[QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Danny
I'm technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic and wondering if
you guys could give me ideas work I'm able to do? I can move my right arm
only a little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is weak so I
can barely move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my arm will
start curling in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance extending it
again. My left arm is completely paralyzed. I can use a computer with the
use of a mouth joystick called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I also have
a trach atm. The reason I mentioned what function I have was purely to help
you with recommendations. Before my accident I was a network security
engineer and computer programmer. I'm good with math, technology, science
and problem solving.

Thanks in advance for your suggestions and feedback

-Danny



RE: [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For Hacking Users Email Accounts

2013-09-21 Thread Danny
Who sent them? You should let them know so they can protect themselves.

 

From: wheelch...@aol.com [mailto:wheelch...@aol.com] 
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 6:17 PM
To: c5sc...@gmail.com; quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For Hacking Users Email Accounts

 

Link Ed In,   I think.  Perhaps that explains those invites I have received
from 2 members here asking me to join them there.  Thanks Eric!

Best Wishes

 

In a message dated 9/20/2013 8:00:27 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
c5sc...@gmail.com mailto:c5sc...@gmail.com  writes:

link endin or linked in?

- Original Message - 

From: wheelch...@aol.com mailto:wheelch...@aol.com  

To: quad-list@eskimo.com mailto:quad-list@eskimo.com  

Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 7:36 PM

Subject: [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For Hacking Users Email Accounts

 

Linkendin, has been sued recently for hacking user accounts and emailing
their friends with ads to join the network.

 

If you are registered with Linkendin, you could be a member of this class
action suit.

 

Best Wishes



Re: [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For Hacking Users Email Accounts

2013-09-21 Thread wheelchair
Thanks Danny.  Its been a couple of weeks since I received my last  invite. 
 I'm sure they know who they are but anyone who signed up for their  
service was hacked.  Anyone who has access to google can read the news  article.
 
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 9/21/2013 5:48:28 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
da...@immortaldesigns.co writes:

 
Who  sent them? You should let them know so they can protect  themselves. 
 
 
From:  wheelch...@aol.com [mailto:wheelch...@aol.com] 
Sent: Friday,  September 20, 2013 6:17 PM
To: c5sc...@gmail.com;  quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For  Hacking Users Email Accounts

 
Link  Ed In,   I think.  Perhaps that explains those invites I have  
received from 2 members here asking me to join them there.  Thanks  Eric!
 
Best  Wishes
 

 
 
In a  message dated 9/20/2013 8:00:27 P.M. Central Daylight Time, 
_c5sci97@gmail.com_ (mailto:c5sc...@gmail.com)   writes:

 
link  endin or linked in?

 
-  Original Message - 
 
From:  _wheelchair@aol.com_ (mailto:wheelch...@aol.com)   
 
To:  _quad-list@eskimo.com_ (mailto:quad-list@eskimo.com)   
 
Sent:  Friday, September 20, 2013 7:36 PM
 
Subject:  [QUAD-L] Linkendin Sued For Hacking Users Email  Accounts
 

 
Linkendin,  has been sued recently for hacking user accounts and emailing 
their  friends with ads to join the network.
 

 
If  you are registered with Linkendin, you could be a member of this class  
action suit.
 

 
Best  Wishes







Re: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread wheelchair
Do you have any degrees, certifications?  Are you willing to go back  to 
school for additional school or training?
 
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 9/21/2013 5:22:14 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
da...@immortaldesigns.co writes:

 
I’m technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic  and wondering if 
you guys could give me ideas work I’m able to do? I can move  my right arm 
only a little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is  weak so I 
can barely move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my  arm will 
start curling in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance  extending it 
again. My left arm is completely paralyzed… I can use a computer  with the 
use of a mouth joystick called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I  also have 
a trach atm… The reason I mentioned what function I have was purely  to help 
you with recommendations. Before my accident I was a network security  
engineer and computer programmer. I’m good with math, technology, science and  
problem solving. 
Thanks in advance for your suggestions and  feedback 
-Danny



Re: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Billy Lang
Online courses towards a  will open up many opportunities. Add voice 
recognition to your tech inventory (if u have not already done so). 
Inventory of jobs by quads that I know personally include psychologists, 
psychiatrist, published novelists, poetess, physiatrists (2), software and 
application programmers, web developers et.al.

Danny, pick something that you love to do. Although you may not be physically 
capable you can still provide positively to the endeavor by documenting, 
advertising or teaching others.

Just don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!

