Newsletter Archives
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How my Internet outage caused security problems
ON SECURITY
By Susan Bradley
I live in a city with electricity, high-speed Internet, and all the other customary modern conveniences.
In that same city dwell squirrels, birds (including beautiful hummingbirds), possums, kit foxes, bees, and too many others to mention. Although they’re lovely to have around, they are not necessarily the best of neighbors. Interaction with them doesn’t always work out, and sometimes that affects my technology — and even my security.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (21.39.0, 2024-09-23).
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Gifts for your computer
ON SECURITY
By Susan Bradley
Technology is one of those purchases best done personally.
It’s often hard to know how people like their technology, but for gift-giving it’s important to know whether they are firmly entrenched in the ecosystems of Microsoft, Apple, Android, or Kindle.
That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t treat yourself. And your treat shouldn’t be limited to purchasing something new — this may be the time you want to upgrade the technology you already have. Even a Windows 10 PC might benefit from Santa’s visit.
Your best gift to yourself is to take stock of your daily drivers. Know how much RAM and hard-drive space they have, determine how well your most important apps run, and decide how reliable and dependable the devices are. Do it once a year — the holidays are a great time for it!
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.50.0, 2023-12-11).
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Randy’s remedies: Juice, heat, glass, social, grid, and malware
SUPPORT
By Randy McElveen
Let’s finish up that list of remedies from Randy’s top 10 customer-support issues: Identified!
In this article, we’ll tackle #6 all the way up to #1. If you remember, we’re going to get you some free malware-removal tools for #1, so find that flash drive!
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (19.38.0, 2022-09-19).
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Before moving to the cloud, check the foundation
CLOUD SERVICES
By Amy Babinchak
For small businesses, migrating to cloud-based services will impose some significant changes in how local computing gets done.
But there are also some principles that never change. The cloud might alleviate some information technology (IT) issues, but the basics of good networking practices remain — and they still need to be understood and adhered to.
Before any sort of tech migration, establishing a solid IT foundation is essential; this process includes both IT professionals and the technology infrastructure.
Read the full story in AskWoody Plus Newsletter 17.2.0 (2020-01-13).