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    <title>Tech Seige</title>
    <link>http://www.patrickhynds.com/</link>
    <description>Technology vs. Life</description>
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        <p>
      New games all the time, this one is Blog Tag.  <a href="http://www.bhighlymobile.com">Don
      Sorcinelli</a> tagged me via his blog and so now I am to write a blog entry that reveals
      things about me that you wouldn't be likely to know and then tag others.  I will
      do the first part to the letter, but will only tag a single individual instead of
      five.<br /><br />
      Here goes:<br /></p>
        <p>
       - I was a pacifist until the age of 9.  After that I went rabid and couldn't
      be confused for a pacifist by anyone who has met me since.<br />
       - My nickname in High School was "NATO".  Even my teachers called me that.<br />
       - I was an avid fan of Battlestar Galactica and still have my trading cards. 
      I just can't get into the new series, but I have watched it and it is good, but the
      Cylons should be obviously mechanical.<br />
       - I still don't watch war movies set in the Gulf.  Tried, doesn't work
      well.<br />
       - My mother was a Roman Catholic Nun for 2 years before she decided it wasn't
      the life for her and left.  Moral of the story is that I was brought up very
      Catholic.<br />
       - I served as an altar boy for over 3 years.  Father Foley was the kind
      of priest from the movies in the 50s, not from movies to come.<br />
       - I drank at least a 6 pack of Coke everyday until later in 1991 when I quit
      cold turkey.<br />
       - I like most music except Jazz.  I prefer Fleetwood Mac, AC/DC, The Eagles,
      Charlie Danials and Pink Floyd (varied to say the least).<br />
       - I watch MASH whenever it is on and I am home.<br /><br />
      I have more, but you will have to buy me a drink (Ice Water) to hear it ;)<br /><br />
      I tag <a href="http://www.cyberspacesamurai.com">Duane Laflotte</a>.  He has
      now been tagged by both me and Don.
   </p>
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      <title>Tagged</title>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 08 Jan 2007 02:55:50 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
   New games all the time, this one is Blog Tag.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a href="http://www.bhighlymobile.com"&gt;Don
   Sorcinelli&lt;/a&gt; tagged me via his blog and so now I am to write a blog entry that reveals
   things about me that you wouldn't be likely to know and then tag others.&amp;nbsp; I will
   do the first part to the letter, but will only tag a single individual instead of
   five.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   Here goes:&lt;br&gt;
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I was a pacifist until the age of 9.&amp;nbsp; After that I went rabid and couldn't
   be confused for a pacifist by anyone who has met me since.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- My nickname in High School was "NATO".&amp;nbsp; Even my teachers called me that.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I was an avid fan of Battlestar Galactica and still have my trading cards.&amp;nbsp;
   I just can't get into the new series, but I have watched it and it is good, but the
   Cylons should be obviously mechanical.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I still don't watch war movies set in the Gulf.&amp;nbsp; Tried, doesn't work
   well.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- My mother was a Roman Catholic Nun for 2 years before she decided it wasn't
   the life for her and left.&amp;nbsp; Moral of the story is that I was brought up very
   Catholic.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I served as an altar boy for over 3 years.&amp;nbsp; Father Foley was the kind
   of priest from the movies in the 50s, not from movies to come.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I drank at least a 6 pack of Coke everyday until later in 1991 when I quit
   cold turkey.&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I like most music except Jazz.&amp;nbsp; I prefer Fleetwood Mac, AC/DC, The Eagles,
   Charlie Danials and Pink Floyd (varied to say the least).&lt;br&gt;
   &amp;nbsp;- I watch MASH whenever it is on and I am home.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   I have more, but you will have to buy me a drink (Ice Water) to hear it ;)&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   I tag &lt;a href="http://www.cyberspacesamurai.com"&gt;Duane Laflotte&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp; He has
   now been tagged by both me and Don.
&lt;/p&gt;
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      <category>Personal</category>
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        <p>
      In a personal topic post (which are fairly rare here I am proud to say) a while ago
      I reported that a classmate of mine from West Point, Erik Kurilla was wounded
      in Iraq and gave some details.  I had to post a follow up especially given the
      news that Erik may end up being portrayed by Bruce Willis in a planned movie about
      the unit that Erik commanded in the troubled town of Mosul.  The <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1892675,00.html">London
      times has further details </a>and while it is still somewhat speculative, I personally
      think that this would be a very cool thing.<br /><br />
      As a veteran of the first Gulf War back in 1991, I don't as a rule watch movies about
      either the current war in Iraq or the one I fought in, but I will certainly make an
      exception if this comes to fruition.<br /><br />
      While I wasn't very close to Erik at school, I did know him well enough to know that
      he is a true leader and just the kind of guy you want in charge when things get tough.
