Thursday, December 29, 2011

#205 - 2011 Tech review

As the year 2011 ends, I thought I would look back at the year in technology and the significant items that occurred.


For us at PCSS, the biggest technology change was the addition of our Asus Transformer Tablet PC. It only took a few weeks and we were convinced that tablets are the wave of the future. Other then heavy duty spreadsheets and word processing, you can do it all AND more on a tablet. We use ours for Weather, Internet, Stock market info, email, games and reading books. The latter being the biggest change in our life. We download e-books from our library and read them on the tablet. The format of the tablet - 10" size with back lit color screen - makes it ideal for book reading. Also the use of touchscreen also has changed how we do things. When I get on one of my notebook PCs, I have to stop myself from touching the screen. Goodbye mice and touch pads! The Kindle Fire and new Nook from Barnes & Noble are too small for my eyes, but they sold a ton of them this past holiday season!


Microsoft actually almost led a technology with the advent of Office 365 - the cloud based version of Office. Well almost is giving them something since Google introduced Google Docs several YEARS ago. The problem with Google Docs is simple. Its not Office! We have all been trained to use Word, Excel and PowerPoint to an extent that anything else just won't work in the business world. We had several clients change over to Office 365. Our warning to them was to have backup Office on their PC. And sure enough Microsoft had SIGNIFICANT outages of the Office 365 product after introduction. Start up problems I'm sure. The US still isn't totally covered by the Internet so you can't have a completely cloud based product, yet. Its coming though.


The big cell phone providers introduced the 4G network. Although we don't have it yet in Covington (coming soon!) we did try it out in the BIG cities and the speed is significantly better. I'm hoping when my cell contract runs out in 2012 that 4G will be more available. Faster is usually better when we are talking Internet. With my use of the new tablet, I don't use my phone for much Internet. Just email and some basic sites. Ideally for me would be a 4G powered tablet (android!) and a phone that just does email, calendar and calls.


The tragedies in Japan and Thailand had significant impact on technology availability. It makes us much more aware of the global nature of technology manufacturing. I wonder if any of the big technology companies will bring back manufacturing to the US to ensure a safer product channel? Right now hard drives are in very short supply and many laptops are getting that way. Solid State drives were not affected by the Asian disasters, but their prices are still too high to be put in all laptops. Apple is putting them in many of their smaller laptops.


The passing of Steve Jobs certainly had much of the press looking back at a remarkable career. If I were giving Steve a totem animal it would be the Phoenix. He resurrected Apple 3 times and that is amazing.


Google tried to get in the social network business with Google+. We joined but don't understand the interface and there just aren't enough people on it to get traction. Facebook rules and everyone else will fail in that area. Of course there were changes to Facebook that made all the users mad. The latest Timeline change will go forth in 2012. Let the social network whining begin!


We look forward to great things in 2012. One that won't be so great is Windows 8. Mark it down as another Microsoft problem child. Also coming out is the new Android operating system "Ice Cream". It has the potential to keep the Android (read that Google) system on top and beat back any Microsoft chance to get into the phone/tablet business. Have a very Happy New Year friends!

Saturday, December 3, 2011

#204 Holiday Gadgets

So what are the hot gadgets this holiday season?

Tablet PCs are very hot. iPads and Android talblets are in short supply and selling well. Inexpensive (less then $70) digital cameras are also hot. I have some customers that buy an cheap camera and just leave it in their car to have just in case. Flat screen TVs are very hot. The price of LCD, Plasma and LED TVs have come down and are available everywhere from Kmart to Walmart to any appliance store.

How about the Spynet Laser Trip wire? For $39 you can protect an area just like in the movies. Anyone that crosses the invisible laser light sets off an alarm. Pets will drive you crazy with this one, but kids love it "protecting" their rooms.
Want to know where your kid or pet goes? Garmin has the GTU 10 tracker. Just attach it to your kid or pet and you can go online and follow them around in real time or at your leisure.

Digital storage is also Big. We have 8GB flash Drives for $10 (a great stocking stuffer). External Hard drives to back up everything were hot, but are no longer available due to the Thailand flooding of most major hard drive makers. Solid State drives are now under $100 for 64GB sizes. These have no moving parts and are great for laptop replacement hard drives.

