Office Productivity - News and ArticlesMicrosoft
Vista April 1, 2007 from CAmagazine "If youve
heard anything at all about Microsoft Windows Vista, you are probably wondering
whether its worth upgrading to the new operating system. The short answer
is a qualified yes. It offers a lot of advantages in security, connectivity, collaboration
and ease of use. However, because of those new features, you might find your existing
PC or laptop does not have sufficient memory (RAM) or processing power (CPU) to
run it
" Tricks of the Trade (A few ideas to improve productivity) February
2007 from 180 Systems Many people spend the majority of their time with
a few programs that they know well enough to get the job done. They realize they
could find a more efficient way to get the job done, but the effort involved seems
to outweigh the benefit. So theyre stuck in a rut. This article will give
you a few ideas to crawl out. One big waster of time is searching for information.
Lets assume that its on your computer somewhere and you keep everything
important. The 1st trick does not involve recent technology, just common sense.
Organize your documents and email in folders or directories. However even if youre
diligent in filing things away, you could be looking for something that spans
directories, email and different document types. There are solutions that are
easy and inexpensive that will automate the search process. All you need to do
is type the keyword and you can instantly see a subset of files or emails that
contain the keyword. And the keyword does not need to be a tag that you manually
apply. Its just text somewhere in the document or email. There are solutions
like X1, Google desktop, ISYS that can help. And Microsoft Vista (The new Windows
system) now includes search right out of the box. Meetings are also right
up there as big wasters of time. Once again, you can use common sense to reduce
the wasted time by making sure everyone gets to the meeting on time, establishing
a tight agenda, issuing documents in advance
. But technology can help too
especially if the participants are not in the same office. Try one of the web
conferencing tools such as WebEx or GoToMeeting. You can also waste time
flipping back and forth between documents. Windows does let you split the screen
and synchronize or de-synchronize scrolling, but you dont see as much as
you would like. The solution is relatively inexpensive by using a dual monitor
or using one of your old clunkers to view a document while you do the heavy lifting
on your new PC. When creating presentations or writing documentation, you
will want to copy something that appears on your computer screen. There has always
been the PrintScreen function that can give you the whole screen or just the current
window by also using the ALT key when you press the PrintScreen function key.
But if you cant do it because there are restrictions on the document you
are reviewing, or you want to be more picky, there is help using a program such
as SnagIT. (I know I dont need to remind you to give credit to other peoples
work and make sure that you are not violating copyright) There are also
many time savers in the programs we use everyday. The best way to leverage these
tricks of the trade is to provide training. Why not have a series of lunch and
learn sessions? Get your best technical person to show time savers in MS Word
or Excel. For example, teach the group how to do multiple selects from a list
using the CTRL or ALT key or to automatically populate a series of days, months,
years
Take a look at Office Watch for instruction on how to use AutoFill We
are sure there are many other ways to be more efficient, and would welcome any
of your suggestions. Please update the blog with your suggestions. Thanks 180
View We wrote it so you already know our view.
Vista January
29, 2006 from Canadian Business magazine It's been five long years
since Microsoft booted up a new operating system and three since updating its
popular suite of productivity software. So gird yourself for the sales pitch you're
bound to hear in the coming weeks for the company's new Windows Vista OS and Office
2007 packages--both launched for businesses Nov. 30 and consumers Jan. 30--because
it might sound a bit excessive for what, in the end, is just software. Microsoft
has not reinvented the PC; it has merely made it easier to use. "A
lot of it is eye candy," says Naumi Haque, a research analyst at Info-Tech
Research Group, based in London, Ont. "For the majority of users, what they
have is already fulfilling their needs, so there's no immediate drive to upgrade
to these products." And, Haque says, it's no different for corporations.
A majority of Info-Tech's clients say Windows XP is exceeding their requirements--and,
in some cases, even older versions of Windows suffice. The same goes for Office. But
if you're a Microsoft fan, you can't help but like the amount of work that has
gone into Vista. For example, Vista automatically indexes everything on the hard
drive and lets users quickly search for files and applications. A resizable preview
panel reveals a thumbnail image of a file, and let's you scroll through its entirety
before opening it. Also impressive is Vista's use of metadata tags, which are
descriptive information about a file, such as the author and subject matter. The
tags allow users to slice and dice search results in a variety of ways and customize
how they sort categories of similar files. For example, growing digital music
and photo collections can be organized on-the-fly by date, a star-rating system
or personal tagging terms. Much of Microsoft's focus on Vista for consumers
has centred on solving digital-content overload and making the PC more fun to
use. And, of course, there are updated 3-D glossy and translucent graphics. For
business customers, Vista has tried to make IT departments happy with a more secure
OS that's easier to back up and lock down. Vista also simplifies how corporate
users adjust settings for presentations and find networks. Similarly, developers
of the Office 2007 suite of applications (Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, etc.)
have directed their efforts toward some of the peripheral programs, such as SharePoint,
to improve collaboration, workflow and document management for governance purposes. But
the big change everyone will notice in Office 2007 is what Microsoft calls the
"ribbon," which replaces the familiar drop-down menus and floating palettes.
The ribbon presents all the functions in buttons along the top of the screen,
organized in contextual tabs such as Table and Review. It will take some getting
used to, but it's supposed to put everything in plain sight and standardize the
functions across all programs. The idea is that everyone, not just the experts,
get more out of the applications. And you might. But there is no killer
feature that makes Office 2007 an essential purchase. "The decision to buy
new hardware is going to be more important for the consumer than the actual decision
to upgrade to Office 2007," says Haque. When it does come time to get a new
computer, you won't miss the old Windows or Office--but you won't have that choice
anyway. 180 View There has been so much in the press
about Vista that is was difficult to figure out which article to quote. We have
just completed our own review of the system, which will be published in CAmagazine
in the near future. We recommend Vista if you have enough horsepower to run it,
and your existing programs and devices will work. Microsoft does provide a free
downloadable program called Upgrade Advisor which will tell you which of the various
versions of Windows Vista is most appropriate and also whether you have any devices
or software that may be incompatible. Vista Reviews from PC Magazine
and PC World We have attached excerpts from 2 of the better articles
available about Microsofts new operating system. PC
Magazine November 30, 2006 - The first things you notice about
Windows Vista are the glitzy bells and whistles, but these aren't the essentials
that will woo businesses. Organizations, especially large ones, have always been
Microsoft's most important customers, and Vista is full of offerings aimed at
them
What's certain about working with Vista is that it's very different
from previous versions of Windows; it has perhaps the biggest interface changes
since Windows 95. It will require significant retraining of users and of IT personnel. Yes,
you can build a secure network and secure desktops with Windows XP if you work
at it and administer it properly. But with Vista, making your systems more secure
is a lot easier, even as you run into new issues in the process
The
most interesting new tool in Vista is Windows Meeting Space, which seems at first
glance like a version of Groove, the virtual office program Microsoft bought when
it hired its author, Ray Ozzie. WMS is a pale shadow of Groove and will pose no
market threat to it (Groove 2007 is currently in beta). Still, WMS will be worth
evaluating for many organizations
With WMS, you can set up a meeting
and invite others (up to ten participants) either through e-mail, by sharing an
invitation file, or by browsing and joining meetings on the local network. We
found setup very easy. In a meeting, you can chat, share documents, and share
desktop applications. Indeed, application sharing is the only apparent advantage
WMS has over an instant messaging program. Vista Home Basic users cannot start
a new meeting
Vista also comes with an integrated desktop search feature.
