Latest Comments
In response to: DroidX - Second Impressions
one x dock [Visitor]
I think use GSM will save your battery more compare WCDMA/3G/HSDPA, mainly the green network
keep on bouncing amongst 3G and HSDPA. Somehow
rather WIFI turn on will get the mobile phone more heat compare to making use of data on
3G/HSDPA.
keep on bouncing amongst 3G and HSDPA. Somehow
rather WIFI turn on will get the mobile phone more heat compare to making use of data on
3G/HSDPA.
In response to: Twitter from the Desktop and Scheduling Tweets
Trish Havey [Visitor]
This was very useful information! (In your usual form). Thanks Ben!
In response to: Forking Android
android3tablet.com [Visitor]
I hope Android 5 coming soon
In response to: The Monday Morning Technologist Rides Again! (On a Saturday)
John Marshall [Visitor]
Software runs on hardware, what runs in the cloud is called vapourware.
Sorry Ben, it is Saturday night and I am online.
Sorry Ben, it is Saturday night and I am online.
In response to: May I See Your License?
used dell desktops [Visitor]
I am using my dell laptop with pre.install windows XP .The OEM version is the exact same operating system as Retail, you just can't transfer it between computers (no big deal), and you don't get support with it (again, no big deal).
In response to: May I See Your License?
Ben Schorr [Member]
Not a problem Ann - you can move that license to the new machine. Just uninstall Office 2010 from the old one and install it on the new one. If it gives you any complaint when you go to activate on the new one (and it probably won't) just call the Microsoft Licensing desk, explain you're moving your license and they'll fix it up. I seriously doubt you'll have to do that though.
In response to: May I See Your License?
Ann Tamulinas [Visitor]
I work for a non-profit with a volume license. I had to retire one of my computers and want to install Office 2010 on another computer. Will I use up one of my instances? How do I prevent this?
In response to: Tech Review: Virgin Mobile Broadband2Go - Ovation MC760
laura curtiss palmer [Visitor]
My hubby and I are trying to find a mobile personal wifi that won't kill us financially. And work at least 1/2 way decent. This is only occasional as we have a router at home and so only for times like camp for a few days at a time or ocassional weekend travel. We thought Virgin Mobile would be a good option but seeing a lot of complaints. Is anyone aware of other options out there for no contract mobile personal wifi, or mifi that you are aware of. Thank you so much for any help!
In response to: Monday Afternoon Technologist?
Ben Schorr [Member]
O.K., follow-up. I never heard back from Tina, but I did get a call from Karen (who I think is one of the SuddenLink staffers I talked to earlier in the week). She left a message yesterday a bit before 1PM saying that they could install yesterday before 4PM and I should call her back to confirm. I called her back just after 1:30PM and got her voicemail...which was full, so I couldn't leave a message. I tried to call her back a few more times but got voicemail each time.
Then, just after 2PM, I got a call from Scott; a SuddenLink tech. He informed me that we had an install appointment between 1P and 3P and that he was standing on my doorstep but nobody was home. Of course, this is the first I'd heard that we had an actual appointment, but I assured him that I was on the way home and would be there in 15 minutes. He said that was fine, he had some things he needed to do on the outside of the house anyhow.
Upshot of it...I got home, Scott did the install, and now I have Internet again.
I like SuddenLink's product. It's reliable Internet service at a reasonable price. It's not as fast as I'd like, but Scott and his partner assured me that over the next 18 months SuddenLink would be making some significant upgrades to their speeds. Good. But I will say that SuddenLink customer service is a bit slapdash. They're all friendly but there seems to be a lot of confusion going on there. Nobody seems to know what anybody else is doing and it can be a chore to get an issue resolved. Hopefully those are just growing pains.
The other provider in town, Qwest/Century Link is primarily a DSL provider. I'm not a huge fan of DSL, though it's fine for some installations. Currently their product isn't as good here in Flagstaff. In most parts of Flag they can offer, at best, 12Mbps which - just isn't that fast. I understand they too are upgrading their network and hope to roll out 40Mbps service to most of the town in the next year or so. I hope they do, competition can only make both providers better.
