For anyone not familiar, Internet Storm Center (ISC) is a great way to keep track of the current condition of the internet. Each day a different administrator is assigned to keep diary entries. These entries vary from current attack vectors, to discussions of critical patches for various OS' and applications. The ISC also contains a list of the top 10 ports being attacked and a world map depicting attack trends.
The ISC is a resource that helps to paint a picture of what is going on in the cloud, the problem is that most of us have 20 tasks to complete, and even the two minutes needed to browse the site it too much to spare. Luckily (and if you are running Windows), Tom Liston of Intelguardians, wrote an application that sits in the system tray
http://handlers.sans.org/tliston/ISCAlert.zip.
Simply download the .zip file, and double click the .exe. If you have an environment which restricts executables, simply copy the .exe into C:\Documents and Settings\uuser\Start Menu\Programs\Startup. In the system tray you will see a small icon of the world, which hopefully will be green, this indicates that everything is normal. As the threat level increases, the color of the icon changes; for a complete breakdown of each threat level and the color which represents the threat see
http://isc.sans.org/infocon.html