Sent from Billy Lang's iPad


 On Sep 21, 2013, at 8:57, wheelch...@aol.com wrote:
 
 Do you have any degrees, certifications?  Are you willing to go back to 
 school for additional school or training?
  
 Best Wishes
  
 In a message dated 9/21/2013 5:22:14 A.M. Central Daylight Time, 
 da...@immortaldesigns.co writes:
 I’m technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic and wondering if 
 you guys could give me ideas work I’m able to do? I can move my right arm 
 only a little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is weak so I 
 can barely move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my arm will 
 start curling in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance extending it 
 again. My left arm is completely paralyzed… I can use a computer with the use 
 of a mouth joystick called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I also have a 
 trach atm… The reason I mentioned what function I have was purely to help you 
 with recommendations. Before my accident I was a network security engineer 
 and computer programmer. I’m good with math, technology, science and problem 
 solving.
 
 Thanks in advance for your suggestions and feedback
 
 -Danny


RE: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Danny
All my certs have lapsed since you need to renew them but they were A+, N+, 
CCNA, CCNP, CCSP. I never got any degrees but I did goto college for a while…

 

From: wheelch...@aol.com [mailto:wheelch...@aol.com] 
Sent: Saturday, September 21, 2013 5:58 AM
To: da...@immortaldesigns.co; quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Work question

 

Do you have any degrees, certifications?  Are you willing to go back to school 
for additional school or training?

 

Best Wishes

 

In a message dated 9/21/2013 5:22:14 A.M. Central Daylight Time, 
da...@immortaldesigns.co mailto:da...@immortaldesigns.co  writes:

I’m technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic and wondering if you 
guys could give me ideas work I’m able to do? I can move my right arm only a 
little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is weak so I can barely 
move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my arm will start curling 
in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance extending it again. My left arm 
is completely paralyzed… I can use a computer with the use of a mouth joystick 
called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I also have a trach atm… The reason I 
mentioned what function I have was purely to help you with recommendations. 
Before my accident I was a network security engineer and computer programmer. 
I’m good with math, technology, science and problem solving.

Thanks in advance for your suggestions and feedback

-Danny



RE: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Danny
I’ve been doing web programming but it doesn’t make much… I’ve been using 
dragon for five years now. Hmmm psychiatrist sounds interesting I’ll research 
it. ty

 

From: Billy Lang [mailto:blan...@verizon.net] 
Sent: Saturday, September 21, 2013 9:07 AM
To: wheelch...@aol.com
Cc: da...@immortaldesigns.co; quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Work question

 

Online courses towards a  will open up many opportunities. Add voice 
recognition to your tech inventory (if u have not already done so). 

Inventory of jobs by quads that I know personally include psychologists, 
psychiatrist, published novelists, poetess, physiatrists (2), software and 
application programmers, web developers et.al.

 

Danny, pick something that you love to do. Although you may not be physically 
capable you can still provide positively to the endeavor by documenting, 
advertising or teaching others.

 

Just don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!

Sent from Billy Lang's iPad

 


On Sep 21, 2013, at 8:57, wheelch...@aol.com mailto:wheelch...@aol.com  wrote:

Do you have any degrees, certifications?  Are you willing to go back to school 
for additional school or training?

 

Best Wishes

 

In a message dated 9/21/2013 5:22:14 A.M. Central Daylight Time, 
da...@immortaldesigns.co mailto:da...@immortaldesigns.co  writes:

I’m technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic and wondering if you 
guys could give me ideas work I’m able to do? I can move my right arm only a 
little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is weak so I can barely 
move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my arm will start curling 
in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance extending it again. My left arm 
is completely paralyzed… I can use a computer with the use of a mouth joystick 
called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I also have a trach atm… The reason I 
mentioned what function I have was purely to help you with recommendations. 
Before my accident I was a network security engineer and computer programmer. 
I’m good with math, technology, science and problem solving.

Thanks in advance for your suggestions and feedback

-Danny



Re: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Don Smith
How about math, technology  or science tuter at the local school or college.  
You can also work privately from your home.