   </p>
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      </body>
      <title>Erik Kurilla might be portrayed by Bruce Willis</title>
      <guid>http://www.patrickhynds.com/PermaLink.aspx?guid=fe2aba16-0a99-455b-b23b-c751a2382feb</guid>
      <link>http://www.patrickhynds.com/PermaLink.aspx?guid=fe2aba16-0a99-455b-b23b-c751a2382feb</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2005 04:16:40 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
   In a personal topic post (which are fairly rare here I am proud to say) a while ago
   I reported&amp;nbsp;that a classmate of mine from West Point, Erik Kurilla was wounded
   in Iraq and gave some details.&amp;nbsp; I had to post a follow up especially given the
   news that Erik may end up being portrayed by Bruce Willis in a planned movie about
   the unit that Erik commanded in the troubled town of Mosul.&amp;nbsp; The &lt;a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1892675,00.html"&gt;London
   times has further details &lt;/a&gt;and while it is still somewhat speculative, I personally
   think that this would be a very cool thing.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   As a veteran of the first Gulf War back in 1991, I don't as a rule watch movies about
   either the current war in Iraq or the one I fought in, but I will certainly make an
   exception if this comes to fruition.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   While I wasn't very close to Erik at school, I did know him well enough to know that
   he is a true leader and just the kind of guy you want in charge when things get tough.
&lt;/p&gt;
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      <category>Personal</category>
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      <slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">I had a conversation with a friend of mine
   recently about the physical protection of his home.  I have a bit of a reputation
   as a gun enthusiast that is somewhat earned.  What surprised my friend and got
   him to urge me to post this entry is that my advice was a surprise to him and something
   he admits he had never heard before from anyone.<br /><br />
   The issue wasn't computer or even company security, but security at home.  How
   do I protect my family in a world where convicts escape, kids kill and home invasion
   is a common occurence?  I do have weapons including an AK47, but they are not
   ready at a moments notice.  I have kids so I have bolts out and disassembled,
   ammo stored away from the weapons and trigger locks (in the case of the AK there is
   a cable locked through the barrel).  I can't just run and grab one of these weapons
   for the defense of my home and that works since that isn't my plan.  We have
   3 dogs who average about 70 pounds each and should they alert me to a problem I am
   most likely to grab my paintball gun or a wooden sword to join the fray.  If
   I confront an intruder in my house with a paintball gun then there are several advantages. 
   I won't be having rounds going through walls and hurting my family or pets, I won't
   be causing a fire or water damage with paintballs, but if I put 20 rounds into someone
   at close range they will be down.  Anyone who has played paintball knows what
   I mean, especially if they have been hit from 10 feet or less (not recommended). 
   I live in NH which means that I am unlikely to be prosecuted should I kill someone
   invading my home, but why make killing the person a goal?  I view it as impossible
   for a court to convict someone if they choose an obviously non-lethal weapon especially
   when given more deadly alternatives.<br /><br />
   I know this seems to be off the topic of security as it relates to technology, but
   if you have been reading my posts you know that I don't see a distinction in most
   cases.  Security is security.  I would welcome your comments on how this
   concept (well recieved by all I have discussed it with) might apply to technical security. 
   I will reserve my analogies for now.<img width="0" height="0" src="http://www.patrickhynds.com/aggbug.ashx?id=7eec0966-9c9c-4690-b283-624f298a6245" /></body>
      <title>Physical Defense</title>
      <guid>http://www.patrickhynds.com/PermaLink.aspx?guid=7eec0966-9c9c-4690-b283-624f298a6245</guid>
      <link>http://www.patrickhynds.com/PermaLink.aspx?guid=7eec0966-9c9c-4690-b283-624f298a6245</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2005 19:33:39 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>I had a conversation with a friend of mine recently about the physical protection of his home.&amp;nbsp; I have a bit of a reputation as a gun enthusiast that is somewhat earned.&amp;nbsp; What surprised my friend and got him to urge me to post this entry is that my advice was a surprise to him and something he admits he had never heard before from anyone.&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
The issue wasn't computer or even company security, but security at home.&amp;nbsp; How
do I protect my family in a world where convicts escape, kids kill and home invasion
is a common occurence?&amp;nbsp; I do have weapons including an AK47, but they are not
ready at a moments notice.&amp;nbsp; I have kids so I have bolts out and disassembled,
ammo stored away from the weapons and trigger locks (in the case of the AK there is
a cable locked through the barrel).&amp;nbsp; I can't just run and grab one of these weapons
for the defense of my home and that works since that isn't my plan.&amp;nbsp; We have
3 dogs who average about 70 pounds each and should they alert me to a problem I am
most likely to grab my paintball gun or a wooden sword to join the fray.&amp;nbsp; If
I confront an intruder in my house with a paintball gun then there are several advantages.&amp;nbsp;
I won't be having rounds going through walls and hurting my family or pets, I won't
be causing a fire or water damage with paintballs, but if I put 20 rounds into someone
