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Showing posts with label Computers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Computers. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

SugarSync: Sync Your Files

By Diana Hsieh

This post is a shameless plug of a product that I use... and because I use it so much, I'm hoping to for a bonus by convincing you to use it too!

SugarSync is a cloud-based backup and sync service similar to DropBox. I use it to keep my active files in-sync between my desktop and laptop, as well as a secondary off-site backup for those files.

I used to use DropBox, but I got frustrated by its limitations. In particular, Dropbox only permits you to sync one folder, whereas I have files across multiple folders that I wanted to sync. As it happens, SugarSync not only permits you to select what folders and files to backup and/or sync, but it also offers far more free space than DropBox -- 5 GB rather than just 2 GB.

Also, like with DropBox, I can access anything on SugarSync on my iPad and iPhone. So, for example, I keep reference files and PDFs that I want to read on SugarSync, so that they're always at my fingertips. I'm sure that they have similar apps for Android.

Basically, if you sign up for SugarSync, I get a bit of extra storage. Right now, I've got less than have a gig free, and I'd like a bit more of a cushion.

If you're interested, you can sign up to SugarSync now! If you don't see the "free" option right away, keep looking, because it's there!

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Oh, Those Wacky YouTube Translations

By Diana Hsieh

What happens when you put a simple conversation through YouTube's closed-caption translation feature... twice? Pure comedy gold, baby!

Caption Fail 1:



Caption Fail 2:

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Extra Space on DropBox

By Diana Hsieh

I recently signed up with DropBox, a free online storage service. If you sign up through me, we'll both get a bonus of extra space. Win-win!

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Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Managing Multiple Computers

By Diana Hsieh

I posted the following commentary to the OProducers e-mail list a few weeks ago. Although I still have a few kinks to work out, I'm happy to report that my new e-mail system has made managing my e-mail so much easier!

For some time, I've been struggling with the management of multiple computers, particularly with e-mail. My iMac desktop is my primary computer, but I often read and send e-mail from two secondary computers: my MacBook Pro laptop and my iPhone. Happily, I think I've finally found a workable solution, largely using MobileMe. It's not perfect, but it's a huge improvement. For many of you, that solution will be old hat -- or unnecessary. Yet I hope that others might find it useful. And I hope that folks will have some suggestions for alternatives or further improvements too!

Until recently, I'd been limping along with old-fashioned POP e-mail service. I could read e-mail -- and reply too -- on any of my computers. However, messages would only be deleted from the server only once downloaded by my primary computer, as that's where my mail archive resides. That was inefficient. Sometimes I would see an e-mail multiple times before I'd be able to file it away. My iPhone was often cluttered with old messages that I'd have to delete in a tedious fashion due to the lack of a "select all" button. While at my secondary machines, I couldn't flag a message for an action or reply, so I'd have to do that immediately -- or hope to remember it once I downloaded my mail to my primary machine. Although I could send e-mail from the secondary computers, saving those e-mails in my archive required auto-BCC'ing myself, then downloading them to the primary computer, then moving them into the "Sent" folder. Ugh!

Given the amount of e-mail that I receive and send over the course of a single day, I had to find a way manage my e-mail better. Lately, the problem seemed worse: I've often failed to empty my inbox for days or even weeks on end. That's unacceptable: I must empty my inbox twice per day in order to manage my projects effectively and keep my mind clear for substantive intellectual work.

Using a web-based e-mail system was not an option for me, as we have a fairly slow internet connection. (It was just upgraded from 1.5 Mbps to 3.0 Mbps. Yipee!) Instead, I needed some better way of syncing e-mail across machines.

Upon thinking about this problem, I realized that the best solution would be to switch from POP to IMAP e-mail. My internet host doesn't offer IMAP, and because I wanted to sync iCal, Address Book, and MacJournal too, I decided to sign up for Apple's MobileMe.

I set up my e-mail as per these instructions. My e-mail address is still diana@dianahsieh.com. However, all e-mail sent to that address is forwarded to my MobileMe account. To preserve diana@dianahsieh.co as my address on outgoing mail, I'm using a different SMTP server than MobileMe.

More importantly, all my incoming, outgoing, and saved mail is stored on the MobileMe server, then continuously synced with my three computers. Thus all of my computers are completely up-to-date with what I've read, drafted, sent, filed, etc. That's sooooo fabulous! However, I don't want to keep my mail on the MobileMe server forever. So periodically, I transfer my e-mail from the folders on MobileMe to my iMac, then sync that archive with my MacBook Pro.

I can read and manage my e-mail on MobileMe's web site. However, I can't send e-mail through any SMTP server than MobileMe, so that screws up my outgoing e-mail address. Since I don't want that, I don't plan to use the web interface, except in an emergency.