Then, just after 2PM, I got a call from Scott; a SuddenLink tech. He informed me that we had an install appointment between 1P and 3P and that he was standing on my doorstep but nobody was home. Of course, this is the first I'd heard that we had an actual appointment, but I assured him that I was on the way home and would be there in 15 minutes. He said that was fine, he had some things he needed to do on the outside of the house anyhow.
Upshot of it...I got home, Scott did the install, and now I have Internet again.
I like SuddenLink's product. It's reliable Internet service at a reasonable price. It's not as fast as I'd like, but Scott and his partner assured me that over the next 18 months SuddenLink would be making some significant upgrades to their speeds. Good. But I will say that SuddenLink customer service is a bit slapdash. They're all friendly but there seems to be a lot of confusion going on there. Nobody seems to know what anybody else is doing and it can be a chore to get an issue resolved. Hopefully those are just growing pains.
The other provider in town, Qwest/Century Link is primarily a DSL provider. I'm not a huge fan of DSL, though it's fine for some installations. Currently their product isn't as good here in Flagstaff. In most parts of Flag they can offer, at best, 12Mbps which - just isn't that fast. I understand they too are upgrading their network and hope to roll out 40Mbps service to most of the town in the next year or so. I hope they do, competition can only make both providers better.
In response to: Tech Review: Virgin Mobile Broadband2Go - Ovation MC760
Bret Carpenter [Visitor]
I happen to be trying out Virgin Mobile's service on a Android phone. So far I have had no dropped calls and the 3G service has been pretty good. All for $25 per month - not bad.
In response to: Monday Afternoon Technologist?
Ben Schorr [Member]
Thanks Tina, I've sent you an e-mail to follow-up. I have to say that I *HAVE* found SuddenLink staffers, like Tina, to be friendly and even sympathetic. However...it's results that count and so far the results are still 8 days of no Internet access.
I'll let you know if Tina is able to improve the situation.
I'll let you know if Tina is able to improve the situation.
In response to: Monday Afternoon Technologist?
Suddenlink Help [Visitor]
Hi Ben – My name is Tina and I am with Suddenlink. I am very sorry to hear about you’re the issues you are having regarding your internet service installation. I’d be happy to work with management in the Flagstaff area and see if we can move your install up sooner than Friday. Please feel free to contact me directly at [E-Mail Redacted] for assistance. Thank you.
In response to: No More Passwords
Ben Schorr [Member]
Most Windows applications do and I haven't found a Mac application that wouldn't yet. I agree that some web applications still don't allow spaces (the most common problem I've found) but you can get around that by substituting something else for the space. Commonly an underscore character ("_") is used for a space, but you could also use a zero ("0") if it's really picky about special characters.
So "My 2 dogs are really cute!" becomes "My02dogs0are0really0cute!" which is still pretty strong.
As for those sites that don't allow passphrases of 19 characters we need to put some pressure on them to get more secure. I have seen the very occasional site that caps their passphrases at 8 or 10 characters but they need to realize that short passwords are increasingly vulnerable. A lesson we should understand all-too-well in the wake of Lulzsec and Anonymous wreaking havoc on Sony and the others.
Thanks for writing!
So "My 2 dogs are really cute!" becomes "My02dogs0are0really0cute!" which is still pretty strong.
As for those sites that don't allow passphrases of 19 characters we need to put some pressure on them to get more secure. I have seen the very occasional site that caps their passphrases at 8 or 10 characters but they need to realize that short passwords are increasingly vulnerable. A lesson we should understand all-too-well in the wake of Lulzsec and Anonymous wreaking havoc on Sony and the others.
Thanks for writing!
In response to: No More Passwords
Maarten van Stam [Visitor]
How many applications, sites etc will actually accept 19 characters, let alone spaces. I have a whole slew of sites that actually fail when you just try to use special characters, only accepting Alpha and numbers ...
