Category Archives: Technology/New Stuff

Repositioning South — Kennedy Space Center Part 1


Apollo Firing Theater

While our journey aboard the Royal Caribbean ship Adventure of the Seas may have started off in Quebec as a fall foliage cruise, it was never meant to remain so. This was also a repositioning cruise, as Adventure of the Seas need to get to its winter season port of Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. So, after a couple of days at the bridge table, we arrived at Port Canaveral, Florida. Ursula already had our excursion planned out for this stop — Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.

Apollo program mission logos

This was a particularly emotional visit for me. As a child, I can recall watching in the school auditorium on a black & white television several of the manned space launches of the early 1960s. On May 5, 1961 I watched Alan Shepard become the first American in space inside a cramped Mercury space capsule for a suborbital flight atop a Redstone rocket for the Freedom 7 mission.

Kennedy Space Center Rocket Garden—Mercury-Redstone and Mercury-Atlas on left

Nine months later, on February 20, 1962, John Glenn became the first American to orbit the earth in his Mercury “Friendship 7” capsule blasted into space atop an Atlas rocket. We held our collective breaths in the auditorium waiting to hear from Astronaut Glenn that he was all right after Mission Control announced that his capsule possibly had a loose heat shield.

KSC Rocket Garden—Atlas-Agena (left) Gemini-Titan II

And then, following Mercury came  Project Gemini, which sent two-man crews into space aboard the Gemini capsules, lifted into orbit by the much more powerful Titan II rocket. To me, Gemini was the most beautiful capsule design of the era, far surpassing either Mercury or Apollo. In comparison, it was like a sleek two-seat sports car next to the stodgy Mercury college student econobox or the misproportioned Apollo Command Module family station wagon.

Interior of an Apollo capsule

But nothing captured the imagination of the era quite like the Apollo Program.  Over fifty years later, and only now are we finally getting around to building a rocket that’s almost, but not quite, as powerful as the incredible three-stage Saturn V. When fully assembled with the Apollo LES (Launch Escape System), Apollo CSM (Command and Service Module), and LEM (Lunar Excursion Module), this giant stood 363 feet/111 meters.

KSC—Saturn V Rocket

Powering the first stage of the Saturn V were five revolutionary Rocketdyne F-1 engines, which together generated 7,891,000 lbf/35,100 kilonewtons of force. To this day, the F-1 remains the most powerful single combustion chamber liquid-propellant rocket engine ever produced.

KSC—The massive Rocketdyne F-1 engines of the Saturn S-1C stage

We’re now going to visit the Apollo Firing Room Theater:

Apollo Firing Room Theater

In this mock-up, which is in the Race to the Moon: Apollo/Saturn V Center, overhead monitors play recorded scenes from the launch of Apollo 8 — the first manned spacecraft to leave low Earth orbit and head toward the Moon.

Apollo launch scenes

Off to the side I got a glimpse of the STDN (Spacecraft Tracking and Data Acquisition Network)  status panel, which would display what stations were receiving current data from an Apollo mission.

STDN—Spacecraft Tracking and Data Acquisition Network

Inside the Race to the Moon you’ll also find several more displays, including a full-size diorama of a lunar landing site, complete with LEM (Lunar Excursion Module) and suited astronauts:

KSC—Sound stage where NASA faked the lunar landings (just kidding)

Full-size Lunar Landing diorama with LEM (Lunar Excursion Module)

 

Comments Off on Repositioning South — Kennedy Space Center Part 1

Filed under Photography, R. Doug Wicker, Technology/New Stuff, travel, vacation

Readers Beware! — A particularly clever Phishing Attack


Now here’s a nifty little phishing attack that targeted me over a two-day period, and this one is both unique and, if you’re not careful, very effective.

On Monday my iPad informed me that I needed to log into my Apple ID account, which I attempted using my Apple ID and password.  That attempt was rewarded with an admonition, “This Apple ID has been locked for security reasons,” or something similar to that wording.  Apparently, someone attempted multiple logins with my Apple ID and an incorrect password, and Apple took the precaution of locking my account after too many such attempts.  I managed to log in my iPad using other contingencies employed by Apple.