Of course, I could have gotten IMAP e-mail elsewhere, likely for cheaper. However, MobileMe allows me to easily sync my calendar, address book, and other third-party software. That's hugely valuable to me too. For example, I can now edit my calendar via my laptop, whereas before I could only read it. And I can sync MacJournal -- the program I'm using for drafting blog posts -- between my laptop and desktop. Totally separate from MobileMe, I use EverNote to store references, notes, and other useful information. That data is stored on their server, so it's available from any computer. And I use Xmarks to synchronize my FireFox bookmarks with Safari (and thus with my iPhone) and between computers.

It's a terrible failing of the computer industry that syncing files between computers is so darn difficult. I'd be very interested to hear what others are doing. I've taken a huge step forward, but I know that I could do more!

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Friday, January 8, 2010

Nine Opinions on Operating Systems

By Diana Hsieh

Awesome:

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Monday, January 4, 2010

Apple Tablet Rumors

By Diana Hsieh

As a small-time Apple fanatic, I'm definitely excited by the rumors swirling about an Apple tablet. Gizmodo recently posted The Exhaustive Guide to Apple Tablet Rumors. It's a fun read.

Of course, tons of people are asserting definitive claims, most of them contradicting other people's definitive claims. I suspect that most people don't know jack, and if some people do know something, we have no way to determine who they are.

Nonetheless, all the crazy speculation makes me happy. People are soooo excited about a device that they don't know anything about and that might never come to market. I love that! Apple has indeed built a great reputation for itself.

As for the rumored device, unless you're suggesting that it's going to sear your steak and wash your laundry, you're probably underestimating it. Most people seem to be imagining the device to be little more than an extension of current technology, meaning a large version of the iPhone.

That's exactly the mistake that people made with the iPhone during the rumor-mongering phase. They thought it would be some kind of blend of the iPod of the day plus a cell phone. For example -- and these are highly amusing -- see Four iPhone Mockups That Completely Missed the Mark and The Speculative Prehistory of the iPhone. My favorite wrong comment is from the author of that second article, who said:

And the swiss-army knife philosophy of today's phones seems anything but Jobsian. Would the iPhone play music, capture still photos and video, do e-mail and browsing, and be a mobile gaming platform (oh, and let you make phone calls)? Or could Apple get away with introducing an elegant device that did voice, music, and possibly video extremely well--and didn't even try to do anything else?
Haha!

I suspect that people are so excited about this tablet because, based on Apple's history, they have reason to believe that it will be so much more than they can imagine right now. That's what the innovative producer does. He does not give us what we want; he produces some new thing that we didn't even know we wanted until we saw it. He does not satisfy demand; he creates demand.

That's what makes capitalism so damn great.

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Question on Switching to Mac

By Diana Hsieh

Bryan Armentrout recently e-mailed me the following about switching from PC to Mac. I didn't have anything to add over and above what was said in the comments of this post, Back to Mac?, except that I recommended TUAW. (They probably have some good resources for people making the switch.) So anyone have any new advice to offer? Here's what Bryan wrote:

I am looking at switching from a PC to a Mac - the IMac 3.06GHz, 24" specifically. I am holding off until the convention is done this week to decide on a model. Rumors of a new model introduction this week. This is for home use only - no serious artistic applications in mind, but I would like to build up a website myself.

You have commented on your Apple before on Noodlefood.

Any quick recomendations or things a Mac newbie should look out for?
Thanks!

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Monday, January 5, 2009

MacBook Wheel

By Diana Hsieh

From our friends at The Onion, via The Agitator:


Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard

Don't they know that the wheel is passé? It's all about the touch screen, baby!

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Saturday, November 22, 2008

Tenth Circle of Hell: A Week of PC After Two Years of Mac

By Diana Hsieh

I'm in PC hell.

Yesterday morning, I used my computer -- my beloved Mac PowerBook Pro -- to check and answer my mail. A bit later, after I'd fed the beasts, I returned to find it apparently frozen in sleep. So I rebooted it. It bonged and the hard drive whirred, but the screen never lit up. I tried again, and again, and again. I got nothing. When I hooked it up to an external monitor, I got nothing.

So I took it to the friendly local Apple Store. It looks like a dead video card -- just as I thought. Unfortunately, they need to ship it out, and I likely won't get it back for a full week. Boo hoo hoo!

