T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3205.1 | Digital is no longer a company, it's an all-out riot. | TEGAN::LOWE | Should I go down with the ship, or bail now? | Fri Jun 24 1994 15:41 | 9 |
| It doesn't help to tie 'em down... I can't believe what is going on around
here. I cannot begin to list the things STOLEN in this facility (ALF) in the
last two months. The latest equipment was in a LOCKED storeroom. They STOLE
equipment including several Alpha PC's, a Flamingo, a dozen RZ57's and
several PC's.
It's like the LA riots down here.
brett
|
3205.2 | pay more respect to TFSOers please | NYOSS1::JAUNG | | Fri Jun 24 1994 15:52 | 11 |
| re. 0
>>>with all the TFSO's, I guess these people need equipment at home
>>>too...after they leave Digital.
Please pay more respect our TFSO'ed ex-collegues/friends. Your lost
equipments might not be stolen by them. Last year, I've lost two
laptops in the office (in one night we had 8 PCs been stolen.) We
latter found out who did it but they are not our TFSOed employees.
Speculate the criminal behaviors on our collegues in the publicly
accessible notes conference is not proper from my personal opinion.
|
3205.3 | sheeezzzz | USHS01::CESAK | Makin tracks..sales and rails | Fri Jun 24 1994 19:32 | 6 |
| Sorry for the direct hit...It was not intended that way...but since
you raised the question?....hmmmm.
Grins
Pc
|
3205.4 | | TEKVAX::KOPEC | I know what happens; I read the book. | Sun Jun 26 1994 18:48 | 4 |
| My group solves that problem by not having any equipment worth
stealing.
...tom
|
3205.5 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Jun 27 1994 03:43 | 23 |
| I must admit I have been tempted to save DEC money by stealing my
own workstation (PASTIS). It was one of the first VS2000s to reach
Europe around 8 years ago, so it doesn't have a very high book value.
Using VWS rather than DECwindows it is as fast (for the sort of things
that I do) as any later workstation, and the VWS fonts seem to suit my
eyes better.
The problem is that I sometimes need to read manuals, and since we
have given up paper manuals (a pain, since I can't read manuals in bed
at home) I have to have a DECwindows workstation to read them from
Bookreader, and I have SNUPPA (a Firefox) at my desk as well so that I
can read manuals. Not a big problem (apart from desk space) except that
France has a company tax on the number of PCs/workstations on peoples'
desks, and we have been told we have to cut down to 1 each to reduce this
tax liability.
I tried to buy PASTIS, but there seems to be no way to do this
unless I am TFSOd. I wouldn't even mind leaving it in the office
until/unless I leave DEC. If I was just to peel off the DEC asset
labels and replace them with my own would that permit DEC to report it
as stolen and save on the tax? I would probably have to keep it on my
desk even if I stole it since my current manager is not too keen on
people working at home.
|
3205.6 | laptops & briefcases | ASABET::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg MLO1-3/H20 | Mon Jun 27 1994 06:58 | 2 |
| here in ZKO, laptops and briefcases are targets & vanish
|
3205.7 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Jun 27 1994 09:23 | 7 |
| RE: .6 by ASABET::SILVERBERG
>here in ZKO, laptops and briefcases are targets & vanish
The briefcases are probably being used to smuggle the laptops out of
the building.
|
3205.8 | | CALDEC::RAH | withstand firmly all sin | Mon Jun 27 1994 18:15 | 2 |
|
building lo-jack into them might help somewhat..
|
3205.9 | | GUCCI::RWARRENFELTZ | Follow the Money! | Tue Jun 28 1994 07:56 | 2 |
| In COP, we've experienced a lotta thief lately also, ranging from
laptops, memory and money.
|
3205.10 | Try VTBOOK for Bookreader @ home | NECSC::LEVY | A song that's born to soar the sky | Tue Jun 28 1994 08:21 | 16 |
| re: .5
You might want to try VTBOOK. It's a DECUS tool and works pretty
well...alot better than our attempt at BOOKREADER/CC.
I have a kit available at:
EZWIND::SYS$KITS:VTBOOK014.%
You don't get the pictures, but everything else works pretty nicely.
Now all you need is a nice PC and VTstar or WinVT or KEATerm/MSU in
order to do multisession...
dave
|
3205.11 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Jun 28 1994 08:57 | 4 |
| Thanks. I will try it.
Dave
|
3205.12 | Where oh where has my mac address gone? | NPSS::BRANAM | Steve, Network Product Support | Tue Jun 28 1994 13:31 | 5 |
| An interesting application of wireless network technology:
"Has anyone seen my laptop talking on the net anywhere?"
Similar to cellular phone security: somebody steals it, you
tell the network to reject calls from it, and track down the
cell it's in.
|
3205.13 | | LARVAE::DARRALL_D | Dave Darrall, SE PSC, 781-1662 | Wed Jun 29 1994 18:12 | 8 |
| In the UK there is a thing called Tracker, intended for Cars.
Sends out signals that can be traced by Police.
We've had the idea of putting it in a really juicy PC in a (customer)
office that is being broken into on a regular basis.
shame this sort of thing couldn't be extended.
|
3205.14 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jun 29 1994 20:29 | 1 |
| re .13 that's what lo-jack (.8) is.
|
3205.16 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Jul 01 1994 07:22 | 5 |
| The simplest ones work by an electromagnetic resonance effect.
Note that the items you mentioned normally contain no metal to
interfere with the detection. A metal casing would screen it
completely, and other electrical components might make detection
unreliable.
|
3205.17 | | KLAP::porter | it don't feel like sinnin' to me | Fri Jul 01 1994 09:37 | 2 |
| Uh, compact disks contain metal.
|
3205.18 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jul 01 1994 10:36 | 3 |
| CDs have non-ferrous metal; aluminum or gold, and not much of that.
Steve
|
3205.19 | | ELWOOD::LANE | Short timer | Fri Jul 01 1994 11:12 | 7 |
| The little dohickies that protect products consist of a coil of wire and,
if my guess is right, a capacitor. The pair forms a tank circuit that
resonates at a specific frequency. The thing you walk through is a low
power transmitter. If the circuit passes through, it absorbes energy at
the specific frequency and the bells go off. Bulk metal has nothing to
do with it. If it did, everyone who sets off airport detectors would
also set these things off.
|
3205.20 | Merchandise Loss Prevention | MRKTNG::VICKERS | | Fri Jul 01 1994 11:50 | 8 |
| Re: 3205.19 - you are essentially right - the cheapest of the
protective stickers are just tuned tanks made from two outer
layers of film with inner foil layer configured to present the
correct configuration of capacitance/inductance. They can be
turned out for pennies, detected easily, and they won't set off
a bulk metal detector.
|
3205.21 | MolyChrome 40 based systems | ISLNDS::MCWILLIAMS | | Fri Jul 01 1994 14:12 | 11 |
| Another system uses a Molybdenum/Chrome alloy that has the interesting
property that when magnetized and excited by a varying magnetic field,
the odd harmonics are 30-40 db less than the even harmonics. When
demagnetized, the harmonics are roughly the same on the exponential
curve. This system requires some form of field coil and has a maximum
effective span of 7-8 feet.
This is the basis of most system where you watch them demagnetize the
sticker.
/jim
|