Besides that ... I fully agree and support your blogpost. I still hope some time someone invents the onetime ultimate authentication device. :-)
Besides that ... I fully agree and support your blogpost. I still hope some time someone invents the onetime ultimate authentication device. :-)
In response to: HoudiniESQ Responds - Part I
Brad Taplin [Visitor]
I have only begun to dabble but like what I see. As to advantages of a SaaS product being largely lost when you self-install, it should not be such a big deal with this software. Let's follow the theoretical user experience from Flash client into the server.
DynDNS works anywhere and does not require a C Sci degree or corporate Internet presence, just a reliable broadband connection and a bit of intelligence to set up. If you got through law school you should be able to figure this out, and once it's done it's done.
Once a connection gets inside the firm - or home in my case - the local router can route traffic on the app's port(s) to a specific local IP on a PC or Mac. That again should be an easy one-time setup, assuming your router is reliable and properly secured, which it should be anyhow if you keep client data. I always use WPA security plus a whitelist of MAC addresses. If the device trying to connect isn't on my whitelist, the router won't even listen and so cannot get hacked, but that's all tangential to making this work.
The PC or Mac running HoudiniESQ can apparently be any modern Mac or PC as long as it doesn't power down while accessed from outside, is properly configured and secured, and has a dedicated internal IP address. None of this is rocket or computer science.
From what I read, the configuration of HoudiniESQ itself should be a breeze. I will know soon, but the whole point of using a Flash client and Java server is to make it all flexible and relatively independent of the architecture. That inherent separation should minimize the IT woes some fear.
Personally, if I had a grand to burn I'd buy a Mac mini with dual hard drives set for RAID mirroring (that takes tweaking) and the three-year extended warranty, setup OS X Time Machine with external USB drive to back it up, and dedicate it to this - i.e. in a cool, clean, dark closet, not for other uses. Should pay for itself in a year. Run Software Update once a month just to be sure. You could do likewise with a good Windows box, but I favor the security and simplicity of OS X. I'd really favor Linux, but that's not (yet) a solo option, right?
Any tech-savvy person should be able to configure all of this in an hour or two, I suspect. If you can't, hire a good tech for a couple hundred. Once configured, it shouldn't need much maintenance and eliminates concerns about SaaS. You own the network, etc.
All SaaS products - HoudiniESQ, RocketMatter, Clio, NetDocuments - involve trade-offs. A bit of risk and expense in exchange for no local hardware or installation hassles.
Those points about being cut off with no warning and about where the software might be stored are valid concerns, but Frank's right about the logical separation of an instance. No provider can offer physical separation without passing the cost on to the user, i.e. hundreds/month, and there is no good reason to do so. I say that not as a lawyer but as a former sysadmin with two decades of experience.
My thoughts may change after I install on this iMac and start playing over the weekend.
DynDNS works anywhere and does not require a C Sci degree or corporate Internet presence, just a reliable broadband connection and a bit of intelligence to set up. If you got through law school you should be able to figure this out, and once it's done it's done.
Once a connection gets inside the firm - or home in my case - the local router can route traffic on the app's port(s) to a specific local IP on a PC or Mac. That again should be an easy one-time setup, assuming your router is reliable and properly secured, which it should be anyhow if you keep client data. I always use WPA security plus a whitelist of MAC addresses. If the device trying to connect isn't on my whitelist, the router won't even listen and so cannot get hacked, but that's all tangential to making this work.
The PC or Mac running HoudiniESQ can apparently be any modern Mac or PC as long as it doesn't power down while accessed from outside, is properly configured and secured, and has a dedicated internal IP address. None of this is rocket or computer science.
From what I read, the configuration of HoudiniESQ itself should be a breeze. I will know soon, but the whole point of using a Flash client and Java server is to make it all flexible and relatively independent of the architecture. That inherent separation should minimize the IT woes some fear.
