Top 10 lists are sooo subjective, but still, I read them just to see what other people are interested in, and I recently
read one from InfoWorld that is so terribly lame I can't imagine the dude that wrote it. Well, that's not quite true, I can,
and there's the rub. His list is supposed to be about 10 top free windows apps, and it's a joke. I mean come on, ClamWin?
Sure, if there's a problem it might serve in a pinch but only till you can get something else. If you want free and useful, grab AVG and put it to work for you. People ask me if it's any good, and my answer is that I have used it to clean
systems infected while running both Norton and McAfee, so what's not to like? The only time I have ever seen anything that should have been caught get
past was a zero-day attack that came through Weather Bug. That was a particularly nasty little infection and the folks at
Weather Bug were quite responsive, and sure enough next day it was on the news. But ALL
security programs are vulnerable to zero-day issues, that's just the nature of the beast. And by zero-day, that's the day it
first strikes the first victim. Like the first case of plague. Yuck. http://free.avg.com/us-en/free-antivirus-download
So that's number one. Number two, and this is an amazing little
utility that I use in addition to Acrobat Pro because it
renders tables better, is PrimoPDF. It's a piece of software that
installs as a printer. When you have something you want
to keep like web receipts or documents for email, click print and select
PrimoPDF as the printer. Bam, you've got a free little PDF
file. http://www.primopdf.com/
Number three, and this isn't even something you have to install, but
it's the best group of productivity utilities out there.
Google. Simple. But more than just search, I'm talking Gmail,
documents, calendar, contacts, the whole nine. It's tailor made
for groups to collaborate or for people to keep things running no
matter where they are. You can give other people access to your
accounts, or you can simply all share the same login when managing group accounts. It doesn't require an Exchange server, and works like a
charm with any phone. And yes, I mean any email capable phone. I was
accessing gmail from my ancient clamshell phone, just slowly.
http://www.google.com
So you don't want to edit documents online? Here I have two answers. If
all you really want to do is write an occasional letter, then
AbiWord is it. It is available both as a full install and also as a
USB portable application, which will let you run it on any
computer where you can hook up the drive and it doesn't leave trails
behind it.
http://www.abisource.com If you want the whole enchilada, time for OpenOffice. Looks and
acts like its namesake, but way cheaper! http://www.openoffice.org/
Graphics, and by this I mean like photo manipulation, there's the old
standby from way back when out of the Linux world, and that's
Gimp. What a name, right? But the Gimp is the bomb!
http://www.gimp.org/downloads/
Unfortunately it's a little nerdy, so there's some folks
out there that tweaked it to make it act more like PhotoShop, which
means you can look up a tutorial on Google using Photoshop and
with not a lot of alteration come up with the means of making
Gimpshop do the job.
http://www.gimpshop.com/, http://download.cnet.com/GIMPshop/3000-2192_4-1065 0582.html
Okay, so that's the top 5. Productivity focused, the bare bones you
can use to get yourself up and running with nothing more than a
computer and an internet connection. But all work and no play, right?
So here's the top toys, for the whopping price of, NOTHING?
Music is first on most people's list and for free listening there's
more than one way to go. Pandora is my favorite. It is based on
musical preferences, and you can set up channels that play particular
types of music. For instance, I have a bluesy channel that I
tweak that plays Clapton, Skynyrd, Muddy Waters, Stevie Ray, and
others that I hear for the first time by groups I don't know. But
Pandora finds those and pops them in for me so I don't need to know.
Bonus! Then once you're set up, you can stream it with your
phone using their app. http://www.pandora.com/
Another music option when you want to choose your own music is Rdio.
They recently launched a free version, restrictions but no ads,
that will get you going. There are paid plans, too, depending on what
you want. http://www.rdio.com/
I usually listen to books, though, when I listen to anything. Keeps
the brain focused, sometimes it wanders off into some strange
places when left unattended. And books for free! Count me in! Through
the library, there are several sources to download and listen to
audiobooks, both MP3 and WMA format. My favorite is EbscoHost, used
to be NetLibrary. There's a mobile app or I can load it onto my MP3
player. Download and go!
http://www.poudrelibraries.org/catalog/download.html
Some folks would rather read than listen, and you don't need a Kindle
to do that! Get the apps for the computer and the phone, and access
loads of free classic titles through Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docI%20d=1000426311&tag=googhydr-20&hvadid=7893047648&ref =pd_sl_3ies3d4yuc_b
So for number 10, playing around or not, gotta be Firefox. And this
is not number 10 on the priority list, I saved the best for last.
