Top

Time Capsule saves your digital life

March 28, 2008 by admin · 3 Comments 

What would happen if your computer was stolen, or you lost everything on your hard drive? Scary thought, right? That’s why it is important to back up your data. Do you? If not, thanks to a new gizmo from Apple, it’s never been easier to be prepared.
Our digital files are valuable beyond words. Some of us have thousands of photos on our hard drives, even more songs or TV and movie clips. Then there are our documents, letters and financial info.

I don’t need to tell you how important it is to back up.

But until Apple’s Time Capsule came on the scene a few weeks ago, backing up our computer files was tedious. Time Capsule automatically backs up everything, every hour, every day so you no longer have to worry about losing your digital life. A 500 GB version costs $299. A 1 terabyte version is $499.

Working with a program called Time Machine that comes standard on Mac’s latest Leopard operating system, Time Capsule does all the backing up seamlessly. But it does more than that.

Time Capsule is also a superfast WiFi base station, operating in the new 802.11n format which just about doubles the range of older WiFi stations. You can also plug a printer into the back of Time Capsule and wirelessly print from anywhere in the house.

This is the most advanced backup device and WiFi station I have ever seen. I have my main PC and two laptops backed up on it and feel so secure about it, I’m almost smug.

The system works best with Macs.

For PCs, meanwhile, there are some new tools that can help WIndows machines be more efficient, too.

Did you know that there is now a 50% chance of being infected by an internet worm within just 12 minutes of being online using an unprotected, unpatched Windows PC? This is according to Sophos, one of the big anti-virus companies. That’s how bad it has become. Even the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness team says “the average time-to-exploitation … for an unprotected computer is measured in minutes.”

An outfit known as MacroVirus is offering free scans of your computer to see whether you’ve been hit. clean and repair your entire system and get it back to it’s original performance. MacroVirus not only detects and removes Viruses, but also Spyware, Adware, Trojans, Dialers, Worms and a host of other dangerous parasites that detererate computer performance and invade your privacy.

A recent study found that over 90% of computers are infected by some type of malware picked up from internet usage. MacroVirus claims to protect against ALL of them.

Twing searches online communities

March 22, 2008 by admin · 3 Comments 

The Internet is a huge buzz machine, a place where gossip, trends, fashion and the latest news is analyzed, shaped and spread. And a lot of that buzz originates in online communities… chat rooms and forums.

There’s a brand new tool that does to online forums what Google does for Web pages.

It’s called Twing and what it does is search the postings in forums and discussion groups. A lot of the content found in these active online communities is missed or not indexed by the traditional search engines like Google and Yahoo and the like.

Twing concentrates on them and returns listings from dozens of categories and thousands of online forums. Type in your phrase and you can search by posts, topics or forum.

This is a great way to see what online users are saying, an instant reality check on hot topics or subjects you want information on from real people. The site is free to use, though if you register - also free -“ you can save your favorite searches and forums.

Hulu site sets new online video standard

March 14, 2008 by admin · 8 Comments 

The online video trend shows no signs of letting up with a brand-new site opening this week that sets a new standard for the video-on-demand movement with scores of old and not-so-old TV shows and movies that can be watched online for free.

The Hulu site opened for the public Wednesday and of all the online sites that are now showing video, this is the best I’ve seen. I got so hooked reviewing it Wednesday afternoon that I watched a half-dozen “Saturday Night Live” skits I’ve missed lately, plus a few of the old favorites from vintage “SNL” shows, a “Simpsons” episode and, for 1:46 minutes, the powerful thriller “The Usual Suspects.”

The site is jointly owned by the News Corp. (Fox TV) and NBC Universal (NBC) and is filled with TV clips and full episodes from popular, currently running NBC and Fox shows, such as “Arrested Development,” “Prison Break” and “Heroes.” There’s talk that CBS may join the partnership in future days. ABC is doubtful as it seems to be going its own Disney way.