It never occurred to me that the actual objective was not to break into my account, but rather to intentionally lock the account for the follow-up attack the next day.  Clever.

The next morning I received a security alert email from Apple advising me that my Apple ID account had been logged onto from an I.P. address from Indonesia.  Included in the email was a link to verify machines from which my account had recently been accessed.  I tapped the link and was taken to an HTTPS site with what appeared to be the Apple ID login page.  HTTPS normally means that you’re safe, right?  Well, not really.  It just means that the communications between your computer and that specific site are encrypted to discourage electronic “eavesdropping” of the conversation between the two computers.  Clever.

What I had failed to do was hover over the email link before clicking on it, which if I had would have revealed a bitsy URL link, meaning the real address was hidden behind a URL totally unrelated to Apple.  Not clever, but for some reason I fell for it.

At what appeared to be the Apple ID login screen I entered my Apple ID and password, but instead of being logged into my Apple ID account I was instead directed to another screen that asked for my name, address, and other information.  By now the phishing scum would have my Apple ID and the associated password, but I now was onto the game when the site also asked for credit card information, date of birth, Social Security Number (oh, come on now . . . really?), etc.

I immediately closed out that window, logged into my Apple ID account, and reset my password since I had just compromised my previous password.  I then reported as a phishing scam the offending email with the bogus link.

So, to recap, here’s how this rather ingenious phishing attack works using against Apple its requirement to pair the user’s Apple ID with a functioning email address:

  • Day 1:  The phisher obtains an email address and checks if that email address is linked to an existing Apple ID account
  • Once that link is established, the phisher intentionally makes numerous attempts to log into that Apple ID account until Apple freezes any further attempts
  • The account owner is now wary because, obviously, someone made multiple attempts to log into the account until it was locked; this sets up the user for the follow up email the next day
  • Day 2:  The phisher sends a “security warning” email that appears to be from Apple; the “warning” advises the account owner that his account has been logged into from a foreign I.P. address
  • The account owner then lets his suspicions from the previous day override his normal caution, and he “logs into” his Apple ID account through the bogus link supplied in the “security warning” email.
  • The phisher then captures the account owner’s password and, if the account owner continues to fall for the phishing attack, other even more critical personal information

This is by far the most sophisticated phishing attack I’ve yet seen, or at least it appears so to me because it’s the only one that’s ever duped me into revealing anything.  It’s an extremely fine piece of social engineering that uses a two-pronged con deliberately tailored to instill suspicion on Day 1 of the attack in order to override caution on Day 2 of the attack.

Do not fall for this attack.  Just because your Apple ID account was locked does not mean that the attacker managed to break in later.  Indeed, the chances are that he has not, and that your account is still secure.  Just report as a phishing scam the follow-up email and delete it.  If you’re paranoid after the initial Day 1 attack, just check your Apple ID account over the next several days and make sure you still have access.  If you do, the phisher has not taken over and changed your password to transfer to him control of your account.

Please help spread the word by linking this article to your friends and family members, as I suspect this is going to be the next big scam.

© 2017 R. Doug Wicker (RDougWicker.com)

Comments Off on Readers Beware! — A particularly clever Phishing Attack

Filed under R. Doug Wicker, Social Networking, Technology/New Stuff

Coming Up This Week


Because of several things that have come up in the news and in the theaters, I’ll be pushing back my remaining blogs on our Montreal-to-Boston cruise aboard the MS Maasdam.  In an attempt at timeliness, I’ll be presenting my take on the Chicago En Route (ARTCC) Center fiasco and why those pushing for both consolidation and privatization of ATC are yet again being proven as off their collective rockers.  Also this week I’ll put forth one of my famous double-reviews.

This time I’ll be comparing The Equalizer:

Robert McCall versus . . .

to The Equalizer:

. . . Robert McCall

Comments Off on Coming Up This Week

Filed under Author, Movies, R. Doug Wicker, Technology/New Stuff, Television