Published by KC July 5th, 2007
in Shortcut.
Today’s shortcut is another one that’s great when doing any sort of text entry. Ctrl+Left or Right causes the cursor to move the desired direction by a full word (This is opposed to the normal Left or Right behavior of moving a single character). When writing up an email or a document of some kind, using this shortcut can really cut down on time wasted holding down or repeatedly pressing the arrow keys.
Published by KC July 2nd, 2007
in Shortcut.
I’m starting a new series to help get things going a bit. The shortcut of the day will be an outline of one keyboard shortcut every day. Keyboard shortcuts are useful because they cut down on the number of steps you need to know to get a desired result.
For example: sometimes you’ll need to know some basic ’system specs.’ These are found in the Systems Property area. A simple two button push can get you there.
Keyboard shortcuts also make editing documents a lot easier because you can skip words, lines, paragraphs, or pages. All in all, it’s just a matter of taking the short cut.
Today’s shortcut is the Windows Key + D. This minimizes everything and displays your desktop. Pressing the key combo again will bring everything back. Go ahead and try it, you won’t break anything!
Q: I used to have dial-up, but my neighbor is allowing me to use their wireless network to access the internet. I can reach web pages, but Outlook Express isn’t getting my email. How do I fix it?
This is most likely because Outlook Express is still looking for your dial-up connection and not the wireless connection. It’s pretty easy to fix. Open up Outlook Express. Click on Tools>Options. Click the connections tab and then click on “LAN Settings” towards the bottom of the window. In the new window, make sure that the check box for “Automatically detect settings” is checked. Then just click “OK” on all of the windows. You should now be able to get your email!
Published by KC June 6th, 2007
in Blog Post.
So it appears that something happened to my account and everything was wiped out. I’m still waiting to hear from my hosting service, Blue Host, what went wrong. The great news is that they restored everything in my account less than five minutes after I submitted a help ticket. Thanks Blue Host!
links:
Blue Host
I recently got fed up with storing backups on the same computer. I’ve been using a second hard drive to store my backup data, including pictures and music. This got frustrating because access from another computer was difficult since I dual boot my computer with linux. I also reformat so often that access from other computers is never guaranteed. What I really wanted was a designated file server, a computer that did nothing but share data on the network so that either the laptop or my desktop could get at it. When I looked into this a little more, I discovered Network Attached Storage (NAS) and particularly the Linksys NSLU2. A low power, and easy to use dedicated file server with two USB ports for USB hard drives.
I purchased a 200GB USB hard drive from Seagate in addition to the NSLU2. The hard drive was pre-formatted so when I plugged it into my computer to test it, it was ready to go. It even had a README text document on it. The NSLU2 was just as simple to use. I powered it up, it beeped a couple of times, and then I could access it through my web browser for configuration. It was just like configuring a router. I hooked up the USB hard drive and used the web browser configuration tool to format the hard drive. The NSLU2 wants to reformat the hard drive so that it knows what’s what. This took about twenty minutes.
After the format I opened up “My Computer” in Windows and looked under “My Network Places”; sure enough, there was “data_2″, ready to be accessed. I was able to easily create folders, copy my photos and music, and even play my music as if it was a hard drive on my system.
Some other benefits to this system: I no longer have doubles of photos on different computers; I no longer have to worry about which computer has the most up to date set of pictures; I have all of my music in one place for any of my computers to play; I don’t have to muck around with multiple hard drives or partitions on my desktop computer.
If you need a sane data storage solution and have a few computers that need to share data, the NSLU2 is an easy solution. I paid less than $200 through NewEgg and now have a simple data storage solution. The setup is easy and takes only a few minutes.
Links:
Linksys NSLU2
Seagate