Saturday, February 25, 2023

Lots of Broken Section Breaks

Though I've had experience with headers and footers previously due to English classes, the only experience with section and page breaks have been through my job in appraisal. Even with my job, my experiences with section breaks have been trial and error. In fact, a lot of my frustration while working in the past has been with section breaks as they are a common element of appraisal reports. Every time I would mess one up, I didn't have the knowledge of how to fix it. It would take a good half hour of me messing with it to truly fix what I was trying to do. Section breaks are a very useful tool with utilizing a 'Table of Contents' and if you use them incorrectly, the entire Table of Contents gets messed up. 

After going through Chapter 4, I can say the last few modules were the first modules in TestOut where I wasn't able to blow through easily. Though I found it annoying at first, I also realized that this was the first time using TestOut where I was actually learning things about Word. Not only was I learning, but these things are all extremely common in appraisal reports, such as Headers, Footers, Section/Page Breaks, Charts (one of the most common things in an appraisal report, though typically linked through Excel), and Formatting. I'm excited to finish up Word and get into Excel as I feel that is where I will not only start to learn a lot, but learn things that are very applicable to my career.

Saturday, February 18, 2023

You Learn a New Office Feature Everyday

I have been using Microsoft Word and Excel since I was 9 years old. I still remember trying to hand in my essays in 5th grade on typed paper because my handwriting has always been bad. I also remember creating barebone projects on Excel such as keeping track of standings for my hockey teams. Due to me being introduced to Office products at an early age, I've learned a lot over the years. I especially have learned a lot about Word and Excel since starting my job in commercial appraisal. However, despite me learning a lot over the years, the one thing I've learned with Word and especially Excel, is how much I don't know. Over the past few years my dad has showed me his Word and Excel formats and showed me all his formula's on Excel and how he links the two files so they have the same brain. Typically after the first 10 or 15 minutes, it's my brain that starts spinning. 

However, there were two things I learned from Chapter 3 that I will definitely make use of for the future. Firstly, in Word I never found bookmarks to be useful, let alone know how to create them. After going through Chapter 3 I not only learned how to create bookmarks but found how useful they can be in my current career. In Excel, I learned the use of the "name box" and "named cells". I found out after this chapter that my dad has used these for years and I just never noticed, but now that I learned this I realize how big of a deal it is in my dads format. Nearly every single one of his formulas reference a named cell.

I'm looking forward to the end of Chapter 4 and learning about "macros".

Saturday, February 11, 2023

Sharing is Caring

Much like Chapter 1, there wasn't a whole lot I learned in Chapter 2 with the exception of file sharing. I have never used file sharing with Windows before, and I doubt I ever will with things like Google Drive and Dropbox existing. However, much like setting up my raid system, I like the idea of having files interlinked through a network connection. Though file sharing seems to be outdated in the current world, I definitely see it's use. If Drive didn't exist, my fathers company would have to use file sharing in order to have a base of operations, otherwise we would be very disorganized. 

It is also interesting how you are able to map a drive using file sharing. It is much similar to my raid system, though I prefer the storage of my raid system as well as it's redundancy.

Saturday, February 4, 2023

Data in the Clouds

Since my father started his new company, I've learned a lot about cloud computing in the past few months. Back in November, my father bought a raid system (with cloud support) and asked me to set it up. I originally thought it would be as easy as putting the hard drives in, and plugging it into an outlet... I was wrong. I spent a few hours researching different raid systems and the purpose of each. I knew my dad purchased the raid system with the intention of redundancy, but I also didn't want to limit the storage space too much, so I went with raid 1 which splits the system in half. The first half is the actual hard drive you save data to, and the second half is just a copy of the first half. After setting this up, I had to connect the system to the internet in order to gain it's cloud computing capabilities. After all of this was done, it was just a matter of copying data over to the raid system. 

Relating back to what I learned in 1.2.12, I used all the benefits associated with cloud computing. I also have the disadvantages associated with cloud computing, with the exception of cloud hosting outages. If my internet is down, it turns into a regular raid system and I can upload data manually if I have to.

Saturday, January 28, 2023

Cybersecurity and its Differing Definitions

What is cybersecurity? According to Fredrick Chang, former Director of Research at the National Security Agency (NSA) cybersecurity, "offers many opportunities for advances based on a multidisciplinary approach". That quote was taken from paper written by Dan Craigen, Nadia Diakun-Thibault, and Randy Purse for Technology Innovation Management Review. The paper went on to describe cybersecurity being a collection of resources that prevent malicious attacks towards people and their technological property rights. The exact definition given in this paper was, "cybersecurity is the organization and collection of resources, processes, and structures used to protect cyberspace and cyberspace-enabled systems from occurrences that misalign de jure from defacto property rights." Kaspersky describes cybersecurity as, "the practice of defending computers, servers, mobile devices, electronic systems, networks, and data from malicious attacks." According to Section 225 in the Homeland Security Act, cybersecurity is the act of defending from "cyber crimes". Each source has slightly different information, but I think the TIMReview article gives the most accurate definition.


Scholar Reference:

https://www.timreview.ca/article/835

Primary Reference:

https://www.dhs.gov/homeland-security-act-2002

Secondary Reference:

https://usa.kaspersky.com/resource-center/definitions/what-is-cyber-security

Saturday, January 21, 2023

IS101 and How it Will Help Me

Hello everyone, I'm looking forward to this semester of IS101 with you all. My name is Shane and I'm born and raised in Las Vegas, Nevada. An interesting fact about me is that I have played hockey for a little over a decade now. I played for the Jr. Golden Knights in their inaugural and second season. As for school, I am currently seeking an Associate of Business, but I will likely transfer to UNLV before I have the credits needed to acquire my 2-year degree. I plan on double majoring at UNLV in Finance and Real Estate, due to my current career being a real estate appraiser. Despite the extra major, I only need 3 more classes if I use my electives wisely. I might consider an MBA, but a bachelor's degree is really all that's needed for commercial real estate, specifically appraisal. I'm not a fan of school, but I think that once I get to my upper-level courses, time will fly by and I will have my two bachelor's degrees before I know it.

My expectations for IS101 is to have at least the MOS-Associate certification by the end of the semester. I might consider getting MOS-Expert as well, but given my current resume I don't think MOS certifications will be a huge asset in my career. I've used Word and Excel for many years now, but that doesn't mean I know everything about each software, so I look forward to learning more that way I can be more effective at my current job. I've already learned more about Outlook in the past week than I have in 2 1/2 years at a Fortune 200 company. Despite being a 101 course, I believe it is equally as important as some of the upper-level courses. I look forward to seeing the return on investment this class will give me.