Last the ereader craze has been raised to a high level with the latest kindle and nooks. They are small (7" screen) but you really do get a lot for the cost. Just make sure you are getting complete Internet access with the ereader.


Wireless printers that let you print from anywhere in the house and from anything (phone, tablet, laptop) are also a very nice gift. You can also print to these printers from anywhere in the world with the e-print feature (HP exclusive).


Need help this Christmas? Just drop us a line for suggestions!

Sunday, November 13, 2011

#203 - Scams, Phishing and Internet Safety

We just heard from an acquaintence how their mother was scammed out of $8,500.00. It was a classic "Gammy Scam". The villian called grandma and posed as a beloved grandson. They say they are stranded/incarcerated in Canada or Mexico. Please don't tell the parents and send money. Surprisingly many seniors fall for this and wire the money to be never seen again. What is different about this updated scam is the detailed information that the scammer has about the relationship. They know the child & grandmothers name, details about the child and have somehow got the grandmothers phone number. It has to be identity theft or just getting info from facebook or other social media. Please tell your friends about this scam and to never wire money anywhere. Also be darned careful what you share online.
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Phishing is the attempt to get you to reveal user names, passwords, financial information or other personal information via an email. I get about 3 of these a week. Messages that say your account over due or that your credit card has been canceled. The crooks think of what would worry you the most and send it out via email. Now the email by itself is not bad, It the link enclosed in the email that will tempt you to log in or ask information to make sure you are you. These links are the phishing mechanism. Never click on those links! If you don't know whether an email is legit go to the web site of the company via your normal method (favorites or typing in the address). I call the company that is supposedly having an issue using a verified number (on your credit card or in the phone book) to ask if the message is legit.
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Keeping safe while surfing the Internet with a PC is increasingly tough. You just have to have a strong antivirus/antimalware program. The free versions of AVG, Microsoft Security, Avast or Avira used to be good enough, but we have been seeing problems with using just the free version. We increasingly do most of our Internet work on our Mac Mini or our Android tablet (they are safe from contamination for now). Consider upgrading to the pay version of your antivirus if you just have a PC and surf the Internet.

Monday, October 24, 2011

#202 - Steve Jobs and the end of an era

My first PC was an Apple II. I was (still am!) a geeky engineer that was fascinated that I could have a computer in my house. I already could program (Fortran, Cobal and Basic) so getting a computer that I could train to do just about anything was amazing. Buying it in 1981 also meant I was at the very beginning of the PC revolution. My Apple II cost about $1200 and I bought it through the mail (none were being sold in Baton Rouge then). It came with a floppy disk drive and 64K of programmable memory. Wow!

I subscribed to 3 Apple magazines that had lots of programs I could type in, learn from and then modify to my needs. I also learned about the two Steves - Jobs and Wozniak. Woz the ultimate techno nerd and Jobs the great promoter. Woz would talk about the future stuff we could do to improve our Apples and Jobs would talk about where the world was heading due to a great technology revolution.

As good and successful as the Apple II was (they made it for over a decade!) The next two Apple PCs - The Apple III and Lisa were economic disasters. Even their successor the venerable Macintosh took literally years to take off. And somewhere in that chain of events, Apple let Steve Jobs go. As we all know he came back to start the "i" revolution. ipod, ipad, iphone...

Steve was always about design before function and design integrated into function. The PCs IBM made were boring, square and very functional. Apple PCs just looked better. So much better that there were Apples in museums of art! The importance of design over function lead the incredible success of all Apple products. They are innovative and usually first in class products. They are also pretty expensive. There is no "cheap" Apple product. Thus their tremendous margins and profitability. All thanks to Steve Jobs vision.

I'll miss the Apple product introductions that Steve was famous for. The demonstrations of products that catch your imagination and set you free from limitations the rest of the technology world impose. Vaya con dios Steve. You will be missed here.

Monday, October 3, 2011

#201 - The new PC

My 4 year old Ultra PC was showing its age last week. Actually it was sounding its age with lots of grinds and hums and fan whines. So what to do? I need a PC to run PCSS. I have accounting and email on the PC that just doesn't work the same on my Mac Mini.