Personally, if I had a grand to burn I'd buy a Mac mini with dual hard drives set for RAID mirroring (that takes tweaking) and the three-year extended warranty, setup OS X Time Machine with external USB drive to back it up, and dedicate it to this - i.e. in a cool, clean, dark closet, not for other uses. Should pay for itself in a year. Run Software Update once a month just to be sure. You could do likewise with a good Windows box, but I favor the security and simplicity of OS X. I'd really favor Linux, but that's not (yet) a solo option, right?
Any tech-savvy person should be able to configure all of this in an hour or two, I suspect. If you can't, hire a good tech for a couple hundred. Once configured, it shouldn't need much maintenance and eliminates concerns about SaaS. You own the network, etc.
All SaaS products - HoudiniESQ, RocketMatter, Clio, NetDocuments - involve trade-offs. A bit of risk and expense in exchange for no local hardware or installation hassles.
Those points about being cut off with no warning and about where the software might be stored are valid concerns, but Frank's right about the logical separation of an instance. No provider can offer physical separation without passing the cost on to the user, i.e. hundreds/month, and there is no good reason to do so. I say that not as a lawyer but as a former sysadmin with two decades of experience.
My thoughts may change after I install on this iMac and start playing over the weekend.
In response to: Dropbox Kisses and Makes Up?
The Nerdy Nurse [Visitor]
I would hope that most people would use common sense and know that anything they put in the cloud, on someone elses hardware, is pretty much fair game for the "developers" to peek at.
If not, then I'm sure they think those "dress-up" pictures on your hard-drive were never gawked at when you took your PC in repair... yea. I'm sure.
Don't put it in the cloud if you don't want someone somewhere to potentially peek at it.
If not, then I'm sure they think those "dress-up" pictures on your hard-drive were never gawked at when you took your PC in repair... yea. I'm sure.
Don't put it in the cloud if you don't want someone somewhere to potentially peek at it.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Gerbrand van Dieijen [Visitor]
Legal or illegal, if accessing your personal data is possible at the server, someone will do it if the stakes are high enough. What if you're dating the ex-wife of a jealous dropbox employee (an incident that once happened at Google)?
Just use a service that encrypts your data at *client* side. For example:
Just use a service that encrypts your data at *client* side. For example:
- http://www.wuala.com/en/learn/features/t/2
- https://spideroak.com/faq/questions/3/does_spideroak_use_encryption_when_storing_and_transferring_data
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Ronald Kunenborg [Visitor]
The DropBox license also covers the use of the "public" folder. Otherwise you could drag something into that and then sue them for publishing it. Bingo, free money.
People tend to focus only on their own limited use of Dropbox, not on all the things it CAN do that need to be covered by the TOS.
People tend to focus only on their own limited use of Dropbox, not on all the things it CAN do that need to be covered by the TOS.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Maarten [Visitor]
I think they are very clear and Mildred is right:
http://blog.dropbox.com/?p=846
http://blog.dropbox.com/?p=846
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Kelly [Visitor]
This is one of the reasons I encrypt the files I store on Dropbox.
In response to: Dropbox Kisses and Makes Up?
Mari [Visitor]
@Elspeth Kovar
You hit the nail on the head. I think a lot of people are shocked that creative folks, like writers and artists are taking off.
The comment which we deem reasonable is so vague, I could not trust it anymore.
After looking over many different ones. I chose SpiderOak. They make it clear they are not interested in what your files hold, they want to make sure their employees don't have access (something dropbox can't guarantee.).
My husband made a good point about this fiasco. What if it is a way to clear server space for more paying customers. Because most people I know that use it the free 2 gb is more than they need.
You hit the nail on the head. I think a lot of people are shocked that creative folks, like writers and artists are taking off.
The comment which we deem reasonable is so vague, I could not trust it anymore.
After looking over many different ones. I chose SpiderOak. They make it clear they are not interested in what your files hold, they want to make sure their employees don't have access (something dropbox can't guarantee.).