at close range they will be down.&amp;nbsp; Anyone who has played paintball knows what
I mean, especially if they have been hit from 10 feet or less (not recommended).&amp;nbsp;
I live in NH which means that I am unlikely to be prosecuted should I kill someone
invading my home, but why make killing the person a goal?&amp;nbsp; I view it as impossible
for a court to convict someone if they choose an obviously non-lethal weapon especially
when given more deadly alternatives.&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
I know this seems to be off the topic of security as it relates to technology, but
if you have been reading my posts you know that I don't see a distinction in most
cases.&amp;nbsp; Security is security.&amp;nbsp; I would welcome your comments on how this
concept (well recieved by all I have discussed it with) might apply to technical security.&amp;nbsp;
I will reserve my analogies for now.&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://www.patrickhynds.com/aggbug.ashx?id=7eec0966-9c9c-4690-b283-624f298a6245"&gt;</description>
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      <category>Personal</category>
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      <slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <p>
      In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, I am renewed in my frustration that the US government
      hasn't called on the population to buckle down and conserve energy.  In light
      of the Hurricane relief effort it would be, "Save energy and put the money toward
      relief causes".  During WWII the population was involved in the efforts of the
      nation at war by being asked to do everything from conserve fuel to collecting scrap
      metal.  Is the government so skiddish that they are afraid we will revolt over
      any show of "weakness".  Troops overseas (I can say from personal experience)
      feel more supported when they know that the people back home are making sacrifices
      to help them accomplish their mission.  My voice may not be enough, but I would
      like to call on every American to do two things that I have already undertaken myself
      in the wake of a massive natural disaster which occurred while my country fights two
      wars (don't tell me that it is over, I have friends over there).  The first is
      to give to the agencies that are aiding our countrymen in the gulf coast.  That
      is a no brainer I think, but it bears repeating as often as possible.  Second,
      bite the bullet and cut down on energy consumption beyond what the price at the pump
      would make you do already.  I am sick of us being held hostage to OPEC and having
      a huge trade imbalance that is made up almost entirely of foreign oil.  People
      who support our troops should put their comfort where their mouth is.  It is
      easy to show a flag or talk about support, but maybe ease the burden a bit by buying
      a fuel efficient car or skipping a trip when you can.<br /><br />
      I seem to be writing more and more about politics and commentary on our state of affairs. 
      I will be sure to mark these posts as personal, but I am sick and tired of loud mouthed
      "Patriots" who drive the biggest gas guzzlers you could get.  Maybe they haven't
      thought about it, maybe they are just exercising their rights.  My opinion is
      that they are selfish and being as unpatriotic as you can get.<br /><br />
      End of Rant.
   </p>
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      </body>
      <title>Where is the Sacrifice?</title>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2005 14:33:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
   In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, I am renewed in my frustration that the US government
   hasn't called on the population to buckle down and conserve energy.&amp;nbsp; In light
   of the Hurricane relief effort it would be, "Save energy and put the money toward
   relief causes".&amp;nbsp; During WWII the population was involved in the efforts of the
   nation at war by being asked to do everything from conserve fuel to collecting scrap
   metal.&amp;nbsp; Is the government so skiddish that they are afraid we will revolt over
   any show of "weakness".&amp;nbsp; Troops overseas (I can say from personal experience)
   feel more supported when they know that the people back home are making sacrifices
   to help them accomplish their mission.&amp;nbsp; My voice may not be enough, but I would
   like to call on every American to do two things that I have already undertaken myself
   in the wake of a massive natural disaster which occurred while my country fights two
   wars (don't tell me that it is over, I have friends over there).&amp;nbsp; The first is
   to give to the agencies that are aiding our countrymen in the gulf coast.&amp;nbsp; That
   is a no brainer I think, but it bears repeating as often as possible.&amp;nbsp; Second,
   bite the bullet and cut down on energy consumption beyond what the price at the pump
   would make you do already.&amp;nbsp; I am sick of us being held hostage to OPEC and having
   a huge trade imbalance that is made up almost entirely of foreign oil.&amp;nbsp; People
   who support our troops should put their comfort where their mouth is.&amp;nbsp; It is
   easy to show a flag or talk about support, but maybe ease the burden a bit by buying
   a fuel efficient car or skipping a trip when you can.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   I seem to be writing more and more about politics and commentary on our state of affairs.&amp;nbsp;
   I will be sure to mark these posts as personal, but I am sick and tired of loud mouthed
   "Patriots" who drive the biggest gas guzzlers you could get.&amp;nbsp; Maybe they haven't
   thought about it, maybe they are just exercising their rights.&amp;nbsp; My opinion is
   that they are selfish and being as unpatriotic as you can get.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   End of Rant.