That pushed me to a new PC. Choosing a PC is always a tough decision. What processor? How much memory, What kind of Graphics? So lets see how I visited each of these questions and their answers.

The PC we went with is an HP 6005 Pro minitower PC. It comes with lots of options and flavors so that decision just brought more questions.

Processor did not mean as much to me as some other geeks. The Intel "i" series and the AMD Phenom series are their top end processors. They both have their strengths and weaknesses. For every day computing: Spreadsheets, Word Processing, Internet surfing almost any of the new processors would work. For me it came down to cost per speed. The winner was the AMD Phenom II x4 3.02Ghz processor. This is an upper speed mid range processor. Great multimedia performance with a reasonable cost. I got this processor in the HP desktop for the same price as a slower lower grade Intel processor.

How much memory? The PC came with 4GB of internal memory and a 500GB hard disk drive. Those are plenty for my needs. It came with Windows 7 Professional 64bit edition. I had a spare 2GB memory stick so I put it in for a total of 6GB memory. It seems faster then the Windows XP computer I left with 2GB of memory. Note that Windows 7 - 32 bit edition can only see 3.75GB of memory, no more.

I'm still working on Graphics. The HP PC came with ATI Radeon 4200 graphics internal to the motherboard. I'm going to get a bigger screen (24" vs 19" I have now) so I'll probably need a graphics card that can push more pixels on the bigger screen. The ATI will only do 1280x1024 resolution and I'm sure the 24" display will want 1600x1200 resolution. I'll let you know when I get this worked out.

The PC came with a nice DVD-RW drive with lightscribe printing on CDs/DVDs. I'll add another drive so I can do copies. I'll also put in a media card reader so I can put my camera card in without an add on item.

The tough part is the software. I'm going with Office 2010 (I've been using Office 2003!), Adobe Acrobat 9 (X is the latest version) and Internet Explorer 9, Firefox 7.0 and Google Chrome. Move all the files and favorites, install the AVG antivirus and more. Changing PCs isn't a whole lot of fun. Thank goodness its almost done!

Saturday, September 10, 2011

#200 - Ten years later

Its the eve of the 10th anniversary of the al Quida attacks on America. So much has changed in the world in the past 10 years. Just fly once and your life will be impacted by the hate of extremist 1/2 a world away. Lets take a look at the technology and how its impacted our response to being attacked.

We are now scanned, probed and much of our life closely monitored due to the attacks. Heaven help you if your name coinsides with someone on the No Fly List. Computers have a very significant role in deterring similar attacks. The US Armed Forces even has a Cyber Command to actively attack enemies and defend from same attacks. There is great worry that the next 9-11 will be a cyber attack that shuts down our important infrastructure, like power, Internet and communications. Imagine an attack that shuts down our cell phones? Its been tried quite recently.

The recent earthquake and several hurricanes that have hit Virginia have disrupted our power supply and all that means. We are so dependent on power. One week without power is like being transported back to the 15th century. Every time we lose power, I'm thankful for the battery back up system we have that makes shutting things down safer (no damage to valuable systems). I see the US having more of these back up systems in the future. Sales of back up electric generators is at an all time high in Richmond, Virginia. There have been good talks on how to make our power system safer and hardened to prevent terrorist attacks. I hope we move forward with these proposals.

The us of robots in combat has also come about in the war on terrorism. Drone planes routinely run missions in a very dangerous part of the world. Robots are used to diffuse bombs and go into dangerous areas. These technologies will soon move back into the commercial arena. The use of robots or remotely controlled vehicles will become more common later in this decade is my prediction.

The technology for body scanning was first used in medicine, but has had much research dollars spent on it for security purposes. I would imagine this increased spending will also come back to help the medical fields that invented this technology. Imagine a safe simple scan that can identify the vast majority of diseases in a human. You'll go to the doctor once a year for your scan and know immediately of any issues.

Let's remember the losses we were subject to 10 years ago, but lets move forward as a nation (or better yet world).