There were questions raised several times during Vista's development about what
level of system search the operating system should provide, and it does provide
less than what was originally planned. Nevertheless, desktop search is implemented
well
Vista will likely save your butt one day with its Previous Versions
feature, borrowed from Windows Server 2003. Vista automatically creates "shadow
copies" of file changes, reserving (by default) 15 percent of disk space
for this purpose. If you mess up a file and need access to an earlier version,
you can right-click on the file or folder and select Restore Previous Versions
We
agree with what seems to be the consensus among observers: Vista has many compelling
advantages over previous versions of Windows, especially in the area of security.
Security has been a focus for Microsoft over the last several years, as well one
of the most headline-grabbing of all computing problems, and the new features
in this area may cause many businesses to upgrade just to get them. Windows
Vista is a better business operating system, all things considered. For many organizations,
this release will prove to have been worth the long wait. But businesses need
to evaluate thoroughly, plan rigorously, and move carefully as they transition
from older versions to Vista. In many cases, this isn't going to happen overnight,
and, as always, up-front planning will make a very big difference. Expect a long
adoption cycle, especially since much business software will take some time to
work properly in Vista. But businesses should welcome this new OS and never look
back. PC
World November 22, 2006 Windows Vista is a clear winner.
It's beautiful, sports much-improved security, offers superb networking capabilities...and
maybe most of all, it's just plain fun to use. That's not to say it's perfect--far
from it. Some may view the new interface as little more than fluff or be turned
off by the intrusive User Account Control feature
. The Look The
moment Windows Vista starts, some of its biggest changes are in plain view: It
is distinctive and eye-catching. Colors are subtler and the overall look less
cartoonish than Windows XP's. Dare I say it's Mac-like? In fact, it is.
Microsoft has always stolen from the best. Key to a lot of what's new in Vista
is the much-anticipated Aero interface--but to use it, you'll need adequate hardware
and one of the pricier versions of the OS. Within Aero, screen windows maximize
and minimize with a kind of visual "swoosh." The - command for switching
between open windows now invokes Windows Flip, which displays thumbnails of open
windows. Flip 3D (-) ups the ante, stacking windows so that you can flip through
them like playing cards. Some may say this is mere eye candy that won't
affect your real productivity. Maybe so. But it makes life at the keyboard fun
again. And for my money, that's right up there with productivity. Two other
notable new interface elements are the Sidebar and Live Thumbnails. Hover your
mouse over a minimized window on the taskbar, and a thumbnail pops up with its
contents, plus the program and document name or Web site. I'm particularly
fond of the Sidebar gadgets, interactive applets that display information--RSS
feeds, stock tickers, clocks, weather, and so on. Vista ships with about a dozen
of them; there are more online. While similar to Google Desktop Gadgets or Yahoo
Widgets, they're actually more like the Mac's Gadgets in that they're built directly
into the operating system and so may use its underlying architecture. For example,
one gadget displays RSS news feeds you've subscribed to using Internet Explorer
7's RSS Reader
New, Annoying Virtual Nanny User Account Control
(UAC) has riled more Windows Vista testers than all other features combined. UAC
prompts you to type in a password or click OK before taking certain actions--for
example, turning the Windows Firewall on or off, adding or removing user accounts,
or even running some applications. You sometimes get a warning: A small shield
appears next to links or options that will summon the UAC prompt if clicked. What's
the point of this annoying virtual nanny? First, it protects against malware running
unchecked. If your PC gets infected and the malware attempts to perform a dangerous
action such as turning off your antivirus program or the firewall, UAC will stop
it cold. Second, UAC can protect you against yourself, keeping you from making
changes that could harm your computer. That's all well and good, but Microsoft
has gone overboard with this protection. Why should you get a UAC prompt when
you try to change Windows' font size, or your PC's name? Because of UAC, using
Vista can at times become a herky-jerky kind of experience, with so many annoying
pop-ups coming at you that you want to scream "Stop!" In fact,
you can stop the prompts by turning off UAC entirely. Go to Control Panel, User
Accounts and Family Safety, User Accounts, click the Turn User Account Control
on or off link, and you'll send that nanny into the virtual ether. Of course,
if you do turn off UAC, then you have no one but yourself to blame if a piece
of malware does get in and take over your system. Networking Up to now,
Microsoft had never done a stellar job of integrating networking capabilities
into Windows. Just try synchronizing Offline Folders in Windows XP, for example--I
dare you. Windows Vista, however, presents your network as a natural extension
of your PC. The OS helps you configure a network, share files, manage multiple
networks, and more--all with a minimum of fuss. Vista supports all the usual network
technologies, including ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. The new Network
and Sharing Center puts network tools and information right at hand. Click View
Full Map, for example, and you'll see a diagram showing all PCs and devices on
your network, including printers, switches, and gateways. Click or hover over
a device icon to get more details, such as IP and MAC addresses. Vista handles
wireless network connections deftly: Simply click the network icon in the system
tray, click Connect or disconnect, and you'll see a list of nearby wireless networks.
Hover your cursor over any one to see details such as Wi-Fi type (802.11b or g,
say) and security protocol, if any. Vista saves settings for networks you
use frequently so you can automatically connect to them when you're in range.
