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Quick Update Hi Hi

Great week so far, therefore great year, and specifically, great last 24 hours.  I jacknifed at least 7 times, killed it on 4  levels with work stuff,  and 3 other things that take too much typing.

Starting to get a handle on my new haircut.

Took some arty night shots of the Chrysler 300.

So. Arty.

My review prints at the end of the month. Really liked it. Canadian built, too.

Then Car Swap Day, and said goodbye after 2 weeks.  Now I’m driving a 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT.

Excited, no dramatics. I requested this. So functional.

Hit 600 followers on my Viddy video channel.

Got stuck in my jacket.

The scarf material is so thin that it zipped right in and seized, trapping me. For a while too, the takeout got cold.

Remember that time I got stuck in some PVC piping? Oh boy.

Blog meeting with Andy. If you need anything WordPress, contact him.

No matter what you do, taking fake-working photos always feels dumb.

Dinner in my nest.

Which I later transformed into desk nest, and that’s where this post is coming from, hi hi.

Have a good rest-of-week, and great night tomorrow, it’s Thursday night, best night of the week!

xo Keri

 

 

Medical Offices – Password Protect all Computers

A scenario illustrating why.

Patient is shown to a private room.

They are instructed to change, then left alone to do so.

The desk is bumped, the mouse moves, and the screen comes to life.

It’s displaying the doctor’s daily schedule.

1 – Patient Name – Age – Reason (!) – Note – Other Doctors – Insurance   

There’s 30 listings like this.

2 – the yellow is a name highlighted, which displays the below information:

3 – Patient phone number

Another example screen.

4 – Billing screen

That’s a lot of time alone,
with a lot of personal information

Medical offices – protect your patient’s privacy, and put a password on all computers. Ideally it’s 15 characters strong, uses numbers, characters and letters, and is changed regularly.

(How to edit a sensitive photo)