So in the meantime, I'm working on my old PC laptop. That's not going to be fun. I don't have access to regular programs, including programs that I use regularly for dissertation writing. I'm going to have to use web mail. (UGH!) The setup is now unfamiliar, so I'll be doing all kinds of stupid things. Windows will do its usual dumb things like asking me to reboot every few minutes after an update. (Yes, that's happening already.) The keys on the keyboard are really cramped and hard-to-press. My space key onlyseemstowork intermittently. So I'll have to fight this machine -- like all PCs must be fought. Worst of all, however, the video card on this machine is flaky, so I might need to switch to Paul's old PC, which isn't set up how I like in the slightest. (I'm very fussy!)

The good news is that I do backup my whole Mac -- meaning that I mirror the entire hard drive to an external drive -- every week. (I also backup my dissertation to multiple off site locations on a regular basis.) I just did that total backup on Wednesday night, and the Apple Store did another backup for me on another drive last night. So I shouldn't lose any data whatsoever.

I do expect to age a few years in this next week, however.

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Friday, October 31, 2008

Ayn Rand at My Fingertips

By Diana Hsieh

Woo hoo! I just got my Objectivism Research CD-ROM running on my Mac using CrossOver Mac. The installation was a breeze, and it's working perfectly. Yeah!

Update: With some fussing, I even got it working from the hard drive, without any need for the cd-rom. Double Woo Hoo!

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Monday, October 13, 2008

Contact Management Software for the Mac?

By Diana Hsieh

In my work for the Coalition for Secular Government, I'm developing an ever-growing list of contacts in the media and other advocacy organizations. Right now, I have them poorly organized in an Excel file, but I need some better system.

Can anyone recommend some good contact management software for the Mac?

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Mobile Me

By Diana Hsieh

As I was reading this TUAW post on the awful (and very un-Apple-like) logo for Mobile Me, the .Mac replacement scheduled to launch in a few weeks, I finally realized why I can't say "Mobile Me" without some strange feeling of cringing mockery. For weeks now, I've known that it reminded me of something vaguely unsavory, but I just couldn't say what. Then I realized: The phrase "Mobile Me" is just too damn close to "Magical Me," the title of Gilderoy Lockhart's autobiography from Harry Potter.

Sheesh, didn't anyone at Apple read Harry Potter?

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

FaceBook Made Real

By Diana Hsieh

FaceBook, if real rather than virtual:



(Via Flibby.)

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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Homing from Work

By Diana Hsieh

Paul sent me his "urban word of the day" for April 25th. It's too perfect not to post:

Homing from Work

Using work time and resources for personal tasks.

See reverse telecommuting

Busey: Steve, did you download those episodes of Entourage I told you about?

Myers: I told you Gary, my home Internet connection sucks ass. I am going to download and burn them at the office while I am homing from work.
Ha!

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

MacBook Pro Sleep Problems

By Diana Hsieh

Hooray! I've finally fixed my MacBook Pro's problems with waking up from sleep!

Basically, about one time in ten, my Mac would only partly wake up from a state of sleep. Nothing would revive it, so I'd have to reboot. That was very annoying, and multiple web searches over the past few months offered no help whatsoever until I discovered this page on how to change the sleep mode. So now my Mac is set to sleep mode 0 (i.e. the "old style sleep mode, with RAM powered on while sleeping, safe sleep disabled, and super-fast wake") instead of the currently standard sleep mode 3 (i.e. the new sleep mode where "RAM is powered on while sleeping, but RAM contents are also written to disk before sleeping" so that the machine hibernates if power if totally drained).

The lack of ability to slip into hibernation as a backup isn't a problem for me, since I never fully run down my battery while in sleep mode. Plus, I like that the computer sleeps and wakes faster than before. Most importantly, however, my computer has woken up perfectly from sleep for a few weeks now, with just one funky exception. Until it began working properly, I didn't realize how much the constant nagging worry that my computer might not wake properly wore on me! Now I feel liberated!

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Saturday, March 1, 2008

Printer Recommendations

By Diana Hsieh

I am thinking of buying a laser printer. It absolutely must:

  • print only in black and white
  • connect wirelessly
  • print double sided
Any recommendations (or anti-recommendations) of particular printers -- or manufacturers? I've been very happy with my HP inkjets over the years, but their wireless capacity seems to be less than stellar.

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Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Dark Castle

By Diana Hsieh

I've never been much for computer games, but back in my early teens, I spent tons of time playing Dark Castle and Beyond Dark Castle on my little Mac SE and Mac Classic. Now, thanks to TUAW, I recently discovered that a new version, Return to Dark Castle, is supposed to be forthcoming shortly. It's in color, with all its characteristic sound effects, and includes not all the old levels from the prior two games. To get a glimpse, you can check out the just-released trailer.

Apparently, the game has been in development for some time, so I can only hope that it will be released sooner rather than later. Otherwise I might just explode.

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