Thursday, August 11, 2011

#199 - Tablet Follow up

We've had the Asus Transformer Tablet PC now for over 3 weeks. The docking station came this week, but we still haven't seen the tablet sleeve cover. I've made a nice bubble wrap home made cover to protect the screen while traveling. We've made the rounds of many customers so that they can have a touch and feel of the tablet. Most are favorably impressed with the size, resolution, brightness and speed.

The remarkable initial impression of the Transformer was how quickly it picked up all my information. After opening the box and charging the tablet the first item you see is to enter you gmail account information. From this information the Transformer automatically updated our contacts, calendar, facebook, android apps, and even our wifi location settings (including passwords!) from our android Motorola Droid Pro phone. We only had to add our AOL email info and then download some specific android Tablet apps.

We've been looking for a better calendar app since the android app is pretty simple. We like to enter appointments in the field and see week/month activities fairly quickly. Both of those tasks are tough with the android calendar app. We found several and are evaluating them now. We also added the Opera Android browser. This is a fast browser that has tabbed windows and has a 6 panel favorite sites (like google chrome) you can quickly switch to. I wonder why there isn't Google Chrome for andoid yet.

The USA Today and the CNBC apps for android tablet are also very nice and I highly recommend them for news and financial updates. We put on several card games and of course Angry birds (regular and rio versions!).

Battery life has been very good (around 8 hours) and now we should get near 16 hours with the docking keyboard. My initial impression of the keyboard is positive. Having a trackpad is a huge help with editing in any app. Also nice are the dedicated keys that just make using the tablet on the Internet very easy.

We've had no problems getting on WiFi sites. The antenna seems strong and we have had very few Internet drops (less them my laptops!). The tablet is about the same speed as my Lenovo Windows 7 laptop. Some sites take a bit longer to load, but that happens on all Internet devices.


If you have any question just comment below or email me!

Sunday, July 24, 2011

#198 - Tablet in the house



PCSS now has an ASUS Transformer tablet PC! Shown on the left is the tablet and its docking station/keyboard. The Transformer is an Android Honeycomb tablet PC with the following specifications:
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NVIDIA® Tegra™ 2 1.0GHz dual-core CPU for excellent multitasking & HD video playback
• Android 3.1 Honeycomb O.S. with Adobe® Flash® 10.2 support*2
• Full QWERTY keyboard, touchpad input with Polaris® Office® for mobile productivity
• 16*1 hours long battery life for all day computing with docking station
• Brilliant IPS panel with ultra-wide 178 degree viewing angle made from scratch resistant and super tough glass
• One year of Unlimited ASUS WebStorage, two USB ports, SD and Micro SD card readers for easy sharing & storage expandability
• 3D stereo with max bass response with SRS premium sound
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That's a lot to chew over. First question I get is how does it compare to the iPad2? Its bigger (10.1" vs 9.7" screen), faster (Tegra 2 vs A5 CPU), has better screen resolution and can have a great docking station with keyboard that Apple does not make for the iPad2. To beat the iPad you have to be better all round then the iPad. We have put both side by side and the are very similar in quality and design. The Transformer had a textured back panel that makes it a bit easier to hold. Now there is no denying there are way more tablet based apps for the iPad2 then for all of the Android tablets. However the tablets will run nearly all the 200,000 Android apps from the Android Market. So no shortage of games, utilities (yes the bar code reader works!) and Internet browsing. Oh, did I mention that the Transformer runs Adobe Flash so 99% of all the websites can be shown on the Transformer?
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The last difference is that the Transformer costs $399 (Available from PCSS!) for the tablet versus $499 for the iPad2. The keyboard/dock is extra, but the iPad2 doesn't even have an Apple part equivalent.
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We'll be putting the Transformer through some rigorous testing over the next month. If you would like to see it let Nick know and he'll bring it by (Alleghany Highlands & Hawaii customers only!)