 From: Danny da...@immortaldesigns.co
To: quad-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Saturday, September 21, 2013 3:22 AM
Subject: [QUAD-L] Work question
 


I’m technically a c2 incomplete asymmetrical quadriplegic and wondering if you 
guys could give me ideas work I’m able to do? I can move my right arm only a 
little up to my wrist, my bicep is strong but my tricep is weak so I can barely 
move my arm since extending my arm takes effort and my arm will start curling 
in eventually, get stuck and I need assistance extending it again. My left arm 
is completely paralyzed… I can use a computer with the use of a mouth joystick 
called a quadjoy and onscreen keyboard. I also have a trach atm… The reason I 
mentioned what function I have was purely to help you with recommendations. 
Before my accident I was a network security engineer and computer programmer. 
I’m good with math, technology, science and problem solving.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions and feedback
-Danny

Re: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread bob quinn
Apologies upfront that this is so long-winded, but I hope it helps you to 
easily learn some things I learned the hard way

With your tech/programming/net-security background, I'd recommend that you 
learn back-end (server-side) web development.  Most computer, tablet and 
mobile based web-browser apps are all dynamically generated by server-side 
code, frameworks and databases, which customize page generation according to 
the browser/user request, and the platform to display it on.  Most of the 
frameworks have network security features built-in, these days too, and hosting 
sites do the systems security, and allow you to do some configuration when 
necessary, too (e.g., they provide https, ftps, and site or folder-level 
.htaccess support.

For any web development --including either front-end/static or backend/dynamic 
pages-- it helps to be familiar with both HTML and CSS.  That should be your 
starting point for getting into any kind of web design or development.  And 
force yourself to write/type the code from scratch, rather than using code 
generated by tools like Adobe's Dreamweaver.  By typing the code, you WILL 
learn it better and faster (and write MUCH cleaner, more-readable code than any 
generator can).  Javascript is used often too, but you can get away without 
learning a lot if you learn to use the many (free and open) .js libraries

The Java language is used in many large enterprises, so there are usually many 
jobs available for this.  I learned it first as I started teaching 
web-development to myself (for a project I wanted to do), but I found it very 
restrictive, and tedious.  To do even simple things, you need to jump through 
hoops.  More importantly for me, it has very high overhead on the server, the 
hosting services are more expensive, and Java applets loaded WAY too slowly in 
the browsers.  I didn't like it at all.

Next, I learned PHP.  It was liberating, since it was so easy to do so many 
things (and its syntax was based on the C language, in which I was fluent).  
Most PHP applications use SQL (MySQL or Postgre) to access and update 
databases.  There were also well-established application frameworks (also known 
as Content Management Systems, or CMS), like Wordpress, that also have 
plug-in widgets available (which are like mini-applications, like a calendar, 
advertising windows, calculator, or whatever).  With Wordpress, it is possible 
to do a whole lot, without knowing a lot of PHP.  PHP and WordPress (and MySQL, 
the database) are all free and available from most web-hosting sites, and VERY 
popular among web-designers that have little programming experience.

I did a number of PHP-based projects for myself, websites for friends (for 
free), and even some contract work for a development house a friend runs.  I 
liked it, though I ran into issues where the PHP code was embedded in pages.  
It made them difficult to make changes/updates, especially in large websites.

Last year I went to a (free) Python meetup tutorial nearby, and someone said to 
me, When PHP programmers grow up, they become Python programmers.  I cornered 
the guy and asked why, and he pointed out how most large PHP-based projects are 
difficult to maintain when updates are needed ...mainly because PHP is 
hard-coded within pages.  I did a few stand-alone (non-web) applications and 
some network (ftp) applications with Python, and I was amazed how quick and 
easy it is to do almost anything.  The syntax was different, but easy to learn, 
and had almost all the constructs (like if...else, for loops, etc.) as PHP.

To generate web-pages, I chose to learn how to use the Django framework and 
templating system.  I might have simply used a template system, like Jinja, by 
itself to generate pages, butI chose Django to use all its plugins (widgets), 
especially for the secure logins and database modeling it provides.  BEST of 
all, it supports a separation of code from the pages, and page 
styling/presentation.  In common computer science parlance, it supports a MVC 
(Model-View-Controller) project architecture pattern.

There are many tutorials for learning Django, and they all say how easily and 
quickly it is to develop robust and responsive web applications with it.  
Personally, it took a little time, and a few tutorials, for me to wrap my brain 
around the process and its mechanics.  Now that I have, I appreciate what's 
involved and the advantages it provides for building large applications with 
complex databases (it has its own, relatively simple database query syntax, 
which generates appropriate SQL commands, depending which SQL engine you are 
using (PostgreSQL is recommended over MySQL or SQLlite).