You can even specify which take precedence if more than one is available. Not
all networking features are hunky-dory. Windows Meeting Space is supposed to let
you hold virtual meetings over an ad-hoc network--but has a well-nigh worthless
chat module, no voice capabilities, and no whiteboard tools. Doesn't sound like
any virtual meeting I want to attend. The Sync Center, designed to help
you sync files and folders between networked PCs and devices, is a bit of a mess
as well. If you want to do anything other than perform basic syncs, you may throw
up your hands and walk away. 180 View We have read that the
research group Gartner claims some 58 percent of new PC shipments in 2007 will
include Windows Vista, and also estimate that Vista will be running on less than
10 percent of PCs in the installed base by the end of 2007. That figure is expected
to rise to 29 percent in 2008, 50 percent in 2009 and 67 percent by the end of
2010. The reason for the delayed acceptance is mostly because of the hardware
requirements. Check out http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvista/getready/capable.mspx
to see the hardware requirements and to see an analysis of the differences between
the 4 Vista editions (Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, and Ultimate). Just
Say Yes to Internet Explorer 7 October 19, 2006 from ComputerWorld
It's been a long time coming, but Internet Explorer 7 is here at
last. If you're dying to get your hands on the new browser, you can download it
right now. But otherwise, there's really no need -- IE7 will soon come knocking
on your door. In November, Microsoft plans to make IE7 an Automatic Update
to Windows XP. That means that if you have Automatic Updates configured to install
automatically, or to download automatically and then notify you about the download,
the new browser will download behind the scenes and then ask for your permission
to be installed. If you have Automatic Updates configured to notify you but not
download automatically, you'll see an Automatic Updates screen offering to download
and install IE7. And if you have Automatic Updates turned off, you'll get no notification
at all. When the new browser comes knocking, should you let it in? Oh, yes.
IE7 is a considerable improvement over IE6, and with new features such as tabbed
browsing, RSS support, improved security and an integrated search box, it's well
worth the upgrade... Google
Docs and Spreadsheets are here October 11, 2006 from Office Watch
Google has bundled their acquisition of Writely and their own Google
Spreadsheets into a single package known as Google Docs and Spreadsheets
With
this service you can create documents or worksheets online and save them either
in a private storage space on Googles servers or on your own computer. You
get the basic formatting options like bulleted lists, fonts plus sorting by columns
and Excel compatible formulas. The really big deal is that several people can
work on the same document or worksheet at the same time with edits showing
up in real time. You can also permit people read only access so they
can see a document or worksheet online but not change it. The document formats
supported are the current MS Office formats (.doc .xls etc) and also the OpenDoc
formats (.odt .ods etc). Interestingly you can also save in PDF format as well
as HTML web pages. The HTML option means you can create web pages via Google Docs
to be viewed as standard web pages. Blogs are also supported with special features
to let you write a blog then post it to your site..." Inside
Microsoft Windows Vista Release Candidate September 2, 2006 from
PC Magazine - "It's been a long time coming, but Windows Vista Release Candidate
1 is finally here. As Microsoft starts to collect feedback from a broad spectrum
of users in one of its largest test programs ever, the company will soon be in
a position to decide whether the product is solid enough to meet announced ship
dates of November for enterprise customers and January 2007 for consumers. Earlier
this week, I started using Vista build 5568, a version that Microsoft says should
be virtually indistinguishable from the actual RC1 code. Since recent Vista revisions
have been focusing on improving performance, compatibility, and stability rather
than adding features, there's not a lot to highlight that's truly new. Instead,
I've compiled a walkthrough of 100 screen shots recapping what Vista looks like
from top to bottom. The most pressing question for RC1 is whether it shows
that Vista is good enough to ship. In my experience so far, it's getting a lot
closer, but it's not quite there yet. Microsoft representatives acknowledge that
the term "Release Candidate" might be slightly confusing, as it implies
a non-zero probability that the code might be what actually goes into production-which
clearly isn't the case for RC1. With build 5568, I've encountered recurring
problems when resuming from sleep, anomalous network behavior, and some performance
issues. That said, for the most part, the experience is remarkably good-enough
so that I'm thinking I may finally be able to start using Vista as a production
platform. Most of the flaws I've encountered are minor nuisances rather than showstoppers. Some
of the improvements RC1 offers over beta 2 are substantial. Installation proceeds
much more quickly-about 30 minutes on a newly-formatted partition, versus an hour
or so in the past. My hardware devices have all been recognized during or immediately
after the installation process. (Microsoft claims to have dramatically improved
hardware support lately, particularly for wireless devices, printers, Serial ATA
controls, and Media Center tuners.) The UAC (User Account Control) security
feature has been tuned to be far less intrusive-it can no longer steal focus from
an active application, for example-and there's an easy way to turn it off if you
find it unbearable. RC1 also lets non-administrator users install ActiveX controls
approved by corporate IT. Bundled applications like Windows Media Player
11 that were flaky in earlier builds have so far proved solid. Of a few dozen
third-party software packages, only a couple have shown overt compatibility issues. Vista
now exhibits a level of interface polish and consistency that wasn't present in
earlier versions. In some cases, it seems like minor features whose capabilities
weren't quite solidified have simply been removed. On the whole, I've found
performance and stability in the builds leading to RC1 to be tolerable-and dramatically
better than beta 2-but not yet what I'd expect from a release-quality product.
Resuming a machine from sleep is especially slow, and I sometimes encounter cases
where the Windows shell lags. Although Vista doesn't explicitly include
a lot of the core features that Microsoft initially touted, from the WinFS file
system to the NGSCB (Next Generation Secure Computing Base) security infrastructure,
it nevertheless incorporates a substantial portion of their capabilities and is
clearly a step beyond Windows XP in many ways. But whether it's really ready to
ship in the next couple of months will depend on what the larger ecosystem of
PC software and hardware developers, system OEMs, enterprise customers, and consumers
has to say about its experiences with RC1." 180 View - Vista
is less about changing the user interface and functionality and more about improving
compatibility, stability, and performance. I have not heard any stats on whether
Microsoft has achieved its goals. Windows Boots on a Mac April
12, 2006 from InfoWorld - "On April 4, a date chosen because April Fools'
Day fell on a Saturday, Apple released a freely downloadable beta utility called
Boot Camp. Boot Camp has one astonishing, if not bizarre, purpose: To give Intel-based
Macs the capability of booting and running Windows XP. It doesnt surprise
me that Windows runs on Macs; that was inevitable, and when Boot Camp was released
open sourcers were within two or three device drivers of achieving that goal without
Apples help. Indeed, the stouthearted crew at onmac.net set up a cash kitty
to reward those who solved the problem of Macs inability to boot Windows.
Booting Windows XP is the problem that Boot Camp solves. It doesnt
run Windows and OS X side by side. It allows them to coexist on a Macs boot
drive so that a user can choose to reside in Cupertino or Redmond at startup.
To switch OSes, you have to shut down or reboot. This would be too much of a pain
if Apple hadnt automated the setup. Youll find the technical details
in my Enterprise Mac blog, but Apple crafted an ideal approach to dual-booting.