Sunday, July 3, 2011

#197 - The Good the bad and the Ugly of Tablet PCs

We've had access to two iPods (1 & 2 versions) and my android HP tablet that I got with my latest ink jet printer. Enough time to get comfortable with each and some of the apps that you can use on them. So here goes our first hands on review and if you have more or different experience please leave a comment or email us at pcss4u@aol.com.
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Tablets are the wave of the future. They are selling at record numbers ( estimated 60 million iPads in 2012 alone). Everyone is trying to get into the act. Phone maker Motorola has the expensive Xoom, Monitor maker Viewsonic has the View, Samsung has the Galaxy and yesterday HP introduced its Touchpad. Important in each of these offerings is what Applications (apps) each has to offer. Apple has over 20,000 apps for the iPad. HP has 300 for the introduction of the Touchpad. The others use the Android system and have thousands of apps.
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So what's special about a tablet? Why would you want one? Tablets are the ideal size for a handheld unit. With a 9" to 10" screen most tablets fit very comfortably in your hands. They all have gyroscope/accelerometers that let you view portrait or landscape modes automatically. #1 of importance is being able to get on the Internet. You can see your email, calendar, google the world, read online newspapers and news services. The screens are very readable, but not the best in direct sunlight. Interesting, because of Steve Jobs (Apples CEO) war with Adobe corporation, iPads (using the Safari browser) you can't see any website that uses Adobe Flash Player for animation. The number of sites that use Flash is still over 25%. The Android and HP tablets can all use flash player. The convenience of the small size, nice size screen and portability (they don't weigh much) makes the tablet a very attractive device and thus the huge sale.
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Price wise, they all are in the $500-$600 range with wi fi access. You can also get many tablets with 3G Internet coverage via your cell phone company. Unfortunately that means you have to buy an Internet contract from that cell phone company at $30 per month. Free wi fi access seems to be decreasing in this country, not increasing so the phone companies may be on to a lucrative money maker.
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Its all about the apps with tablets (good luck HP). We just put several new apps on the iPads that are fun and useful. Leafsnap let you take a picture of a leaf on your iPad and then it will suggest what species it is. You have information on the leaf (front & back), bark, flowers, fruit. You can then put the identified tree in your collection based on location. Very fun and informative. The tablets are made for games such as Angry Birds, that take little skill but are addictive to get a better score. Tablet apps to help in shopping or finding prices are everywhere!
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Typing on a tablet isn't too bad. The virtual keyboard is spaced far apart so that my fat fingers can almost touch type. I don't like that you have to switch from alphabet to numeric virtual keyboards. If you use a very secure password such as j1u2n3k4 you'll spend a bunch of time switching between screens and probably will make a mistake. The finger scrolling and gestures are great input devices. Unfortunately, not having a pointing device (no arrows either) makes editing very hard (my fat fingers again).
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So I use our tablets for quick Internet access, some email and playing some games. Could I do away with my laptops for a tablet? Not yet. I'm writing this blog on my Thinkpad and I couldn't imagine doing it on a tablet. The input would take longer and editing would be cumbersome. There is a definite niche for the tablet and at its more affordable pricing many people will own a tablet AND a laptop. Comments?

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

#196 Windows 8 and will anyone listen?

Sorry for the one month hiatus. I had a death in the family and am just now catching up on work, house and life. We are back to normal and that mean Microsoft announces a new operating system. Windows 8 has been announced, but there is no introduction date. It seems to be Microsofts answer to touch screen tablet PCs. Lots of features similar to the iPad. Microsoft is certainly not known for its innovation, just its marketing.

Now Microsoft didn't ask me what I wanted in Windows 8, but dear readers, let me fill them in via my blog. 1st and foremost I want a safer browser. Although Internet Explorer isn't really part of Windows, it has come with every version of Windows (if it quacks like a duck, must be a duck). Its been a sad excuse for a browser for over 10 years. Its one of the main culprits in malware getting on your PC. The latest version IE9 is better, but it doesn't work on Windows XP which over ½ of the PC world still uses. FireFox and Google Chrome remain better alternatives and PCSS highly recommends them to our customers.

Next would come speed. We have these tremendously fast processors with obscene amounts of memory and it still takes my Windows 7 laptop over 3 minutes to start up and about a minute to shut down. Check out a MAC Microsoft and learn how to start and stop an operating system in an efficient manner. It would also be nice to make it easier to join a network and share stuff. The Windows 7 Home Network (only works with Windows 7 PCs) just isn't universal enough. What business has all the same operating system when a new one comes out? Microsoft supposedly hires smart people. Maybe, but they don't have an once of common sense.

