Posted on 12/31/2010 9:23:49 PM PST by iowamark
Your gadgets and computers, your software and sites they are not working as well as they should. You need to make some tweaks.
But the tech industry has given you the impression that making adjustments is difficult and time-consuming. It is not.
And so below are 10 things to do to improve your technological life. They are easy and (mostly) free. Altogether, they should take about two hours; one involves calling your cable or phone company, so that figure is elastic. If you do them, those two hours will pay off handsomely in both increased free time and diminished anxiety and frustration. You can do it.
GET A SMARTPHONE Why: Because having immediate access to your e-mail, photos, calendars and address books, not to mention vast swaths of the Internet, makes life a little easier.
How: This does not have to be complicated. Upgrade your phone with your existing carrier; later, when you are an advanced beginner, you can start weighing the pluses and minuses of your carrier versus another. Using AT&T? Get a refurbished iPhone 3GS for $29. Verizon? Depending on whats announced next week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, get its version of the iPhone, or a refurbished Droid Incredible for $100. Sprint? Either the LG Optimus S or the Samsung Transform are decent Android phones that cost $50. T-Mobile users can get the free LG Optimus T.
STOP USING INTERNET EXPLORER...
UPLOAD YOUR PHOTOS TO THE CLOUD...
GET MUSIC OFF YOUR COMPUTER...
BACK UP YOUR DATA...
SET UP A FREE FILE-SHARING SERVICE Why: Because while e-mailing yourself files is a perfectly decent workaround, there are easier, more elegant ways to move files around and they do not cost anything, either...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
I always doubt the Times; but this looks thought-out.
:-)
Everyone is overlooking the Thunderbolt. I have had 2 Droids by them and will sleep in the parking lot if they release this. Screw the iLame..err...iPhone.
Ping for later.
“Drop Box” certainly looks interesting. Does anyone have any comments about it or similar online services?
bookmark
Drop Box takes a lot of maintenance. Free, but up to you to keep it up to date.
If the topic doesn't have a political angle yet, I usually find their science writers to be very good. Their reliability is like Wikipedia is, it's OK if the topic is aploitical. Happy New Year!
I’m with ya’!
Happy New Year!!!
:-)
bookmark
Oh My - No Thanks Skynet!!
Decent enough article; its tough to work in liberal bias when conveying the existence of various Web 2.0 technologies and processes to an uninformed audience.
That said, the recommendation of installing antivirus apps on a Mac is absurd for a variety of reasons, but particularly absurd in an article clearly written for Windows users.
Huh? Dropbox requires little to no maintenance. You drag files into a folder to upload to Dropbox, and you drag files out of a folder (or simply delete them in the folder) to remove them from Dropboxs servers. Application updates are relatively rare, and your Dropbox folder only becomes as cluttered as you allow.
“GET A SMARTPHONE Why: Because having immediate access to your e-mail, photos, ca...”
GET A SMARTPHONE, then move your household and begin living in a semi-urban area that has the right number “G-coverage” so that you can actually use said smartphone?
Sounds like it is a convenient way to share files w/out the hassle of emailing them. Especially larger files.
Bookmark!
The Amish have it figured out.
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