We get lots of questions, and we don't have all the answers. But we
do know how to find them: Google them.
Almost without
exception, if you simply type a computer problem in the Google
search field and hit return, up will come experts and whole forums
of
people who have dealt with this very thing before. No matter how
much a columnist or any expert knows, it is as nothing to what 50 or
60 million people know.
Let's say a
program running in the background has some cryptic name no human
could ever decipher. Type those letters and numbers in a search
field, and you'll find out what it is.
Last week we wrote
about using "msconfig" to reconfigure which programs load into your
Windows computer at start-up. A reader then wrote to say he tried
that with Windows 2000 and got a screen message saying, "path not
found." The solution: Joy typed "msconfig for Windows 2000" in the
Google search field; up came 12 forums with helpful advice.
Technical support is out there!
You're
on the Air!
Sign on with the new
BlogTalkRadio.com and you can record your own radio show
from your telephone. We did, and it was easy and free. You can find
our maiden broadcast by searching on our name or "computers" at the
BlogTalkRadio Web site.
You can listen in whether you have a Windows or Mac computer.
You can listen to
hundreds of broadcasts already up there and arranged by category.
Subjects include art, books, dreams, hobbies, computers, technology,
writing, photography, jobs, etc. Some broadcasts are updated
regularly, some just once in a while. You can record as many
broadcast segments as you want, and they can be up to two hours at a
time.
Click
here to listen to Bob Schwabach on the Alan Levy Radio Show
The key convenience here is that you can do the broadcast from your
telephone -- no special equipment required. You decide on a time for
your broadcast, and that time will be listed in the
BlogTalkRadio
program guide. At the appropriate time, you call in to a special
number provided by BlogTalk and ...talk. There's an additional
number available for people who want to call in and talk with you.
They can call from any phone, including cell phones. You can screen
those calls,a nd you can also provide listeners with an address for
instant messaging.
BlogTalkRadio plans to make its money selling ads. We didn't see or
hear any ads, but it's still the early days.
A
Browser that Sticks with You
A new free Web browser is our new favorite. It's called
Maxthon . This browser keeps a
record of where you've been. When you reopen it, a message asks if
you want to start again where you left off in the last session. If
you had a dozen Web sites open, they'll all be there again, each
with its own tab.
The new version of Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE 7) also has
tabbed browsing and a lot of new features, and should be able to
hold its overwhelming market share. But there's a lot to like about
Maxthon. It has a new free service called Access that allows you to
remotely access your home or office computer from another
Internet-connected computer. And it uses less memory, saving on
system resources.
Maxthon looks like IE to the Web sites you visit. This is important
because nearly all sites accept a connection with IE, but not
necessarily with other Web browsers. You can find Maxthon at
Maxthon.com, which notes that
so far, 70.6 million people have snapped it up.
Free Training
It's been a couple of years since we last visited
Lynda.com, and a whole lot has
happened. Lynda is the queen of Web tutorials, and now you can try
out
more
than 1,700 of them for free. They cover instruction for 75 major
software titles. Many of the videos also include closed-captioning
for the hearing impaired.
We took a look at instructional videos for Adobe Illustrator and one
titled "Effective Email," and both were the best teaching videos
we've ever seen. The lessons on e-mail covered a lot of bases most
people don't think about when they compose and send off a message.
The first two chapters on any topic are free, and if you want to
continue, there is a charge of $25 a month or $250 a year. This
provides access to all the videos. For an additional charge you can
get exercises to work on offline.
Free
Scrapbooks
Scrapbook Flair is a free program that creates really lovely
scrapbook pages. We had this program around for months, but never
took a look at it until one day we moved a pile of papers and the
disk literally fell into Joy's lap. What a lucky break!
You start up the program and drop in photos like pasting them into a
physical
scrapbook.
Later when you print it, it will be a physical scrapbook. You can
put them in pages of various sizes, from 4-by-6 inches to letter
size or 12-by-12, print the pages out and bind them. You can
download the software for free at
scrapbookflair.com.
When you go to the Web site, you can sign up for a scrapbook
community. You can share scrapbooks with as few or as many people as
you like, and you can also post to public galleries. There are
scrapbook clubs, too, like the "Scrappin' Mamas and Papas" and
"Puppy Love." The groups are international and fun.