Lastly I would tighten up the rules for programs to run on Windows 8. Make the software people make their programs more efficient and easier to load AND unload. (again take a look at those crazy guys at Apple). Programs do anything they want and generally that isn't good when it comes to loading a program on your computer. Who thought it was a good idea to let any program put files in the operating system folders? ARGH as the pirates would say. Also new programs can take control of resources on your PC and when they close not release those resources. That is just silly.

Ok rant mode off. Those are just 3 items that I'd like to see in Windows 8, but you know they will never see to do them. Nope we'll make a more bloated operating system to try and catch up with the iPad and forget about the 1 billion PCs that exist world wide.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

#195 - How fast is fast?

First of all some definitions. Broadband Internet is also called "High Speed" Internet access. The speed of Internet is defined now by MBPS or Megabits per second. There are two directions of Internet speed: Upload and Download. Download is almost always faster and that is the number that most Internet providers give when talking about speed.

Now some context. The first Internet access was done via dial up phone modems. Their maximum top upload speed was rated at 0.056 MBPS. High Speed Internet was originally defined to be greater then 0.256 MBPS. Now I would say High Speed starts at 1MBPS.

There are several competing technologies to provide Broadband Internet for your use. DSL (digital subscription line) is a technology used mainly by telephone companies to provide Broadband over their telephone wires. This is done by sending the Internet at a much higher frequency then voice telephone conversations. The top end download speed for copper wired DSL is about 6MBPS. The other major Broadband provider for your home or office is Cable. Again Cable Internet uses their existing cable lines in your home/business to provide high-speed Internet. The top end download speed for Cable Internet in the US is probably around 30MBPS. One other difference between DSL and Cable is DSL is a dedicated line to your place while Cable is a shared resource. Meaning DSL won't slow down if your neighbor also has it and is on line, but if you both have Cable the more on the system, the slower the Internet.

Two other newer technologies for Internet are Cell phone systems (the 3G & 4G networks) and Fibre Optic. Cell phone Internet is a wireless system that uses the cell phone towers to provide Interet. Existing 3G technology is capped at download speeds of 3.1MBPS. 4G is the newer technology and could possibly go as high as 100MBPS. That is POSSIBLY. Right now the new 4G networks max out around 6MBPS. Fibre Optic is the fastest of all technologies. Using light waves to sent the Internet over dedicated fibre cables, Fibre Optic Internet can now run as fast as 40MBPS.

In our area Shentel Cable provides up to 20MBPS over their Cable network and ntelos is matching them with Fibre Optic system at 20MBPS. We have 3G in all the towns but no 4G yet. ntelos is going to provide up to 6MBPS to all their wired customers.

So what is the importance of speed? If you want to watch seamless Internet videos (no jumps, skips, bumps) you need over 5MBPS download speed. Multitasking videos, surfing, cloud computing all requires 10MBPS. Just like we keep increasing and using more memory in PCs, we'll keep using more Internet speed.

Monday, April 4, 2011

194 - What are those black dots and squares?


The image you see below is called QRbarcode. Its used to code text, an Internet address (URL), or a phone number. You can read it with your smart phone and then go immediately read the text, go to the Internet site or dial the phone number. It has great potential use in advertising! The QR (short for Quick Response) barcode was developed by by Toyota. This two dimensional barcode has quickly been adopted in Japan and South Korea and a bit slower here in the west. Toyota used it for car part numbering. Its 2 dimensional design allowed for a small size. The QR contains more information then a standard barcode (limited to numbers). In fact the QR has been used for all sorts of interesting information coding.


QR codes storing addresses and URLs may appear in magazines, on signs, buses, business cards, or on just about any object about which users might need information. Users with a camera phone equipped with the correct reader application can scan the image of the QR Code to display text, contact information, connect to a wireless network, or open a web page in the phone's browser. The code in the upper left of this article will direct you to this Blog. The one in the lower left to the PCSS web site.