So, bottom line, I'd recommend learning Python (maybe with Jinja, to generate 
pages), then SQL, and eventually Django.  Best way to learn is in a course: 
There are LOTS of free courses available online from the likes of MIT, Harvard, 
and Stanford (see 

[QUAD-L] Writing tools

2013-09-21 Thread Gmail
Hi All,
   What dose everybody use to write with? How do you place it in your hand? 
I've used a felt tip pen cradled in my curled-up hand and using my shoulder 
and moving my entire arm. I used a felt tipped pen for 35 years until I 
discovered a Pilot Razor Point pen that I LOVE!
My handwriting has gotten pretty darn good, if I do say so myself. I LOVE to 
write long letter's pen to paper.
Bobbie 


Smile Everyday


RE: [QUAD-L] Work question....

2013-09-21 Thread Danny
Ya I mostly do php/mysql for people… I used to be a developer for Gentoo and 
have been programming/running *nix systems for the last 16 years. I started 
programming with qbasic when I was a kid. I  mostly did Cisco router/switch 
configuration for my employer before my accident and was put in an on-site 
consultant position for the superintendent of schools for a few years. I mostly 
worked with linux servers and setup a IDS network at all the schools. We were 
all the schools and government buildings isp. We piped out internet from our 
oc48 to all the schools. After that I built networks for university’s from 
central California to San Diego.

Long story short if I went back to college the only reason would be to learn 
something not in the realm of information technology or to teach, The problem I 
face is that I can’t move my arms very well or fingers at all. I type with 
either speech recognition or with an on-screen keyboard and am fairly slow 
because I use a mouth joystick “http://www.quadjoy.com/ “ with sip and puff for 
my right and left click.

I’m just so slow on the computer now that I can’t use my fingers and barely use 
my arm that it seems so slow to do anything for work.

This took me a little over an hour to type…

 

From: bob quinn [mailto:kult...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Saturday, September 21, 2013 1:38 PM
To: Billy Lang; wheelch...@aol.com
Cc: da...@immortaldesigns.co; quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Work question

 

Apologies upfront that this is so long-winded, but I hope it helps you to 
easily learn some things I learned the hard way

 

With your tech/programming/net-security background, I'd recommend that you 
learn back-end (server-side) web development.  Most computer, tablet and 
mobile based web-browser apps are all dynamically generated by server-side 
code, frameworks and databases, which customize page generation according to 
the browser/user request, and the platform to display it on.  Most of the 
frameworks have network security features built-in, these days too, and hosting 
sites do the systems security, and allow you to do some configuration when 
necessary, too (e.g., they provide https, ftps, and site or folder-level 
.htaccess support.

 

For any web development --including either front-end/static or backend/dynamic 
pages-- it helps to be familiar with both HTML and CSS.  That should be your 
starting point for getting into any kind of web design or development.  And 
force yourself to write/type the code from scratch, rather than using code 
generated by tools like Adobe's Dreamweaver.  By typing the code, you WILL 
learn it better and faster (and write MUCH cleaner, more-readable code than any 
generator can).  Javascript is used often too, but you can get away without 
learning a lot if you learn to use the many (free and open) .js libraries

 

The Java language is used in many large enterprises, so there are usually many 
jobs available for this.  I learned it first as I started teaching 
web-development to myself (for a project I wanted to do), but I found it very 
restrictive, and tedious.  To do even simple things, you need to jump through 
hoops.  More importantly for me, it has very high overhead on the server, the 
hosting services are more expensive, and Java applets loaded WAY too slowly in 
the browsers.  I didn't like it at all.

 

Next, I learned PHP.  It was liberating, since it was so easy to do so many 
things (and its syntax was based on the C language, in which I was fluent).  
Most PHP applications use SQL (MySQL or Postgre) to access and update 
databases.  There were also well-established application frameworks (also known 
as Content Management Systems, or CMS), like Wordpress, that also have 
plug-in widgets available (which are like mini-applications, like a calendar, 
advertising windows, calculator, or whatever).  With Wordpress, it is possible 
to do a whole lot, without knowing a lot of PHP.  PHP and WordPress (and MySQL, 
the database) are all free and available from most web-hosting sites, and VERY 
popular among web-designers that have little programming experience.

 

I did a number of PHP-based projects for myself, websites for friends (for 
free), and even some contract work for a development house a friend runs.  I 
liked it, though I ran into issues where the PHP code was embedded in pages.  
It made them difficult to make changes/updates, especially in large websites.

 

Last year I went to a (free) Python meetup tutorial nearby, and someone said to 
me, When PHP programmers grow up, they become Python programmers.  I cornered 
the guy and asked why, and he pointed out how most large PHP-based projects are 
difficult to maintain when updates are needed ...mainly because PHP is 
hard-coded within pages.  I did a few stand-alone (non-web) applications and 
some network (ftp) applications with Python, and I was amazed how quick and 
easy it is to do almost anything.  The syntax was different, but easy to