Besides the current shows, there are plenty of classic programs and reruns, too, like “Adam 12,” ” Hill Street Blues” and “Starsky and Hutch.” You’ll also find sporting events, music videos and what Hulu says will be a growing list of fairly recent full-length movies. To watch the movies, you need to sign up for a free account. But all the viewing is totally free.

What’s the catch?

You have to watch commercials that sandwich around the shows you choose to watch. I encountered one at the beginning of everything I watched. The commercial that ran before “The Usual Suspects” was the 1:45 trailer for the new “Leatherheads” movie starring George Clooney. After that, the movie ran, uninterrupted by any other ads. At other times, when I clicked on a category or browsed a genre, a short commercial would also play, but nothing anywhere near as obnoxious as the 20 minutes of ads that air during a typical prime-time show during its regular broadcast time on TV.

On Hulu, you watch the videos at your computer online and they stream pretty clean. Obviously, you need a broadband cable or DSL connection. You wouldn’t want to try this with dial-up.

But watched on my Comcast home cable connection, I noticed barely a trace of the herky-jerky, stuttering video glitches that other streaming sites struggle with. The programs and movies played almost as if I was playing back a DVD. The quality of the images and sound was excellent. Now I don’t know if that will change when a lot of people discover the site and it starts playing a lot of simultaneous streams, but Wednesday, it was about as flawless of a streaming experience that I have ever had watching online video.

You can watch the shows and movies in a box on the Hulu Web page or, by clicking a button, full screen. You can also pause it (which I did several times to take phone calls). If you want to see a scene over again, just drag the player marker on the control window back a bit.

I’m very impressed with Hulu. There are lots of TV shows and movies in lots of different venues. It’s only going to get better. I think this is going to be hugely popular and a site we’ll look back on as advancing online entertainment to new mainstream levels.

The one down side is the programs have to be watched “live” on Hulu. You can’t download them.

There are, however, sites that do let you download TV shows. Here’s one. It’s a membership site but it has TV shows, movies, music and thousands of files you can download right to your computer. It works with Macs and PCs, too.

Online auction site sells unclaimed items from police property rooms

March 7, 2008 by admin · 14 Comments 

eBay and online auction sites have changed the way America shops. But of all the copycat auction sites out there, I’ve found an inauction site with a twist. This one scours police property rooms around the country and sells off unwanted or unclaimed property that somehow ended up in police hands.

The site is www.PropertyRoom.com and it’s bursting at the virtual seams with pretty cool stuff at very hot prices. In design, it looks and works like similar online auction sites. Browse the categories and place your bids.

But right away, you notice some pretty good buys. Check out power tools …jewelry, electronics,computers, automotive stuff, like car stereos, GPS receivers and speakers.

The site has arrangements with police property rooms across the country, moves out the unclaimed or forfeited stuff to its own warehouses and then cuts the cops in on a part of the proceeds.

The site says it sells about 98% of everything it lists and should the rightful owner find his stolen stuff online, it offers a service called “Steal it Back” that returns the items. All the owner has to do is provide the serial number.

Then…. there are other sites that specialize in auctions of other items.

For example, very month across the United States, thousands of vehicles are seized by different Government agencies (IRS, DEA, FBI) & Police departments and auctioned off to the public. Due to certain laws these vehicles are listed and sold at up to 95% OFF their original value and auctions many times start at $100. This site lists 3,000+ updated auctions nationwide, with listings in every state.

Here’s another government auction site, this one of just about every type of surplus, seized, and abandoned property you could imagine. Once you join this site, they give you access to our unparalleled database of over 2,000 federal, state, and local government agency auctions in your state and on the Internet.

Finally, don’t forget good old eBay. Here’s a guide on how to make and save money on eBay. The site claims 95%of eBay sellers are wasting money because they do not know the answers to some simple questions. This causes expensive mistakes. You can take the test and see what you can do on eBay.

Bottom