At the Worldwide Developers Conference 2005, where the Intel transition was
announced, the official company line regarding Windows on the Mac was trotted
out: Apple did nothing specifically to prevent running Windows, but Apple
will not support running Windows on Mac systems. Apple still wont
claim to support Windows on a Mac, hanging the beta tag and setting a self-destruct
timer on the Boot Camp software. However, Boot Camp will be integrated
into Leopard, the next major release of OS X, and interestingly, Boot Camps
time bomb is set to go off in fall of 2007. Come next fall, either that time limit
will be extended or Leopards release will make such an extension unnecessary.
In any case, Windows on the Mac will likely be supported the way Microsoft supports
Linux on Virtual Server: It starts out being something users do at their risk,
but when the vendor realizes Linux on Windows, or Windows on Macs, is moving sales,
grudging support is phased in. During a briefing, Boot Camps program
manager told me that Boot Camp was created to address two groups of prospective
Mac buyers: those who had one Windows application they absolutely couldnt
live without, and those who had trepidation about making a buying decision that
precluded running Windows. That latter issue is the I have one desk, Ill
have one PC objection thats dogged Apple from the start -- and to
which Apple has always responded, The Mac runs Office. To be able
to say, The Mac runs Windows, is a better convincer, and cheaper,
too, for those who already own Office for Windows. There are two other
groups whose needs are addressed by Boot Camp. Group Three comprises gamers, developers,
and enthusiast/power users who realize that Macs are the best-designed systems
on the market but who, on principle or by necessity, wont buy anything that
wont run the OS of their choice. And then theres Group Four: Mac users
who have talked Windows users into making the switch but cant follow through
on their promise to keep all of their converts data intact. Meet the poster
boy for Group Four. Ive been sitting on the iMac I have set aside for my
wife, who is a lifelong Windows user, since I received it. Boot Camp gets me off
the hook." For the article, click here. CPR
For Your Computer's Hard Drive January 22, 2006 from CBS News - "It
started out like any other day. Sit down at the desk, fire up the computer, and
get down to -- huh? "DISK READ ERROR. Press Ctrl+Alt+Del." Something
was seriously wrong with the computer, CBS Sunday Morning contributor David Pogue
recounts. Now, I'm not the first person on Earth to experience a total
hard drive meltdown. It happens to thousands of people, every day. It happened
to the computer manager for the Minnesota Twins, John Avenson. "It started
squealing like a pig. Unfortunately, once you hear that clicking noise, it's pretty
much done for," Avenson says. It happened to a writer for "The
Simpsons," Bill Oakley. "I couldn't begin to remember what was on there,
I just knew everything was on there," Oakley recalls. And it happened to
Gene Rupp, a consultant who designs industrial equipment on his computer at home.
"It said, 'Hard drive not found' and then I started listening to my computer
and it's like, I hear a little noise, it's not like a transmission going out on
a tractor or something," Rupp says. Of course, I'm not some amateur.
I'm a professional technology journalist. I have experience. I have tools. I have
-- exactly the same problem. I was desperate. And when you're desperate, there
is a last resort for people who absolutely, positively have to get their computer
files back. It's called a data-recovery company. It's a service as specialized
and high-tech as a hospital and almost as expensive. But they boast a 90 percent
success rate in recovering files from dead drives." For the rest of the article,
click here.
180
View - What's your excuse for not backing up? 10+ things you should
know about troubleshooting a slow PC
September 28, 2005 from TechRepublic
- "User complaints are minimal when new PCs are rolled out. They start up
quick, and programs seem to open in a snap. But over time, users begin to notice
that their system is slow or that it hangs up often. While the possibilities for
system slowdown are endless, I have identified 10 common troubleshooting areas
you should examine first before you suggest to management that it's time for an
upgrade." For the article, click here. Vista
(successor to Windows XP)
July 18, 2005 from MicrosoftWatch - "For
the past several years, Microsoft has been promising that Longhorn (now called
Vista) would deliver some substantial security, reliability and performance improvements.
But until the worldwide partner conference in Minneapolis in mid-July, company
officials had not quantified the benefits that Longhorn the version of
the Windows client operating system, due in 2006 would deliver...Stephan
told conference attendees that Longhorn will: - launch applications 15
percent faster than Windows XP does
- boot PCs 50 percent faster than they
boot currently and will allow PCs to resume from standby in two seconds
- allow
users to patch systems with 50 percent fewer reboots required. For the article,
click here.
July
22, 2005 from ZDNet News - "Longhorn's new name: Windows Vista". For
the article, click here. July
27, 2005 from PC Magazine - For a review of the Beta release of Vista, click here.
Podcasting July
14, 2005 from PROFITguide - "If you haven't already heard about podcasting,
or even if you have, get ready to hear a lot more in coming weeks and months.
It's white-hot, and is poised to become the next great business tool. An
amalgam of "iPod" and "broadcasting," podcasting allows anyone
to create their own "radio show" by posting MP3 audio files to the Net.
Listeners who subscribe to your show, usually for free, receive new episodes as
soon as they're released. These are loaded onto mobile devices such as an iPod,
another MP3 player or even a cellphone so subscribers can listen whenever and
wherever they'd like... Podcasting emerged from the world of blogging, and
while it's still largely the domain of geeks and early adopters, the buzz is spreading
exponentially. Googling "podcast"a word that didn't even exist
a year agonow generates more than 7.3 million results. Research firm Cambridge,
Mass.-based Forrester Research forecasts that 12.3 million U.S. households (with
more than 30 million people) will use an MP3 player to listen to podcasts by the
end of the decade. And Plano, Tex.-based The Diffusion Group, a research consultancy
on "the connected consumer," is even more bullish, predicting a U.S.
audience of 57 million people by 2010. What's more, Apple CEO Steve Jobs recently
announced that impending versions of iPod devices and iTunes music software will
build in the ability for users to search for, subscribe to and download podcasts.
Click here
for the article. July 28, 2005 from New York Times -"EVER since Steven
P. Jobs returned to Apple Computer in 1997 after a 12-year absence, his company
has thrived by executing the same essential formula over and over: Find an exciting
new technology whose complexity and cost keep it out of the average person's life.
Streamline it, mainstream it, strip away the geeky options. Take the credit. So
far, Apple has worked this kind of magic on digital video editing, wireless networking,
online music selling, R.S.S. feeds (a kind of Web site subscription) and other
technologies. Its latest attempt, however, will be music to an awful lot of ears.