My husband made a good point about this fiasco. What if it is a way to clear server space for more paying customers. Because most people I know that use it the free 2 gb is more than they need.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
testbeta [Visitor]
i always loved DropBox but now i think otherwise i might use box.net btw i am a free user i don't want to pay...:P
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Ben Schorr [Member]
""The very words "distribute" and "publicly display" should be all you really need to hear."
Right... because that is what you're asking DropBox to do for you. How do you expect them to do it if you don't give them a license?"
Well, no. I'm asking Dropbox to sync files between MY devices. In order to do that they do NOT have to have access to the files - case in point if I encrypt my data with TrueCrypt Dropbox still works for syncing between my devices (or to anybody else if I gave them my decryption key).
As Ed Bott points out, Dropbox isn't any worse than a lot of other services in this regard. But...those are all services that are not suitable for confidential documents. There are plenty of other files you can happily and successfully use Dropbox or Google Docs or SkyDrive to host.
Right... because that is what you're asking DropBox to do for you. How do you expect them to do it if you don't give them a license?"
Well, no. I'm asking Dropbox to sync files between MY devices. In order to do that they do NOT have to have access to the files - case in point if I encrypt my data with TrueCrypt Dropbox still works for syncing between my devices (or to anybody else if I gave them my decryption key).
As Ed Bott points out, Dropbox isn't any worse than a lot of other services in this regard. But...those are all services that are not suitable for confidential documents. There are plenty of other files you can happily and successfully use Dropbox or Google Docs or SkyDrive to host.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Lin Mu [Visitor]
Good article. Yet one thing bugs me. When I read about security or lack thereof, I hardly ever here about solutions.
So … If you use a Mac, and would like easy to use strong encryption. The good folks over at GPGTools have a real workable solution. Yes GPG has been around for a long time, and terrific work is being done. One of the newer additions is “Service Menu” GPG tools it allows one to encrypt or decrypt any file from the service menu. or any text block in any service aware program.
It all comes in a single install. Easy. Free. and auto updates…. head on over and pick it up.
http://www.gpgtools.org/projects.html
(they are working on an iOS version)
So … If you use a Mac, and would like easy to use strong encryption. The good folks over at GPGTools have a real workable solution. Yes GPG has been around for a long time, and terrific work is being done. One of the newer additions is “Service Menu” GPG tools it allows one to encrypt or decrypt any file from the service menu. or any text block in any service aware program.
It all comes in a single install. Easy. Free. and auto updates…. head on over and pick it up.
http://www.gpgtools.org/projects.html
(they are working on an iOS version)
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Ayman [Visitor]
Wow thanks for bringing this to our attention! I'm so pissed! I am even more disappointed that Google Docs has a similar TOC clause because I was going to move everything there and use insynchq for the uploading service. Now I'm not sure what to do....
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Mildred [Visitor]
"The very words "distribute" and "publicly display" should be all you really need to hear."
Right... because that is what you're asking DropBox to do for you. How do you expect them to do it if you don't give them a license?
Right... because that is what you're asking DropBox to do for you. How do you expect them to do it if you don't give them a license?
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Ben Schorr [Member]
"You're missing an important part of the language you quote -- "to the extent reasonably necessary for the Service." This means they don't have the right to "your stuff" for any other purpose than to provide the service to you. They don't own it, can't republish it etc. etc. unless that's part of serving you."
Well, yes, that qualifier exists but who gets to determine what's "reasonably necessary for the service"? And ultimately...it doesn't matter. The fact remains that you're giving access to some anonymous group of Cloud techies, regardless of how well-intentioned. If the data you're uploading is confidential or sensitive then you should seriously rethink that plan.
That's why I encourage anybody who intends to use Dropbox (or similar services) for confidential or sensitive materials to encrypt the data BEFORE uploading it. Then it's secure.
Well, yes, that qualifier exists but who gets to determine what's "reasonably necessary for the service"? And ultimately...it doesn't matter. The fact remains that you're giving access to some anonymous group of Cloud techies, regardless of how well-intentioned. If the data you're uploading is confidential or sensitive then you should seriously rethink that plan.