&lt;/p&gt;
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      <category>Personal</category>
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      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <p>
      A classmate of mine from West Point, LTC Erik Kurilla, <a href="http://www.michaelyon.blogspot.com/">was
      wounded</a> (shot 3 times it seems) while serving as a combat commander in Iraq. 
      While I rarely (almost never) bring personal stuff into my blog and as you will see
      I will weave this a bit toward my favorite subject of security, but I felt I had to
      say something here.<br /><br />
      If you read the writeup it is pretty amazing when we read that, "The Commander of
      Deuce Four, LTC Erik Kurilla, was shot three times in combat yesterday in front of
      my eyes. Despite being seriously wounded, LTC Kurilla immediately rejoined the intense
      and close-quarter fight that ended in hand-to-hand combat. LTC Kurilla continued to
      direct his men until a medic gave him morphine and the men took him away.". 
      I haven't seen Erik for a while, but he is a stand up guy who has always been
      very serious about every mission he gets.  If I am reminded about any lesson
      here it is that when we get a setback or even a catastrophe, we have to keep our heads
      and not make it worse.  If you flail, you fail.<br /><br />
      Being in the service helped me immensely in dealing with security because it is the
      same mindset (though the military consequences are much more intense I have to admit). 
      You have to re-evaluate every time the situation changes and that could be minute
      by minute.  Erik could easily have just rolled over once he was hit and let someone
      else direct the battle or do the fighting, but he determined that he was still required
      and still able (though God knows how) so he made the call.  
      <br /><br />
      My info says that Erik is OK and is already back stateside.  It was not my intention
      to stir up political debate with this post, but to show the kinds of people I look
      to for my inspiration when I think about protecting resources.  I believe that
      the wars we fight will and are extending into cyberspace faster than most people
      think.  Ultimately the courage to do the harder right rather than the easier
      wrong is easiest to find when we are reminded regularly of the immense sacrifices
      and miraculous bravery of people like Erik Kurilla.  I am proud to know him and
      regret that I haven't seen him in so many years and didn't get know him nearly as
      well as I would have liked while we were at school together.<br /><br />
      Erik, get well soon and thanks!
   </p>
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      </body>
      <title>Wounded in Iraq</title>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 22 Aug 2005 02:50:17 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
   A classmate of mine from West Point, LTC Erik Kurilla, &lt;a href="http://www.michaelyon.blogspot.com/"&gt;was
   wounded&lt;/a&gt; (shot 3 times it seems) while serving as a combat commander in Iraq.&amp;nbsp;
   While I rarely (almost never) bring personal stuff into my blog and as you will see
   I will weave this a bit toward my favorite subject of security, but I felt I had to
   say something here.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   If you read the writeup it is pretty amazing when we read that, "The Commander of
   Deuce Four, LTC Erik Kurilla, was shot three times in combat yesterday in front of
   my eyes. Despite being seriously wounded, LTC Kurilla immediately rejoined the intense
   and close-quarter fight that ended in hand-to-hand combat. LTC Kurilla continued to
   direct his men until a medic gave him morphine and the men took him away.".&amp;nbsp;
   I haven't seen Erik for a while, but he is&amp;nbsp;a stand up guy who has always been
   very serious about every mission he gets.&amp;nbsp; If I am reminded about any lesson
   here it is that when we get a setback or even a catastrophe, we have to keep our heads
   and not make it worse.&amp;nbsp; If you flail, you fail.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   Being in the service helped me immensely in dealing with security because it is the
   same mindset (though the military consequences are much more intense I have to admit).&amp;nbsp;
   You have to re-evaluate every time the situation changes and that could be minute
   by minute.&amp;nbsp; Erik could easily have just rolled over once he was hit and let someone
   else direct the battle or do the fighting, but he determined that he was still required
   and still able (though God knows how) so he made the call.&amp;nbsp; 
   &lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   My info says that Erik is OK and is already back stateside.&amp;nbsp; It was not my intention
   to stir up political debate with this post, but to show the kinds of people I look
   to for my inspiration when I think about protecting resources.&amp;nbsp; I believe that
   the wars we fight will and are extending into&amp;nbsp;cyberspace faster than&amp;nbsp;most&amp;nbsp;people
   think. &amp;nbsp;Ultimately the courage to do the harder right rather than the easier
   wrong is easiest to find when we are reminded regularly of the immense sacrifices
   and miraculous bravery of people like Erik Kurilla.&amp;nbsp; I am proud to know him and
   regret that I haven't seen him in so many years and didn't get know him nearly as
   well as I would have liked while we were at school together.&lt;br&gt;
   &lt;br&gt;
   Erik, get well soon and thanks!
&lt;/p&gt;
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      <category>security</category>
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