With its release of the free iTunes 4.9 software for Mac and Windows, Apple has
just mainstreamed podcasting. A podcast, as anyone under 25 can tell you,
is an audio recording posted online, much like a short radio show. ("Podcasting"
is a pun on "broadcasting," implying, of course, that you listen to
it on your iPod or another music player.) The beauty of a podcast is that it's
free and you listen to it whenever you like. And there are more than 7,000 podcasts
"on the air" right now, on every conceivable topic. Their quantity and
variety already dwarf what you can find on regular radio... Overnight, iTunes
4.9 has already become the most popular podcast-management software on earth;
Apple says that within 48 hours of its release, Pod people had subscribed to more
than a million podcasts. Pockets of the populace may not enjoy the transformation
of podcasting into a commercial, pop-culture phenomenon, but it's too late now.
The people have spoken - or, rather, listened." For the article, click here. Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia Wikipedia is an encyclopedia written collaboratively
by its readers. The site is a Wiki, meaning that anyone, including you, can edit
almost any article. Wikipedia contains a huge amount of information on all sorts
of subjects ranging from politics, science, history, music, religion, pop culture,
and sports to everything and anything in between. Check it out by by clicking
here. Web site
search July 1, 2005 from InformationWeek - "You've got a Web site
and you want to let visitors search its contents, just like they can when they
visit the big-deal corporate sites. But you don't have a big-deal corporate budget.
Not to worry. Does free work for you? You can add a third-party search engine
to your site for a total cost of zero. The visitors who use it will see some ads,
but all you have to do is add some HTML code to your site, and wait for the search
provider to spider your site. I've used three search engines for my Web site that
have proven their worth, Atomz.com, PicoSearch, and FreeFind. I'd like to choose
a clear winner. But the contenders are so close in capabilities that I can't."
Click here
for the article. How Speech Recognition WorksAnd
Doesn't Work June 10, 2005 from
ExtremeTech - "Speech recognition has been built into Microsoft Office since
the XP version, offering the ability to talk to your computer and see the words
transcribed directly into documents. Dedicated products such as IBM ViaVoice and
Dragon NaturallySpeaking have been around for years, allowing full spoken control
of your machine. So given these alternatives, why do so many of us stick with
our keyboards? Some people don't use speech recognition because they
work in a quiet, shared office, but many more of us avoid it simply because we
don't think that it works well enough. The irony is that computers often fail
to understand spoken words for many of the same reasons that humans do. Imagine
sitting inside a noisy office next to a coworker slurping coffee, who may be from
another region, and may have a cold. There's probably way more than
you want to know about speech recognition in this article, but just in case, click
here
to get it and click here
to learn how to activate Windows XP Speech. Google
from space June 29, 2005
from Computer Business Review - "Users are presented with a view of the Earth,
and given the ability to zoom in to pretty much any location on the planet, with
the closest zoom sufficient to make out individual cars or boats, but not individual
people." Click here
for the article. Click here
for Google Earth. Microsoft set to open office via XML formats June
3, 2005 from Computer Business Review - "Microsoft has confirmed that
it will move to XML-based file formats as the default option for its most popular
Office applications in the next release of the Office suite, and that it has no
intention of adopting the OpenDocument format recently adopted as a standard by
Oasis. The company will begin using Microsoft Office Open XML Formats for
its Word, Excel, and PowerPoint applications, with the codename Office 12, which
is due for release in the second half of 2006. Microsoft will announce more details
of the formats, which are expected to be published under a royalty-free license
shortly before Office 12, over the next 12 months, beginning with its TechEd 2005
conference in Orlando, Florida next week. "They want much better data
integration capabilities," said Mike Pryke-Smith, Microsoft Office marketing
manager. "A good example of that is the relationship with SAP," he added,
citing Microsoft's recent joint development agreement with the enterprise software
giant to provide a direct and transparent link between SAP processes and Microsoft's
Office applications via a product known as Mendocino." Click here
for the article. What eBay Could Learn From Craigslist June
5, 2005 from New York Times - "These days, triple-digit annual growth rates
are rare among major Web sites. Meet that rarity: Craigslist. Exceptional, too,
is the ability to draw 10 million unique visitors each month without ever relying
on venture capital and equity markets. Or the ability to attain fourth place among
general-interest portals without ever spending a penny on marketing. Signal
accomplishments, to be sure, fit for boasting in an annual report. But Craigslist
is a privately held company that has no such reports, and no burning interest
in the competitive fray. It does far more shrugging than boasting. Its management
regards profits, which it has earned consistently since 1999, as merely the means
to remain in control of its own destiny. Free of debt, it can do as it wishes
to maximize what it calls its service mission without having to maximize profits.
This is good news for its customers - that is, community members - and bad news
for competitors whose shareholders are unlikely to regard community service as
their own companies' raison d'être. Until recently, Craigslist was
the overlooked underachiever from that fertile class of 1995 start-ups. Like eBay,
it began as a free community service that year, a little experiment in applying
technology to community-building, not profit-seeking. Craigslist initially provided
online listings of local events in the San Francisco Bay Area, the kind that could
be found in an alternative newspaper. Visitors were encouraged to contribute,
and they added the online equivalent of the mainstream newspaper's classified
section. Software handled e-mail forwarding. Unlike eBay, which is dedicated
to removing geographic obstacles to trading and defines "community"
along national boundaries, Craigslist thinks and acts locally, organizing listings
city by city for merchandise, jobs, real estate, personals, events, volunteer
opportunities and discussion forums. It has moved at its own idiosyncratic pace,
waiting five years after its start to add a second city, Boston. Today, it has
sites for 120 cities in 25 countries and serves up 2.4 billion pages a month."
Click here
for the article and here
for Craigslist Toronto. Google unveils satellite map feature
April
5, 2005 from CNN.com - "Online search engine leader Google Inc. has unveiled
a new feature that will enable its users to zoom in on homes and businesses using
satellite images, an advance that may raise privacy concerns." Click
here for Google Maps. Thanks
to Mark Canes, President of Blue Link for telling me about this. Ever
wonder what all of those mysteriously-named Windows "processes" are
doing? April 4, 2005 from SearchEngineWatch
- "Control-ALT-Delete used to perform a very simple, but (sadly) vital
function: rebooting your Windows computer. In recent versions of Windows, pressing
Control-ALT-Delete now brings up the Windows Task Manager, which offers alternatives
to handling misbehaving software without the brute force approach of a hard reboot. The
Task Manager has four views: Applications, Processes, Performance and Networking.
