iOS 5 Lets You Cut the Cord – Maybe
By Joe Puckett, director of recruiting and training at PC Helps
The Rave:
One of the ongoing frustrations with the iPad has been that, for a mobile device, it has been extremely dependent on being attached to a traditional computer through a wire. The most frustrating evidence of this was that there was no way to do the initial set up on an iPad except through a wired connection to a computer running iTunes. Quite time consuming if you are provisioning dozens of iPads. Day-to-day synchronizations, updates and imports were also wire-centric.
That all changes with iOS 5. Wireless activation and iTunes Wi-Fi sync go a long way towards making an otherwise delightful device capable of going it alone.
Part 2 in the series: Cutting the Cord with iOS 5.
The Rant:
Today’s forecast — cloudy. Tomorrow’s forecast — even cloudier. Google wants your data in their cloud. Amazon wants your data in their cloud. Microsoft wants your data in their cloud. With iOS 5, Apple makes an offer of putting your data in their cloud that you have to actively refuse if you don’t want it there. You want to back up the data on all these iPads, don’t you? Well, then, just accept the default of backing up through iCloud and all your problems melt away. What? Read more…
Joe Puckett iOS 5 Rants & Raves, iPad, Rants & Raves Amazon, Apple, cloud, Google, iCloud, Microsoft, security
As someone who works in tech support, I am always the go-to person when family or friends need computer help. I’ve thought about changing my Gmail signature to this:
It was a 20-slide beast of pasted-in Word tables, slapdash formatting, and more than a dozen randomly customized slide masters. She was frustrated.
“If you get an alarmist virus warning message, don’t click anywhere. Seriously, DON’T CLICK ANYWHERE AT ALL. Instead, hit Control+Alt+Delete on your keyboard, select the Task Manager, Applications tab, and force quit the Internet Explorer or Firefox browser application. Restart your computer, tap F8 repeatedly when you see the Windows splash screen, choose System Restore, and select Last Known Good Configuration. If you’re lucky it will work.” Read more…
Jenny Sweeney How To, PowerPoint, Worker Productivity Gigaom, Gmail, Google, virus
This week’s batch of stories deals with the good, the bad and the ugly. The good news is that the decline in tech spending may be history. The bad and the ugly: Google’s customer service. Read on…
The Good: Forrester says the Tech Spending Downturn is Over — Huzzah!
Support requests can be sent only through e-mail, to which Google can take up to 48 hours to respond. Yes, two days.
Computerworld magazine reports that the tech spending downturn is over, according to a report released by Forrester. The research firm predicts that IT spending in the United States will increase by 6.6 percent in 2010, after falling 8.2 percent last year.
Even if Forrester’s predictions are correct, it will not necessarily mean a full recovery, according to Computerworld. Spending for 2010 will still be less than in 2007 and 2008. What’s more, the mag warns of the possibility of a double-dip recession – that is, a growth spurt, followed by another decrease of 3 percent to 4 percent. Cross your fingers.
The Bad and the Ugly: Lessons in Customer Service from Google Read more…
Jenny Sweeney This Week in Tech News CNN, computerworld, Google, InformationWeek, Nexus One
If someone asked you explain exactly what a computer mouse is, what would you say? A “pointing device”? But how does it actually point? With infrared sensors, of course. But what is “infrared”?
Not everyone knows what a mouse is, or what a gigabyte is, or how the Internet works.
To people who have used computers since the 1990s, this is an unnecessary dialogue. Doesn’t everyone know what a mouse is?
No, not everyone does. Nor does everyone know what a gigabyte is, or how the Internet works, or what a virus does, or the difference between Office 2003 and Office 2007. It’s called the digital divide, and it’s still an issue.
Granted, the digital divide really isn’t an issue in most office environments — you can expect your colleagues to have experience with computing and the Internet. But the fact that it still exists, even when computers are so inexpensive and ubiquitous, should remind us that we are not all at the same level, and it’s not always for lack of interest or aptitude. Read more…
Jenny Sweeney Computer Literacy Bing, CAPTCHA, digital divide, Google, Greater Philadelphia Cares, lingo, Microsoft, Office 2003, Office 2007, spam, Yahoo
The tech world’s knickers have been in a bunch these past few weeks. While Mozilla (makers of the Firefox browser) and Google (makers of everything else) are sniping at each other over Google’s new Chrome plug-in, the anti-Microsoft camp is warning of the dangers of the Ribbon. There is an upside: Out of all that griping we have two new tech terms (new to us, at least). Read and enjoy.
One reader asked Baker if she was “jealous much?” Another comment accused her organization of hypocrisy.
Ribbonize: (verb, derogatory) To remove universally familiar software menus and put in newfangled, Microsofty ribbons.
On Sept. 22, Computerworld magazine ran a piece titled “Mozilla plans to ‘ribbonize’ Firefox.” A week later, the magazine ran another piece, this one with the headline “Mozilla denies it will ‘ribbonize’ Firefox.”
What gives? Read more…
Jenny Sweeney Tech Babble computerworld, Google, Microsoft, Mozilla, the Ribbon
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