For everything that you just read about, the best way to access it
and use it is Firefox, hands down. It's been out there doing its
thing the longest, and has extensions and add-ons galore to tweak it
to work however suits you best. There is never a one size fits all,
ever, and this application allows for people anywhere to build add-ons that create the functionality that they want. Then those folks
share those tidbits with the rest of us and we, too, can customize
our browsers till they are molded to our forms. And again, like the
majority of these, it comes portable, too!
http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/new/
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Buried Virtually
I know someone who absolutely, positively, unwaveringly refuses to own or condone a smart phone. And I get the point.
To a degree. The argument goes that the smart phone is just another way for already overburdened and harried individuals
to be forced to carry more workload and stress themselves out even further. I mean, how can you go on vacation when your
email follows you everywhere and you can research any project at any time and edit that Google doc that the team needs and
schedule a meeting and attend a web conference and EVERYBODY KNOWS IT?
So, okay, I get that part. And the temptation is always truly there to take care of these things in the middle of the night, and sometimes I secretly do just that. But other times, especially when the mountain is just getting so tall, I remember Nancy Reagan and I just say NO! As in Not Online. Not going online, not acknowledging online just keep me away from it and it from me. And you know what, it works. The alerts turned off, the phone silenced, nothing coming through (unless I am really online but *GASP* not working??).
The temptation is still there just to peek at the email, keep the pile from piling, the stacks from stacking, and the docs from docking, but why? Somebody else is just gonna come along and pile and stack and doc me again, so really, what IS done? Clue: It's the yeti's cousin who lives up in the mountains and howls elusively down at us as we struggle to emerge from our smart phoned world and taunts us that we are down here buried and he's running around free. Nobody has ever seen him and lived to tell, the only ones that can accurately identify him are those that have been "done in" and they don't tell tales. Or "done for" but they really haven't seen him yet, they just think he's on the way.
In other words, the phone is a tool like everything else. But now, I can if I choose get some things done while I am out doing fun stuff that otherwise I wouldn't be getting to do because I really should be in front of the computer monitor but I don't wanna right now. Like those Colorado commercials for the bank where they say they get us? Call in to work because of 6 inches of snow and drive through 12 to ski? Yeah, you know who you are. So smart phones are more like that, the office we don't really have to sit in. For the rest of you, one word. Really?
So, okay, I get that part. And the temptation is always truly there to take care of these things in the middle of the night, and sometimes I secretly do just that. But other times, especially when the mountain is just getting so tall, I remember Nancy Reagan and I just say NO! As in Not Online. Not going online, not acknowledging online just keep me away from it and it from me. And you know what, it works. The alerts turned off, the phone silenced, nothing coming through (unless I am really online but *GASP* not working??).
The temptation is still there just to peek at the email, keep the pile from piling, the stacks from stacking, and the docs from docking, but why? Somebody else is just gonna come along and pile and stack and doc me again, so really, what IS done? Clue: It's the yeti's cousin who lives up in the mountains and howls elusively down at us as we struggle to emerge from our smart phoned world and taunts us that we are down here buried and he's running around free. Nobody has ever seen him and lived to tell, the only ones that can accurately identify him are those that have been "done in" and they don't tell tales. Or "done for" but they really haven't seen him yet, they just think he's on the way.
In other words, the phone is a tool like everything else. But now, I can if I choose get some things done while I am out doing fun stuff that otherwise I wouldn't be getting to do because I really should be in front of the computer monitor but I don't wanna right now. Like those Colorado commercials for the bank where they say they get us? Call in to work because of 6 inches of snow and drive through 12 to ski? Yeah, you know who you are. So smart phones are more like that, the office we don't really have to sit in. For the rest of you, one word. Really?