The Applications view shows you currently running programs. Use the "End
Task" button on this view to kill a program that isn't working as expectedor
to get rid of a "mousetrapped" browser that's repeatedly displaying
an offensive web site. The Performance and Networking views offer interesting
statistics, but aren't really useful unless you're a serious Windows geek. It's
the Processes view that offers the most insight into what's going on with your
computer. Unfortunately, it also displays information in maddeningly cryptic fashion,
showing "Image Name," "User Name," "CPU" and "Usage"
details. Two of these offer the most meaningful information: Image Name is the
name of a process that's currently running in memory, and CPU shows you how much
capacity of your computer's central processing unit is being consumed by the process.
If your computer is sluggish, the processes view will tell you which process is
hogging your system resources. Use the "End Process" button to kill
it. Be careful, thoughkilling some processes could lock up your computer
and potentially result in loss of data. Problem is, it's almost impossible
to determine what most processes are from their image names. I'm convinced that
the people who write Windows processes are highly trained in the art of obfuscation.
Some of the more common processes include lsass.exe, alg.exe, svchost.exe, csrss.exe
and smss.exe. And there's no "properties" information to tell you anything
about what these things are doing or how they got started in the first place. Enter
ProcessLibrary.com.
This searchable database makes it easy to find information about even the most
obscure process running on your computer... Other sources for this type of information
include Sysinfo.org's Startup Applications List and Task List Programs from Answers
That Work. Google's specialized Microsoft search is also another great resource
for finding information about startup processes, from these sites and many others.
Click
here for the article. Thanks
to Mark Canes, President of Blue Link for telling me about this. Microsoft
in the groove March 10, 2005 from eWeek - "Microsoft Corp.
Thursday announced it will acquire collaboration software firm Groove Networks
Inc. Groove, which makes P2P (peer-to-peer) software that allows geographically
dispersed workers to collaborate over the Internet, was founded by Ray Ozzie,
creator of Lotus Notes. Ozzie will join Microsoft as a chief technology officer
and report to Bill Gates, Microsoft's founder and chief software architect."
For the article, click here. January
4, 2005 from InfoWorld - "InfoWorld Selects Groove Virtual Office As Team
Collaboration "Technology of the Year" For Second Consecutive Year...Thousands
of companies, public sector organizations and small businesses use Groove Virtual
Office to allow virtual teams to work together over a network as if they were
in the same physical location. As an integrated suite, Groove Virtual Office lets
teams contextually share files, manage projects and coordinate business processes
within secure, virtual workspaces synchronized across all team members' PCs. The
software's unique decentralized architecture enables teams to work online, offline
and across firewalls -- in real-time and independently -- while freeing IT departments
from costly server and network infrastructure requirements." "With
SharePoint, our (Microsoft) server-based products, you can collaborate across
corporate boundaries, but it does require some administration and setup that is
a little more than we would like," Steven Sinofsky, a senior vice president
of Microsoft's Office team, told eWEEK.com. "Groove allows us to offer an
ad hoc, peer-to-peer workspace within our offerings, without setting up additional
infrastructure." For the article, click here. So
- If you can't beat them, buy them. The search for search supremacy March
22, 2005 from Forbes - "This week's $1.8 billion acquisition of Ask Jeeves
by InterActiveCorp (IAC) confirms what has been obvious for a few years: The search
business is where it's at. The vastness of the Internet makes powerful search
engines necessary; without them, how would we ever find anything? Google, one
of the pioneers of the concept of paid search, where advertisers pay to place
their links on particular results pages. Microsoft, having slept through yet another
Internet evolution, has now jumped into the search business with both feet. According
to data from Nielsen/NetRatings, Google accounted for 47.1% of total searches
in January, giving it the No. 1 spot. The next most popular search, Yahoo!, has
less than half that share, at 21.2%, followed by MSN with 12.8%, Time Warner's
AOL with 4.7% and Netscape with 1.8%. Ask Jeeves is tied with Netscape with a
1.8% share of total searches. Despite its small market share, analysts are generally
in agreement that IAC will benefit from Ask Jeeves by promoting its many e-commerce
businesses on main search pages and results pages. However, to be truly successful,
IAC will need to drive search revenue from outside sources. Click here
for the article although there's not much else more to it. Skype CEO
takes on telcos March 9 , 2005 from eWeek - "Niklas Zennström,
CEO and co-founder of Skype Technologies SA, stopped cold the chatter at CeBIT's
Technology Industry Summit by announcing that the company that provides free phone
calls over the Internet now has 29 million users and is currently signing up new
users at the rate of 155,000 per day. "Free is good. Free service is
very, very good. We think you cannot charge for phone calls," Zennström
said. He might have been wearing pinstripes and a button-down shirt, but he claimed
that the current and future strategy of Skype will knock the financial legs off
of any company that still thinks it can make money by charging for phone calls.
That list, of course, includes just about every major telecom company in the world."
Click here
for the article. You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention February
10, 2005 from The New York Times - "First, a confession. Since starting to
write this article two hours ago, I have left my chair only once. But I have not
been entirely present, either. Each time I have encountered a thorny sentence
construction or a tough transition, I have heard the siren call of distraction.
Shouldn't I fiddle with my Netflix queue, perhaps, or click on the weekend weather
forecast? And there must be a friend having a birthday who would love to receive
an e-card right now. I have checked two e-mail accounts at least a dozen times
each, and read eight messages. Only two were relevant to my task, but I responded
right away to all of them. My sole act of self-discipline: both instant messaging
accounts are turned off. For now. This sorry litany is made only slightly less
depressing when I remind myself that I have plenty of company." Including
me. The article discusses how email could be prioritized and that we would be
alerted only if an important message arrived. I doubt that will be enough. Maybe
the promise of so much better productivity has not happened because of all the
distractions one click away. Click here
for the article which requires free registration. The Nitty-Gritty of
Going Paperless From Accounting
Today - "The savings of going
paperless are tempting, but make no mistake: Going paperless is a huge undertaking.
