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Search Result for “rolling”

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TECH

Fact checkers get it wrong

Life, James Hein, Published on 13/09/2023

» First off, I have some follow-up news on an earlier story. The Australian fact checking group I mentioned being paid by Meta has been suspended for providing a series of "false" fact checks that turned out to be actually true. As I pointed out, many of the so-called fact checkers don't have any experience in the field they are apparently providing the check for. This will be particularly true in any politically charged area.

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Post-Covid world is challenging

Life, James Hein, Published on 24/11/2021

» In the Covid and post-Covid world will the online meeting still reign? For many in the workplace who are working from home it is their lifeline with colleagues and managers. According to chief analyst Matthew Ball, one of the five issues currently challenging industry is better human collaboration.

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The fight for a freer web continues

Life, James Hein, Published on 17/03/2021

» The social media platform Telegram has over 500 million users with over 55 million active every day. Unlike other platforms such as Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and others, you are free to express your opinion there without being cancelled, shadow banned or throttled in searches.

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TECH

Happy birthday, Windows 95

Life, James Hein, Published on 02/09/2020

» Exactly 25 years ago on Monday, Aug 25, Microsoft launched Windows 95. This was a pivotal time in computer history. At that time in the US, only about 20% of households had a computer and most of them were either techies or nerds. The World Wide Web was just starting to grow and the word processor and spreadsheet were also in their early days. Windows 95 changed the landscape from the earlier 16-bit technology to a 32-bit operating system and added a bunch of new features and extensions. It was the first time we saw the start button, long filenames, right-click context menus and the recycle bin along with Plug and Play technology. For those that had a drive, there was a CD for installing programmes and of course the FreeCell game, which I still play today. The marketing campaign, which featured The Rolling Stones, actually had people buying Windows 95 without even owning a computer.

TECH

How to be a Scrivener

Life, James Hein, Published on 31/08/2016

» As readers might appreciate I have been writing in some form or other for many years. This includes two-and-a-bit novels the first of which I am in the process of final editing and until recently I was using Microsoft Word. In the world of self-publishing and preparing for Amazon’s Mobi or for everyone else’s ePub, Word is not the right tool. My recommendation is Scrivener which is available for Mac or Windows. This appears to be the ultimate tool for the writer, be they fiction, non-fiction, researcher or blogger. The application is inexpensive even for a lifetime licence that covers everyone in your household. It handles everything you will need to prepare what you are writing for publishing apart from your own creativity. My only criticism is the lack of a version for Android but hopefully that will come. You can get a 30-day free trial from www.literatureandlatte.com and there is a lot of free training materials available.

TECH

How to be a Scrivener

Life, James Hein, Published on 31/08/2016

» As readers might appreciate I have been writing in some form or other for many years. This includes two-and-a-bit novels the first of which I am in the process of final editing and until recently I was using Microsoft Word. In the world of self-publishing and preparing for Amazon's Mobi or for everyone else's ePub, Word is not the right tool. My recommendation is Scrivener which is available for Mac or Windows. This appears to be the ultimate tool for the writer, be they fiction, non-fiction, researcher or blogger. The application is inexpensive even for a lifetime licence that covers everyone in your household. It handles everything you will need to prepare what you are writing for publishing apart from your own creativity. My only criticism is the lack of a version for Android but hopefully that will come. You can get a 30-day free trial from www.literatureandlatte.com and there is a lot of free training materials available.

TECH

Updates confuse and infuriate users

Life, James Hein, Published on 17/08/2016

» Most software builders want each successive version of their application to be better, faster and have more features. In the latest version of Yahoo Messenger, Yahoo decided to buck the trend and remove useful features to the point where their application is next to useless. They've started by no longer indicating if one of your contacts was online or not. I typically only send a message to someone I see is online. Yahoo also decided to hide many of your contacts, make it hard to add them, and I'm not sure where conversation history went. They removed groups, audio and video chat, got rid of emoticons and a lot of other stuff including no configuration of options. Basically they took a good, usable application and turned it into a steaming pile of trash.

TECH

Reverting to classic Windows

Life, James Hein, Published on 02/09/2015

» By now a number of readers will have applied the Windows 10 upgrade to their machines. Based on the feedback the first thing you should consider doing is going to www.classicshell.net and downloading the latest version of the free software Classic Shell. I have put this on a number of Windows 8.x machines over the past couple of years without any issues. This utility gives Windows 8 and 10 users back the classic Start menu and associated items. As of writing the latest version is 4.2.4 and I recommend it for all long-term Windows users.

OPINION

Protect your photographs from spies

Life, James Hein, Published on 21/05/2014

» Beware the Cloud, or at least Google+. I took a picture with my phone recently, something I don’t do all that often, and happened to visit Google+ soon after. The first thing I saw was the photo I’d just taken. This was the first time I discovered that any photos I take are by default sent immediately to my Google+ area. You would think this was a setting in the Android G+ app but it is instead in the Photos apps. Google’s default push is to fully open up everything you do to Google, so be careful what setting you have and how you use your camera. To be fair the photo was in a “protected” area but we all know how well that kind of protection remains in the open-to-the-world-plus-their-dog environment we live in.

OPINION

IT industry lays off staff, more to come

Life, James Hein, Published on 29/01/2014

» I am reading more and more articles about different IT organisations dropping staff. The latest is Intel, which estimates it will drop 5,400 workers in 2014 after last year, when they were hiring new staff. Acer is another company that will be scaling down this year, as well. I expect to see more bad news like this in the coming year.