That's why I encourage anybody who intends to use Dropbox (or similar services) for confidential or sensitive materials to encrypt the data BEFORE uploading it. Then it's secure.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Jim [Visitor]
You're missing an important part of the language you quote -- "to the extent reasonably necessary for the Service." This means they don't have the right to "your stuff" for any other purpose than to provide the service to you. They don't own it, can't republish it etc. etc. unless that's part of serving you.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
dyno [Visitor]
If you are a lawyer or insurance broker entrusted with private, confidential information of clients the best option for file sharing is tonido (www.tonido.com).
With tonido, the data resides in your computer but you can access it from anywhere.
With tonido, the data resides in your computer but you can access it from anywhere.
In response to: Dropbox Kisses and Makes Up?
Elspeth Kovar [Visitor]
Dropbox didn't change the part that has people involved in any creative field -- authors, editors, columnists, artists, publishers, reviewers etc -- leaving Dropbox in droves:
"you grant us (and those we work with to provide the Services) worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable rights to use, copy, distribute, prepare derivative works (such as translations or format conversions). . . "
"you grant us (and those we work with to provide the Services) worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable rights to use, copy, distribute, prepare derivative works (such as translations or format conversions). . . "
In response to: Dropbox Kisses and Makes Up?
Ray Ebersole [Visitor]
Thanks for the information and research Ben. As a District Technology Support for a school district and private consultant I am always reading and advising people on security, or setting up things like sync for a company.
I am currently looking at other sites for my clients because I have lost faith in Dropbox. Encrypting data is not a great thing across devices because you need to decrypt it on the other side, but of course you could auto mount the volume after DropBox syncs with TrueCrypt. I haven't tried sharing the volume and syncing, but I know it does work with one person mounting and adding with DropBox syncing.
I am currently looking at other sites for my clients because I have lost faith in Dropbox. Encrypting data is not a great thing across devices because you need to decrypt it on the other side, but of course you could auto mount the volume after DropBox syncs with TrueCrypt. I haven't tried sharing the volume and syncing, but I know it does work with one person mounting and adding with DropBox syncing.
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Hank [Visitor]
You can pay for Dropbox as well
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Ben Schorr [Member]
Well...you've all probably heard the expression: "If you didn't pay for the product then you *ARE* the product."
In response to: Oh Dropbox, We Loved You Once...
Eric Lovejoy [Visitor]
Thats why you back up your data on your own server instead of other peoples server.
http://fak3r.com/geek/howto-build-your-own-open-source-dropbox-clone/
Or something like that with rsynch... Srsly people... Every company just wants an "in" to your data. Toolbars, services, mail clients, photos databases, its a recurring theme of the data mining generation.
http://fak3r.com/geek/howto-build-your-own-open-source-dropbox-clone/
Or something like that with rsynch... Srsly people... Every company just wants an "in" to your data. Toolbars, services, mail clients, photos databases, its a recurring theme of the data mining generation.
In response to: Monday Morning Technologist
Ben Schorr [Member]
Well, actually, on Facebook if you friend somebody they have to either "Confirm" or "Ignore" your friend request (or defer it). If they confirm then you guys are "Friends" and that's a reciprocal connection. You're their "friend" as much as they're yours.
That's different from Twitter where 10 million anonymous people can Follow Lady Gaga and she doesn't have to do anything or even be aware of it. Even on the "private" Twitter accounts where the tweets are protected - they have to approve you to follow them, but they still don't have to follow you.
A "Friend" in Facebook is automatically a reciprocal relationship.
That's different from Twitter where 10 million anonymous people can Follow Lady Gaga and she doesn't have to do anything or even be aware of it. Even on the "private" Twitter accounts where the tweets are protected - they have to approve you to follow them, but they still don't have to follow you.
A "Friend" in Facebook is automatically a reciprocal relationship.