Recently a real estate client used the QR code to store an URL for more information and placed it on all their hand outs. You could then go to the site that had more pictures and house plan layout. So let your imagination go wild, but first get a smart phone, wireless Internet plan, and barcode reader software. You can make your own QR code at several free web sites. We use: QR-Code Generator Just put in your URL then right click the image to copy the image to your PC.


Wednesday, March 23, 2011

#193 - The new printer with a tablet thrown in


HP has released a new all in one that caught our attention. The HP Photosmart eStation 510a is a printer, scanner, copier and fax machine with one special twist. The control panel can detach and be an external 7" Android tablet. It runs on wifi and can take print from ipads, ipods and just about any other computer that can send a print document.


The print quality is the best HP makes for an inkjet printer. Top notch photo quality if you use the good photo paper. Ink costs about $45 total for Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Photo Black cartridges that do 300 printed pages. With max speeds of up to 33 pages per minute, this printer is definitely speedy. Because of the wifi tablet you can print to this printer from ANYWHERE! The HP ePrint service lets you print out your expense reports before you get home! You can print from Facebook, Yahoo or even Snapfish. Printing from the web is the new standard in printers and this one has all the rough spots already worked out.
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The setup for wireless printing is pretty easy and soon all your desktops, laptops, tablet or even smart phone can print to the new printer. It can hold 125 pages of 8.5x11" paper and do up to 12 envelopes at a time. It doesn't have a large duty cycle (1200 pages per month) so don't plan on this one being an office workhorse. The scanner is a flatbed (no sheet feed) with 1200x1200 black/white & color operation. It has an SD card slot for data from cameras.
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Now on to the 7" detachable tablet PC. It uses the Android system and comes with Internet browser, book reader, facebook, and other apps. It will be fully Android 2.2 compatible soon and have complete access to the Android market and 175,000 other apps. You get about 5 hours of battery time and just need to put it back on the printer to charge. It can be a digital picture frame, ebook reader or just a web browser.
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Cost for all this? HP list price of $399. $100 less then an iPad. Amazing. Technology at the leading edge.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

#192 - Tech musings on a rainy day


I see that the ipad2 has been released. Same price as the ipad original. The ipad original is available for as low as $349 till the stock is sold. The new ipad is slimmer, faster and has 2 cameras to make your multimedia experience better. Still no Flash player support so 40% of the web pages out there won't work on the ipad original or ipad 2. There is a war between Apple (read Steve jobs) and Adobe. Seems sad the consumer is the loser. Good news is that the use of HTLM5 is growing and displacing Flash so the number of Flash only sites is decreasing.
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PCSS has varied opinion of the ipad. I've played on several and enjoy the size and ability to surf much of the web and add apps that make it more useful. I don't like that it really isn't a full functioning PC. No Office applications that move the world. I think the day of the laptop as we know it will merge into the tablet type PC. I'm very excited about the Motorola Xoom (see last blog) and others that will move the tablet to be a PC replacement.
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On the "you know this was going to happen" front, the Google Android app markets had 21 different apps infected this past week. The infection would send out your personal telephone information to the bad guys. Google stopped the distribution of the 21 apps AND more importantly initiated its Kill App program to terminate the 50,000 infected apps that were downloaded before Google found the infection. Who knew that Google had a Kill App program that could reach every Android enabled telephone? I wonder if Apple has the same on the iphone.
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J.D. Power has declared that Verizon has the best call quality of the big nationwide cell phone providers. I think most knew this, but now there is data to back it up. T-Mobile was at the bottom of the list. Let the crowing ads begin!
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And on the electric car front, although GM and Nissan aren't crowing about them the sales of electric cars in the US was released for February. A whole 281 Chevy Volts and 67 Nissan Leafs were sold. Wow are you impressed yet? As I will continue to say, Electric cars will NEVER be anything but a niche market until they can get 300 miles of range on a single charge. I'll stick with my Honda Insight and the 45 mpg I get on the highway and around town.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

#191 - Tablet PC for the rest of us?


