<!–[if !supportLists]–>1. <!–[endif]–>Keep Antivirus software updated. You should check for new definition updates daily. Antivirus software can be configured to do this automatically.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>To update Antivirus, refer to document Updating My Anti-Virus.doc attachment.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Make sure that the Anti-Virus is updated every time the computer is used.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>If you don’t know how to update, ask for assistance.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>If the computer you’re using doesn’t have any anti-virus software, find one and install it immediately.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>2. <!–[endif]–>Thoroughly scan floppies, thumb drives or external hard drives before using them – This is always important, especially if you are using the disk to carry information between one computer and another. It’s easily to pick up a virus from an unsecured network or computer and introduce it into your system. Scanning before launching any of the programs on the disk will prevent infection.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Before connecting any external drives make sure it is scanned thoroughly.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Make sure that the external drives was not used to any public domain, network or computer cafes.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>If you don’t know how to scan, ask for assistance.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>3. <!–[endif]–>Don’t download programs or files from the web - Unreliable sources such as Internet newsgroups or web sites that you haven’t heard of may be willing providers of viruses for your computer. Avoid downloading files you can’t be sure are safe. This includes freeware, screensavers, games, and any other executable program – any files with an “.exe” or “.com” extension, such as “coolgame.exe.” Check to see if the site has anti-virus software running on their side. If you do have to download from the Internet, be sure to scan each program before running it. Save all downloads to one folder, then run virus checks on everything in the folder before using it.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Before downloading any programs, applications or files (*.exe, *.mp3, *.doc, *.ppt , *.html, etc.) make sure that it ican be trusted.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Make sure you’re downloading from trusted and reliable websites.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>After downloading, scan each file before running or opening it.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>4. <!–[endif]–>Don’t automatically open attachments – It’s always better to err on the side of safety. If you’re unsure about an attachment, Delete it. Especially if it’s from a source you don’t recognize. If there are tempting animations on a site that look highly unprofessional, don’t download them. Be sure your email program doesn’t automatically download attachments. This will ensure that you can examine and scan attachments before they run. Refer to your email program’s safety options or preferences menu for instructions. Be sure to run each attachment you plan to open through the anti-virus check. Do this even if you recognize and trust the sender; malicious code, like Trojan horses, can slip into your system by appearing to be from a friendly source.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Never share files using Instant Messaging application; ask permission before accepting any file sharing.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>5. <!–[endif]–>Limit Disk and Folder Sharing on the network- Another common way that viruses are spread is via disk sharing or folder sharing in the network. Eliminate disk sharing unless it has been allowed by Decode.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>· <!–[endif]–>Never share Disk or Folder on the network, ask permission before sharing any folder or disk.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>6. <!–[endif]–>Backup Files Regularly – If a virus does infect your computer it may corrupt one or more files. It is important that you regularly backup all your files.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>7. <!–[endif]–>Final Reminders – If a virus has been found, make sure to delete to treat first the virus before opening the file or application. If you don’t know how to clean Virus, ask for assistance and never used the file, folder or disk again unless that it is thoroughly clean.
-F1





Musings from the Desert Planet
Published March 23, 2008 Literature , Social Commentary 6 CommentsTags: Dune, Dune universe, Frank Herbert, Philippines, religiosity, ritual, sci-fi, spirituality, tradition
The book presents itself as a story set thousands of years from now, where Earth has been forgotten and humanity has spread across the galaxy, building a vast empire. This ‘galactic empire’ was ruled by families or royal houses that controls the empire, its economy, and its politics. Dune may be hard to understand at first, but just like Tolkien’s Silmarillion it is indeed hard because it is rich in history (fictional history of course) that goes deeper than any mainstream science fiction like Star Wars or Star Trek.
Each family or house has its planet to govern, and each family has its ulterior motive. The House Corrino, the Imperial family, holds the power of the empire and manages it as a large corporation where it manipulates institutions to preserve their hold on power. House Harkonnen, the family ruling a dark planet of Giedi Prime, is evil, ruthless and scheming. The last and the most important family of all, was the honorable House Atreides, ruling a gentle and peaceful planet of 90% water, the planet Caladan.
The House Corrino manages the monopoly of spice, a strange element in the Dune universe that is used for space travel, for prolonging life, and for seeing ‘visions.’ Without spice, space travel would not exist, life would be shortened, and various schools like the Bene Gesserit (a group of women who kept on attempting to manage the genetic pool of humanity by interbreeding to create a super-human called the Kwisatz Haderach) and the Spacing Guild (a group of space pilots who are addicted to spice) would cease to exist. In short, without spice, civilization would crumble.
To cut the long story short, the House Atreides was betrayed, as it was attacked by House Harkonnen with the imperial family’s assistance, and the heir to the house–Paul Atreides–and his mother barely escaped. They met the desert people called the Fremen and they staged a revolution that retook the whole planet. With Arrakis on their hands, the monopoly of spice is now in the hands of House Atreides. The emperor was forced to give up his throne, and due to the mystical rise of Paul Atreides, he put himself as emperor, and was branded by the Fremen as their ‘Messiah’.
The book is really comparable to Lord of the Rings. The intricacies of politics, deception and betrayal made it almost like the human drama we’re experiencing today. The imagination of the author is quite fascinating.
Later on in the story, Arrakis, a once unheard of planet in the universe became the center of commerce and religion. The people in planet Arrakis became so full of religiosity and rituals that they were empty and useless. The priests became corrupt. People are just following the herd without thinking why they are doing those rituals. A rugged old man called ‘The Preacher’ (he was really Paul Atreides himself) who roams in Dune to speak against the priests proclaims:
Is your religion real when it costs you nothing and carries no risk? Is your religion real when you fatten upon it? Is your religion real when you commit atrocities in its name? Whence comes your downward degeneration from the original revelation?
What a reflection of the Philippines! We are drenched with tradition, of rosaries, of novenas. Yet our empty rituals are not consistent with our lives. Every year, during Holy Week, its as if the whole metropolis is a ghost town. It’s as if, God has died again. “Bawal maligo!” people say. Useless superstitions that do not have any rational purpose can be heard in our streets. The real thing has been substituted by rituals that have no meaning. Churches are full but after the Holy Week is over, we’re back again to the same old life we’ve been. There’s no risk. There’s no inward change. It’s like wearing a different mask on Sunday but unmasking our true selves the rest of the week.
The sci-fi story I just told you may be an imagination away from our present situation and yet somehow it’s so true. What I love about Science Fiction so much is that it presents to us a glimpse of reality that we may have overlooked if it were put on a real setting. Somehow, fiction and imagination makes it all the more clearer.
This Holy Week, may it not be a religion that can be strutted in public and is a means to cover the rot inside. May it not be a religion with empty rituals, mediocrity and a heart that remains unchanged. But may it be a true spirituality that possesses a changed heart, a life so vibrant that people would see true light in it, a life that hopes for the betterment of all, a life that begins a true reformation in our country, a spirituality that is not afraid to risk but taking every step of faith hand in hand with integrity and honor.
These are the musings of a geek on a dry desert planet. (Did you notice the sudden change of climate?
)
-resplend3nt
PS: resplend3nt commemorates the life of Arthur C. Clarke, who passed away recently and is one of the giants of Science Fiction. Clarke once had a correspondence with replend3nt’s favorite author, C.S. Lewis, and their interaction when it came to space travel spurred resplend3nt’s serious look on what could be, and the adventure that lies beyond the confines of Earth. “The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.”