"It's one of the most involved IT projects that any firm will ever take on,"
says Jim Bourke, partner with the Red Bank, N.J., firm WithumSmith+Brown. "To
go 'paperless' involves complete buy-in from the firm management team. If you
don't get complete partner buy-in, the project will be very difficult, if not
impossible!" The devil
is in the details of going paperless. "Nothing ruins a good scanner faster
than a staple running over the scanning glass!" says Maga. "Not
only do you need to set policies to stop the use of staples and paper clips for
documents to be scanned, but you need to have a file-scan-preparation process,
whereby a clerical person reviews paper documents prior to scanning for these
items, and identifies other potential problems, such as odd-sized documents, tape,
sticky notes, and the like that could slow the scanning process." "Scanning
can become a choke point," Wiley warns, "and don't rely on advertised
Page per Minute scan speeds. Test these in realistic scenarios to identify real
life sustained scan rates. Allow for mandatory peak periods." Click
here for the article. Google:
How Much Is Too Much? November
5, 2004 from Business Week - "Back in August, as Google raced toward its
initial public offering, many would-be investors felt its executives were a bit
too cocksure. After the search-engine giant first predicted it would fetch between
$108 and $135 per share, Wall Street dismissed the offering as far too expensive,
forcing Google (GOOG ) to drop its asking price to $85. Today investors who passed
on the stock at $85, or even $135, are no doubt kicking themselves. Less than
three months after its IPO, Google's stock has rocketed to $187 per share -- 120%
above its asking price and 52% above the midpoint of its first, seemingly inane
prediction..." Click
here for the article. Google
Desktop Search Launched October
14, 2004 from SearchEngineWatch - "Google has released a new Google Desktop
Search tool today that allows people to scan their computers for information in
the same way they use Google to search the web. In particular, the tool indexes
the full text of: Email within Outlook or Outlook Express (notes, contacts, journal
and to do list items are not included, nor are emails in the Deleted Items folder)
Microsoft Word, Excel & PowerPoint files AOL Instant Messenger chats Web pages
viewed online in Internet Explorer or any HTML file saved to your computer Plain
text files..." Click
here for the article October 14, 2004 from O'Reilly Network -
"The Google Desktop is your own private little Google server. It sits in
the background, slogging through your files and folders, indexing your incoming
and outgoing email messages, listening in on your instant messenger chats, and
browsing the Web right along with you. Just about anything you see and summarily
forget, the Google Desktop sees and memorizes for you. And it operates in real
time. Beyond the initial sweep, that is. When you first install Google Desktop,
it makes use of any idle time to meander your filesystem, email application, instant
messages, and browser cache. Imbued with a sense of politeness, the indexer shouldn't
interfere at all with your use of your computer; it only springs into action when
you step away, take a phonecall, or dose off for 30 seconds or more. Pick up the
mouse or touch the keyboard, and the Google Desktop scuttles off into the corner,
waiting patiently for its next opportunity to look around." Click
here for the article Click here
to download Google Desktop. But caution is advised - Google Desktop is a Beta
release, which means that you could encounter problems. If you could really use
this product now, try it. If not, we suggest you wait for a while. New
Google Search Tool Poses Security Risk October
19, 2004 from Information Week - "If you're the computer's only user, the
software is helpful "as a photographic memory of everything you've seen on the
computer," said Marissa Mayer, director of consumer Web products at Google Inc.
The giant index remains on the computer and isn't shared with Google. The company
can't access it remotely even if it gets a subpoena ordering it to do so, Mayer
said. Where the privacy and security concerns arise is when the computer is shared.
Type in "hotmail.com" and you'll get copies, or stored caches, of messages that
previous users have seen. Enter an e-mail address and you can read all the messages
sent to and from that address. Type "password" and get password reminders that
were sent back via e-mail..." Click
here for the article. Google
Toolbar Features Google
Toolbar has been available for a couple of years, and keeps getting better. You
may not realize that there are many useful features available in Google's free
toolbar including. - Search site: for those sites that don't
already provide a way to search their site for a keyword
- PageRank: PageRank
is the importance Google assigns to a web page. Microsoft has a 10 out of 10.
ACCPAC has a 6 out of 10. It helps to have higher ranked sites linked back to
your site
- Backward Links: enables you to see which pages link to the current
page
- Pop-up Blocker: Prevents most pop-up ads from being displayed by
your browser
- AutoFill: Eliminates the need to type your personal information
into web forms
Click
here for more about Google Toolbar features and here
to download Google Toolbar. Microsoft
starts its run at Google November
10, 2004 from Information Week - "Microsoft will push its homegrown search
software into beta tests Thursday, its first real move against Google, sources
reported early Wednesday. At the moment, Microsoft's MSN Web portal uses Yahoo's
search engine. Microsoft has promised that its search engine would have internally
developed algorithms and an index built by its own spiders and that it would be
live this year. Twice this year it has shown working versions on its Sandbox site,
where visitors can test new technologies. Microsoft will be entering a field packed
with extraordinary competition. "Microsoft's biggest challenge is gaining mind
share," said Gary Price with SearchEngineWatch.com. "Google is so damn good at
building and keeping mind share that Microsoft's technology could be wonderful
and it'll still have a challenge getting people to look at it..." Click
here for the article. Windows vs Linux September
2, 2003 from eWeek - "On the heels of several Microsoft-sponsored studies
evaluating the total cost of ownership (TCO) of Windows vs. Linux, The Yankee
Group has performed its own independent research on the same topic. And the findings
are somewhat similar: Linux provides smaller companies with customized vertical
applications or who have no legacy networks with better TCO than Windows. But
for the vast majority of customers — and especially those that are already Windows
shops — Windows still offers better TCO value, according to the Yankee/Sunbelt
Software study". For the article, click
here. The Windows Patch - What You Need to Know Feb
11, 2004 from PC Magazine, "On Tuesday February 10th, Microsoft released
three new security updates to patch new vulnerabilities, one of which is catching
a lot of attention. Security Update MS04-007 is rated as critical because it has
the potential to leave a user of Windows NT, 2000, XP or 2003 Server open to an
attack that could result in remote code execution. The vulnerability has no workarounds,
and is being very strongly recommended by Microsoft and security organizations."
If you're like me, you don't have a lot of time to spend on upgrading software
and you worry that the change will slow your machine down to a crawl. But this
time, I guess you better do it. Click
here for the article. A Review of Microsoft Office 2003 published
in the January-February edition of CAmagazine A few months ago Microsoft
launched the Microsoft Office System, which includes Word 2003, Excel 2003, Outlook
2003, PowerPoint 2003, Access 2003 and Publisher 2003. Some people don’t use all
the features in their existing Office suite. So how can Microsoft compel you to
upgrade when you already have more features than you can handle? For the article,
click
here. Webinars January 2004, Accounting Technology -
The article describes the rapid popularity of webinars, and identifies their benefits
and some of the leading products. One of the products is from Microsoft that purchased
Placeware in 2003 and repackaged it as Live Meeting. "Live Meeting allows
customers to attend a meeting on the Internet, and actively participate. A big
draw is the application-sharing feature, which allows customers to share their
Windows-based applications with other people in the meeting. There is no need
to install servers in order to share content and applications."... "Also
popular is the San Jose, Calif.-based WebEx Communications, which holds nearly
64 percent of the market share in online meetings and Web conferencing services.