The Motorola XOOM is scheduled to be released very soon. (XOOM SOON was tempting to put in type!) The Xoom is an iPad like tablet PC that runs the new Google Android 3.0 operating system. That means it runs all the Android aps that exist and can surf the Internet totally. It has the latest version of Adobe Flash player that is used by many Internet sites. That is a big deal because the iPad does not support Adobe Flash.
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The Xoom boast the best specifications in a tablet PC. It also may boast the highest price. Verizon will be the lead seller of the Xoom, but probably won't be the exclusive sales company for long.
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It has a dazzling 10.1" 1280x800 screen that is VERY easy to view. It has a 5 megapixel rear facing camera with LED flash and a 2 megapixel forward facing camera to allow for video conferencing. There is 32GB of built in memory and an sd slot for more memory. Its processor is a dual core 1GHz that allows for multitasking. It will initially work on Verizons 3G network but will be able to use their 4G network without a major modification.
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I think tablets are the direction that PCs are going. These truly are PERSONAL computers. They are large enough to be able to see the Internet, yet small enough to take everywhere. Will the best tablet be the Xoom? I'm not getting on board till I get one in hand and see how it handles real world (read Covington) networking. Also the price may be a deal breaker. Watch your local newspaper for ads and reviews!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

#190 - Playing safe on Facebook

Facebook members just passed the 500,000,000 mark. That's a lot of Friends! If you have joined or are considering joining Facebook here are my guidelines to keeping yourself safe and enjoying your friends.



1. Keep your Profile to the minimum information. Your Profile is seen by EVERYONE on Facebook. No phone numbers and I'd even tell you to be careful with your email address. I use an email address I don't use much . You can get a free email address (Yahoo or Gmail) to put there when you register.



2. Set your privacy settings to Friends Only for EVERYTHING. Click on Account from your Facebook home page then Privacy Settings. Choices are Everyone, Friends of Friends and Friends Only.

3. Protect your information from the people that post Ads on Facebook. Click on Accounts then Account Settings and the Facebook Ads tab. Make sure No One is in the box and Save.

4. Be careful what pictures you post. Its obvious but Don't post pictures that put you or someone else with at risk behaviour. If you get posted and tagged in a picture you don't like, first untag your picture (untag button below the picture), then ask whoever posted it to delete it.

5. I don't recommend joining any games. They get your information and they USE it. That's why the games are free. They get your info. Nuff Said.

6. Disable Facebook Apps. Again the apps can access your profile and more. To do this click on Account and Privacy Settings. Below Apps and Websites click on Edit your Settings, Click on Turn off all Platform Apps.

7. Post cautiously. Letting people know when you are away from home isn't the wisest move. Letting people know you are looking for a job while still empolyed also isn't wise. Posting during work when your post is TIME STAMPED is also a bit silly.

8. Friend ONLY people you know well. Friends of Friends should not cut your friends list. There is no prize for having the most friends.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

#189 Android Apps and why apps are so hot

Apps stands for applications, which is a long/short way to say programs. I'm not sure why programs on phones/PDAs are called Apps, but they are and we'll just work with that. I'm also not sure why most apps cost less then $5.00. I'm not arguing for more expensive programs, but geez Bill Gates would only be Bazillionaire (Instead of a Trazillionaire) if Office only cost $5.00 for each program.

Well lets talk about Android apps, since I have an Android phone (Droid Pro) and have loaded up a bunch of free apps. The first one I downloaded was App Killer. It isn't easy to shut down apps in the Android system. App Killer does just that. Two clicks and most of the programs that are running on your phone are shut down. Seems silly that this wasn't part of the Android operating system.

I next downloaded Bar Code Scanner. This nifty app turns your phone in to a (surprise!) Bar code scanner. You can scan any bar code in on a product and the look up the price or information on that product. Very cool!

I've also downloaded two utility type apps: Free Dictionary is from the Dictionary.com people and does a nice job of what it should do. Google Translator is a very neat app that will Translate English words/phrases/Sentences to several other languages. It will also say the translation. So now in a foreign country you can type in what you want, translate it and then have your phone say it without an accent!

Lastly I have turned my phone in to an ebook reader. I downloaded Laputa reader after checking out the reviews. I've been pleased with this reader for ease of use and being able to access all the Gutenberg Projects free books. These books are out of copyright protection and include great classics as well as an interesting mix of turn of the 20th century popular fiction.