Getting the most from your Mac keyboard
While more than 90 percent of the world’s personal computers run on Microsoft Windows Operating Systems, Mac computers have more than doubled in popularity over the last decade.
While more than 90 percent of the world’s personal computers run on Microsoft Windows Operating Systems, Mac computers have more than doubled in popularity over the last decade.
A quote often attributed to John Ruskin says, “There is scarcely anything in the world that some man cannot make a little worse, and sell a little more cheaply. The person who buys on price alone is this man’s lawful prey.” It astounds me to realize this far-sighted 19th century English author, poet, art and social critic knew so much about the 21st century computer industry.
I really do love some of the questions thrown at me by friends, clients, and readers of this column. A good one I recently fielded is “Where is the Internet actually located?” Some people might be inclined to respond to that with a religious analogy, because it seems like the internet is everywhere at once; but that answer really does not work for me. The internet is a physical reality made up of computer hardware in our world.
This is the week Mexico celebrates Day of the Dead, that most colorful of all holidays. And every year about this time I always seem to notice some news article reported on the computer/technical news sites I follow that is at least tangentially related to death and dying. This year will be no exception.
My Aunt Rose, no longer an octogenarian because she proudly points out as of this summer she is a nonagenarian, asks this week’s question as she familiarizes herself with her new laptop and its newer version of Windows. “On the computer, what is the difference between hibernate and sleep?” she emails me to ask.
There is a key on the keyboard of all Windows computers called the [Windows] key, and many people who learn what it can do are thrilled. For those who have yet to discover it, this is the key with the Windows logo that looks like a little flag.
There is a new acronym to add to the bottomless bowl of alphabet soup that makes up the world of Information Technology. IoT is short for the “Internet of Things.” In the beginning, the only things connected to computer networks were … well, computers. This is no longer the case, with more “things” being connected to the net and so we now have the Internet of Things.