In response to: Monday Morning Technologist
Gwynne [Visitor]
That is an interesting analysis of Twitter. However, it makes an assumption that your "friending" someone on Facebook means they will also "friend" you back, which is not always the case. Just as people don't have to follow you on Twitter, they don't have to "friend" you on Facebook.
In response to: Date Searching in Outlook
John Marshall [Visitor]
I was going to tease you about being married and looking for a date, but this is a very good tip.
I now have it on a postit. I know the date I am looking for, but I usually end up scrolling back and forth through several directories. This is far more elegant.
I now have it on a postit. I know the date I am looking for, but I usually end up scrolling back and forth through several directories. This is far more elegant.
In response to: May I See Your License?
Lesley Hoenig [Visitor]
you forgot one version of office, Office Enterprise (though it's essentially the same as ultimate)
In response to: The Lawyer's Guide to Microsoft Word 2007
Ben Schorr [Member]
I don't have a firm publish date but I have now submitted the final manuscript so I'm sure the ABA is hard at work getting the layout done so it can go off to the printers. We should be accepting pre-orders soon and have it in print very soon after.
In response to: The Lawyer's Guide to Microsoft Word 2007
Launy [Visitor]
Do you have a publish date yet for your revised book for Office 2010?
In response to: Cloud Review: HoudiniESQ
Frank Rivera [Visitor]
THIS IS A OLD ARTICLE.
FOR THE MOST UP TO DATE INFORMATION REGARDING HOUDINIESQ SEE
houdiniesq (dot) com
FOR THE MOST UP TO DATE INFORMATION REGARDING HOUDINIESQ SEE
houdiniesq (dot) com
In response to: Beware the Folders
Randyl Meigs [Visitor]
To help with the filing issues related to Outlook folders and subfolders, purchase Simply File. The best $50 I have spent in a long time. It makes filing emails in folders and subfolders very easy.
http://www.techhit.com/SimplyFile/
http://www.techhit.com/SimplyFile/
In response to: Motorola Droid - Second Thoughts
Emilee Kapfer [Visitor]
Hands down, Apple's app store wins by a mile. It's a huge selection of all sorts of apps vs a rather sad selection of a handful for Zune. Microsoft has plans, especially in the realm of games, but I'm not sure I'd want to bet on the future if this aspect is important to you. The iPod is a much better choice in that case.
In response to: DroidX - Second Impressions
Ben Schorr [Member]
Fair enough, however I will point out that I said they should CONSIDER the Droid2 or the HTC Incredible, not that they should automatically get it. Some people will prefer the Incredible or the Droid2 and for those folks it's probably a smart choice. I've heard nothing but rave reviews of the Incredible in particular.
And, if you would re-read the post, you might notice that it's not simply the delay of the updated software that is tempering my enthusiasm. It's the fact that the device, for all its strengths, has quite a few quirks and annoyances. The navigation in the car dock is almost unusable, for example, and that's a pretty big selling point for the device.
I didn't even mention the fairly weak set of default ring tones which seem to place a premium on being cute over being heard. I've lost more calls to voicemail because I never even heard the DroidX ring than I ever did with my Droid. I think I've resolved that now with a more attention-getting ring tone but the inexperienced smartphone buyer you speak of might not even think of it.
The DroidX is a device with a lot of potential. But right now it's also fairly flawed. For now I'm living with the flaws and finding workarounds for them. If the flaws persist 2 months from now I may well be in the position of regretting that I got one.
Besides, with the pace of smartphone development these days we're ALWAYS signing a 2 year contract for a device that's going to be obsolete in a few months. The issue is whether or not it does the job you need it to do now.
And, if you would re-read the post, you might notice that it's not simply the delay of the updated software that is tempering my enthusiasm. It's the fact that the device, for all its strengths, has quite a few quirks and annoyances. The navigation in the car dock is almost unusable, for example, and that's a pretty big selling point for the device.