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Speech Recognition
Okay, I admit it, I'm weird. I watch documentaries over dramas, prefer history over fiction, and would just
generally like to learn something whenever I can. Don't know when or how that started, but I can remember as a kid
being taken to historical sites and being fascinated, trying to think what it would have been like to be there when
history was being made. (Although one of the biggest things I remember about Gettysburg was the dead copperhead in
the bottom of the trash barrel.) I have always liked figuring out how things happen, how they work, and how they
connect. So maybe it was just inescapable that I was a Trekkie before the term existed. Lots of other folks were,
too, and the futuristic technology from the show inevitably made its way into our reality. Even the speech control.
Windows 7 supports it natively, which has camps sprouting up on the side of the old standby Dragon, and in the opposite corner with Windows. I have worked with both, and overall there are pros and cons with each. As with lots of computer changes, it is generally most comfortable to stay with what you know, but if price trends and stability reports are any indication, Dragon may be on its way out. So heads up to any of you hard core Dragon users, be prepared to have to consider some further changes down the road. Who knows? Maybe they can work out the bugs that plague it with Windows 7 installs, maybe not. Heck, it took Microsoft a couple years to work out the Vista kinks and release 7, maybe Dragon is just in the same situation. Either way, there will be options, it just isn't going to be like Scottie issuing engineering commands on the Enterprise for a long time still.
Windows 7 supports it natively, which has camps sprouting up on the side of the old standby Dragon, and in the opposite corner with Windows. I have worked with both, and overall there are pros and cons with each. As with lots of computer changes, it is generally most comfortable to stay with what you know, but if price trends and stability reports are any indication, Dragon may be on its way out. So heads up to any of you hard core Dragon users, be prepared to have to consider some further changes down the road. Who knows? Maybe they can work out the bugs that plague it with Windows 7 installs, maybe not. Heck, it took Microsoft a couple years to work out the Vista kinks and release 7, maybe Dragon is just in the same situation. Either way, there will be options, it just isn't going to be like Scottie issuing engineering commands on the Enterprise for a long time still.
Monday, January 10, 2011
The Pile On My Desk
Responsibility. There's a word that has changed connotation a whole lot since I was a kid. Used to be a great
thing, 'she's responsible' was a pat on the back. A good thing. Made you want to be responsible. That's something I
still strive for, staying on top of things, being responsible, and not 'letting it slide' just to see if I can avoid
something.
Of course, sometimes that means working long past the hours you mean to, often without charging more, to make sure that the work is properly done and fairly priced. Avoiding nasty surprises for the client on the back end. To me, that's just responsibility. If I know something is going to be a pain and can let them know the most cost efficient means of repair on the front end, I do. Sometimes I'm wrong, and then it's my job to make it right by that client, at times the midnight oil is burned, and at others used up.
Because of that, there is a stack on my desk and file cabinet, things I am responsible for, that either have been taken care of and not put away, or just pushed to side because I can't deal with it right now, and when I do find a minute, it feels sooooo good to be irresponsible and ignore it! I work in a lot of different environments, and I seriously envy the clean desks, though sometimes I run across desks that make me fear for my safety. And there are all levels in between. The cleaners have it all filed, the floor sorters are on their way to getting it filed, the stackers have it all filed on top, and the tossers have no discernible order at all.
Ever seen the sign claiming that the clean desk is a sign of a deranged mind? Don't know that I would agree, but I think the author of that statement must have been a quite responsible person.
Of course, sometimes that means working long past the hours you mean to, often without charging more, to make sure that the work is properly done and fairly priced. Avoiding nasty surprises for the client on the back end. To me, that's just responsibility. If I know something is going to be a pain and can let them know the most cost efficient means of repair on the front end, I do. Sometimes I'm wrong, and then it's my job to make it right by that client, at times the midnight oil is burned, and at others used up.
Because of that, there is a stack on my desk and file cabinet, things I am responsible for, that either have been taken care of and not put away, or just pushed to side because I can't deal with it right now, and when I do find a minute, it feels sooooo good to be irresponsible and ignore it! I work in a lot of different environments, and I seriously envy the clean desks, though sometimes I run across desks that make me fear for my safety. And there are all levels in between. The cleaners have it all filed, the floor sorters are on their way to getting it filed, the stackers have it all filed on top, and the tossers have no discernible order at all.
Ever seen the sign claiming that the clean desk is a sign of a deranged mind? Don't know that I would agree, but I think the author of that statement must have been a quite responsible person.
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