Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Google Search Cheat Sheet

Are you frustrated with the results you are getting while searching Google? While Google may be the best search engine ever invented it is sometimes hard to sift through all of the search results that come up for a few key words. The Techie Diva has tipped her readers to a Google Cheat Sheet for searching. I know you may not want to memorize anymore shortcuts, but print this off and tape it somewhere that you can see it quickly when you are trying to search for something.

Remember that Google has already made it easier to search for images through Google Images
or shopping through Froogle -

froo·gle (fru'gal) n. Smart shopping through Google.


or even searching for an item in the News.


One last tip - if you haven't downloaded the Google toolbar - DO IT!!!!!!!! It is available for IE or Firefox.


Tags: Google, Technology, Search Engines

Best Free Security Apps

I must get asked this question at least three times a week. Often I am still appalled at the number of people who have ZERO security apps loaded onto their computers. I think that most people are hesitant to continue to pour money into a new program every year when their subscriptions run out (a la Norton or McAfee).












While this may be a valid frustration, your computer must still be protected. CNet.com provides a helpful list of free security applications along with reviews and free downloads at Download.com.
Check out their list and download one that you feel comfortable with. Just remember, protecting your computer now will save your data later. Documents, Pictures, Music, and E-mail can all be lost in an instant by a computer virus. Take steps now to prevent that from happening.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Stand up straight and mind your e-mail manners

Can you remember a time before we had e-mail? I can remember that time, but I can't remember how we communicated. Then e-mail just sort of happened. We learned how to awkwardly do things just to get the job done. Suddenly, communication via e-mail was required and expected as a routine part of our life. Now we use e-mail for work, family, business, and school. And often we are still using e-mail in the awkward way we first learned how to send an e-mail in 1995. Have you ever read about E-mail Etiquette?

The Crabby Office lady has 10 e-mail crabs that she says everyone should pay attention to, especially in the workplace. And for most of them I agree with her. I'll outline her list here, but be sure to click over to her article to capture the wit she intended behind each item on the list. Or you can follow her suggestion to "print this list, frame it nicely, and hang it next to your computer."
Crab #1: Discretion is the greater part of replying

Imagine that you've received a piece of company-wide e-mail from someone in your very large organization. If you feel the need to respond to the sender, rest assured that every member of your very large organization does not want to have to read your reply, no matter how witty or urbane you may think it is. This goes the same for personal e-mail (especially if it's an Internet joke or rumor).

Crab #2: Stop yelling at me

USING ALL CAPITAL LETTERS IS NOT ONLY RUDE AND IRRITATING, IT'S ALSO HARD TO READ. Save your caps for special occasions, such as those times when you want your recipient to know you're shouting. GOT IT?

Crab #3: Save the stationery for snail mail

(For all of you who love to use background color and stationery for your personal e-mail, please disregard this crab. This one is for you people at the office.)

Crab #4: This is not a chain letter

If I send you a nice note and then get a response from you that, at first glance, appears to have only what I wrote to you at the top of it, I'm going to assume you have nothing to say to me (and sent me an empty e-mail message to tell me as much).

Let's put this another way: when you're replying to an e-mail message and you want to include what the sender wrote, add your comments at the top of the mail, not the bottom. I know what I wrote — why would I want to reread it?

That being said, I do see the logic in keeping all the notes and replies in order (my original message on top, followed by your reply, followed by my reply to your reply, and so on). Well, it may be like that in the snail mail world, but we're not in Kansas anymore, Toto. Adapt. Your reply on top, please — this isn't a chain letter. (And if it is, don't send it to me. But that's a crab of a different color.)

Crab #5: Too many forwards is one step backward

While you can cut some slack for those in your life who have just discovered that Great Oracle of Misinformation we call the Internet, it's just not appropriate, considerate, professional, or even cool to forward these useless things to coworkers.

Crab #6: Don't be a cyber-coward

If you've got something to say to me that is:

  • Highly personal
  • Scary
  • Sad
  • Angry
  • Tragic
  • Vicious
  • Shocking
  • Any combination of the aboveÂ…

Â…please do it in person. (Actually, I prefer you don't do it at all.) Sentient beings are filled with emotions (and NOT emoticons). E-mail programs aren't the best translators of this.

Crab #7: I love you but not your 500 KB image file

As I see it, there are three main reason why you should refrain from sending really large files via e-mail:

  1. It takes a long time to download a large file.

  2. E-mail servers are like studio apartments: there's only so much space to keep everything.

  3. Sometimes you're at the mercy of the ISP

So please consider the size the file you're sending. If it's a large image, make it smaller. If it's large document, zip it up using a file compression program.

Crab #8: The subject "Re: " means nothing to me

In other words, fill out the Subject line. I get hundreds of e-mail messages each day, and when I get one without anything in the Subject line, I tend to skip over it. If the subject of the message wasn't important enough for the sender to fill out the Subject line, then it's not important to me. Be gone!

Crab #9: Plain text and HTML are not buddies

If someone sends you mail in plain text format, you can usually tell because: 1) it has no formatting, and 2) the font it appears in is Courier. If you decide to reply to a plain-text sender using HTML format with special fonts and formatting, the text that your recipient receives will look like indecipherable nonsense that needs a Cold War code breaker to untangle its message. Do your recipients a favor: send your reply in the format it came in.

Crab #10: Itchy trigger finger? Count to 10 before hitting the Send button

You're hot under the collar and everybody knows that (and sometimes loves that) about you. But before sending your clever and scathing message out there to the world (with virtually no chance of retrieving it), remember this: the pushing of the Send button lasts a moment; its effects can last a lifetime — or at least until you're back on the streets, looking for another job.

If you use Outlook 2003, however, there is a way to delay that message — kind of like counting to ten before exploding. Learn about how to delay delivery of a message.

"Good manners are made up of petty sacrifices."— Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Firefox or IE??

Are you still using IE?


Have taken a look at Firefox?

Firefox is the brower to have. It is secure and allows more customization than IE.

A recent article praised the upgrades to IE7 that were released in third Beta last week. A Firefox architect says that IE 7 'looks pretty good'.

I will personally stick with Firefox because I am used to it now and resort to IE only when forced to do so for work situations. However, I think that Firefox's increasing market share has made IE a better more secure product and that is a very good thing!


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