I didn't even mention the fairly weak set of default ring tones which seem to place a premium on being cute over being heard. I've lost more calls to voicemail because I never even heard the DroidX ring than I ever did with my Droid. I think I've resolved that now with a more attention-getting ring tone but the inexperienced smartphone buyer you speak of might not even think of it.
The DroidX is a device with a lot of potential. But right now it's also fairly flawed. For now I'm living with the flaws and finding workarounds for them. If the flaws persist 2 months from now I may well be in the position of regretting that I got one.
Besides, with the pace of smartphone development these days we're ALWAYS signing a 2 year contract for a device that's going to be obsolete in a few months. The issue is whether or not it does the job you need it to do now.
In response to: DroidX - Second Impressions
scott [Visitor]
It's so disappointing to see people posting such poor advice, particularly when there are so many inexperienced smartphone buyers seeking advice nowadays.
Is it really wise to sign a two year contract for a lesser device because a new release of software is two weeks, or even two months, late? Hardly.
Is it really wise to sign a two year contract for a lesser device because a new release of software is two weeks, or even two months, late? Hardly.
In response to: It's a Shame...
Rick Rutledge [Visitor]
Hear! Hear! Each time I post a new entry (and I only have a few so far), I get a flood of about 30-35 new "comments," all of which are ads for cheap imports or totally irrelevant sites. Some try to look legit by including supposed references to non-existent previous comments, etc. I assume from the pattern that the spammers add me to their RSS feeds, so they get notified every time I make a new entry, and they rush to post comments to that entry. I can only assume that, as the number of blog entries grow, so, too, will the volume of spam. {sigh}
In response to: University of Hawaii Data Breach
Janice Taylor-Gaines [Visitor]
This is a GREAT article despite the dismay of breaches. In David Scott’s words, everyone needs to be a mini-Security Officer today. I think Mr. Scott, the author, is right: Most individuals and organizations enjoy Security largely as a matter of luck. For some free insight (and free is good!), check out his blog, “The Business-Technology Weave” – you can Google to it, or search on the site IT Knowledge Exchange which hosts it. Anyone else here reading I.T. WARS? It reflects much of what is said here. I had to read parts of this book as part of my employee orientation at a new job. The book talks about a whole new culture as being necessary – an eCulture – for a true understanding of security, being that most identity/data breaches are due to simple human errors. It has great chapters on security, as well as risk, content management, project management, acceptable use, various plans and policies, and so on. Just Google IT WARS – check out a couple links down and read the interview with the author David Scott at Boston’s Business Forum. (Full title is I.T. WARS: Managing the Business-Technology Weave in the New Millennium). “In the realm of risk, unmanaged possibilities become probabilities.” Keep “security” front and center! Great stuff.
In response to: University of Hawaii Data Breach
CH [Visitor]
Years ago, driver's license numbers in Hawaii were people's SSNs. So, I assume that's why they were on file. What I don't understand is why these numbers weren't deleted back when the state started issuing separate driver's license numbers. There was absolutely no reason to keep them. I graduated from UH almost a decade ago, why did they need to keep my info on file? I'm so livid about this. I got their stupid letter in the mail, no apologies or anything. I think there should be a class action lawsuit filed against them due to their obvious disregard for their student and staff's sensitive information. Unbelievable.
In response to: What Does Onit Omit?
Larry Port [Visitor]
Tick tock... Two years down, three to go until we get Steve's stamp of approval.
In response to: What Does Onit Omit?
Steve Miller [Visitor]
My take is much simpler: Lawyers want to lawyer, they are not interested in "how" the process works, only "that" the process works. 24/7. No excuses. The 20-something Crackberry'd lawyers pushing Saas today remind me of the 20-something MBA geniuses who believed that Wall Street always made money and that there was no such thing as a Black Swan (see "The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable"). The only difference between an MBA and a lawyer is that MBA's will not lose their license to work if they lose their clients' money because of a computer failure. Lawyers do and will. Only after (if?) SaaS has been around for 5 years will I begin to recommend it to my law firm clients. It's good to remember that it's the pioneers who get the arrows in their backs.