WebEx offers a suite of online meetings, including the WebEx Meeting". For
the article, click
here. Videoconferencing: Look Again December 9, 2003,
PC Magazine- "Using the Internet for videoconferencing isn't a new concept;
companies have tried for years to market such applications. But videoconferencing
applications from five years ago proved too difficult to set up for mainstream
use, and they tended to work badly. These programs were simply more trouble than
they were worth. Meanwhile, high-end enterprise solutions began to appear from
companies like Polycom, delivering high quality for larger conferencing needs
but requiring very expensive specialized hardware and sophisticated setups. Since
then, software has improved; systems are more powerful, and broadband connections
are more prevalent. And now videoconferencing software deserves a second look
from the people who dismissed it early on." For this article, click
here. Microsoft Office 2003 launch October 21, 2003,
E-Business News - On October 21 - "Citing more than 400 million global users,
Gates called Office the greatest productivity tool on the planet. The next frontier,
he said, will be driven by collaboration, enabled through XML and Web services...New
Office applications include OneNote, which allows writing and drawing to tablet
PCs and multimedia content assembly, and InfoPath, Microsoft's forms-centric application
that allows users to author, brand and manage forms and also model and create
workflows." For this article, click
here. For a more detailed article from PC World - "Microsoft's
new release boasts a brighter Outlook, potent workgroup tools, and a few surprises..."
For this article, click
here. Microsoft launches voice command October 29, 2003,
PC World - This software lets you control your PDAs and cell phones just by talking.
If you are guilty of using your PDA while driving, you need this or the equivalent.
For the article, click
here. The Urban WiFi Crash of 2004 October 21, 2003,
Aberdeen Group - "Aberdeen predicts a massive wireless traffic jam in urban
and suburban areas by 2004...In an urban environment, the confluence of dense
living (e.g., apartment houses) and the ubiquity of WiFi LAN technology have reached
saturation in some places, and this condition will spread as more home WLANs are
built. When multiple access points are competing for your laptop’s attention,
the radio interference causes the laptop to drop its Internet connection and ask
you, the humble user, to reconnect. When this happens every few seconds — a scenario
we are experiencing now with brand-name equipment — the end of the WiFi world
as we know it is imminent." For the article, click
here. Unwire Your Home October 2003 from PC Magazine
- "Fifty-six percent of PC Magazine readers have a home network, with an
average of 3.3 computers per household, according to a recent survey of 13,000
subscribers. Of those home networks, 48 percent are wireless." If you
have the time to install a wireless network at home yourself, this article should
help. For more, click
here. Best Practices in Expense Management Automation
January 30, 2003 — Aberdeen Group, has released a new research report, Best Practices
in Expense Management Automation (EMA), documenting the latest findings in its
continued research of total cost management technologies. The report contains
expense management market information and analysis of the business challenges,
tips for implementation success, and lessons learned from deployments. "Aberdeen
research has shown that automating the reimbursement of T&E expenditures —
e.g., airfare, hotel accommodations, car rentals, meals, and incidentals — can
produce considerable quantifiable savings in both time and process costs. For
example, companies using EMA solutions to address T&E expense reimbursement
have shortened reimbursement cycles, reduced administrative costs, and enhanced
responsiveness to employees." For a link to the article, click
here. Don't want companies that you visit on the web to monitor
your on-line activity? Ad-aware is a free multi spyware removal utility
that scans your memory, registry and hard drives for known spyware components
and lets you remove them safely. Ad-aware won the best freeware software of the
year in 2002 from PC World. For a link to the PC World article, click
here. Losing your memory? PC World suggests a few free
memory-enhancement alternatives in their January 2003 edition. The article also
contains tips for improving hard drives, CD-R and CD-RW options, monitors, network
connections... For a link to this PC World article, click
here. You use Outlook and haven't archived or deleted your messages
for a long time Outlook stores all of its data in a file called outlook.pst.
When this file gets very large (2 gigabytes), it can become unstable or unusable.
Click
here for an irreverent article on the topic from Woody's watch,
here for Microsoft's help and
here for some advice from PC Magazine. A free and very fast image
viewer and editor that supports all major graphic formats IrfanView
is a fast, simple image viewer and editor that supports all major graphic formats,
including BMP, DIB, JPEG, GIF, animated GIF, PNG, PCX, multipage TIFF, TGA, and
more. Click
here to access ZDNet Downloads for IrfanView. Wordperfect gets new
life from Dell and Hewlett Packard According to the New York times,
"Just as WordPerfect, the once-popular word processing software, was at risk
of slipping from the computer world's consciousness, it is set to appear on millions
of new screens." Click
here for this article. Paste into Microsoft Word without changing
the text format If you're like me, you're frequently copying and pasting
into Microsoft Word. Does the text you copy and paste retain the format from the
source document? Click
here for a tip from PC Magazine. Would you like a better calculator
for your computer with a tape for review and correction? TapeCalc
2 is a practical desktop calculator with a "smart" tape that records
your calculations and lets you correct any errors. Its built-in unit-conversion
feature provides automatic conversion between dozens of different units of measurement.
Click
here for a TapeCalc 2 - free from PC Magazine. Need to make room
in your warehouse, storage area or home? Want to avoid costly storage, trucking
and landfill dumping costs? Want to donate your old stuff and get a tax receipt
from Stuff Canada? Stuff Canada (Supporting Today’s Underprivileged
For the Future) will put your old shoes, clothes, computers, office furniture,
toiletries, appliances... in the hands of charities who need them. You make a
difference and you could get a tax receipt. Click
here for the web site of Stuff Canada. Don’t want to use your old
PC as a boat anchor? There are alternatives. PC Magazine just released
this article that will give you some ideas. Click
here for more. No idea how to stop certain
programs from loading automatically? There are utilities that will
identify which programs are being loaded automatically and will allow you to easily
disable these programs. StartUp Manager is one tool that can be found on a web
site that contains “Downright Useful Downloads”. Click
here for this web site. Just want to print a few business cards?
There are inexpensive programs that make it easy to print a few business
cards at a time. It’s unlikely that the home grown cards will be as good as you
would get from your printer, but you may find that it’s all you need. RKS Software
has developed a program called Visual Business Cards. Click
here for a link to RKS Software. Where has all the disk space gone?
(Long time passing…) It would be useful if Windows explorer would show
where all the space has gone. There are utilities that will show you graphically
which directories and what files are the space hogs. One utility can be found
by clicking here. Purchasing
a new computer with Windows XP? Beware of new PC's or laptops loaded with
Windows XP Home Edition - they may not connect to your network Click
here for more. Have you ever had a problem loading Windows because
of a missing or damaged file? Some computer manufacturers sell you
Windows but don’t give you the tools to repair the damaged file without starting
all over again. Click
here for more. |