Technology


September 2, 2010: 4:10 pm: CraigTechnology

The age of technology has turned people’s lives into a fascinating mix of an existence that is physical and also metaphorical. Almost everything, from shopping to relationships , now has a position in the virtual world, and sometimes the virtual is the center. It’s a shift in thinking that some members of the workforce are born into, and to which others have learned to adjust. In the realm of the workplace, where so many technologies make it possible to connect with other team members with online interfaces, it’s become a kind of virtual lab that’s proving to be as effective as the physical workspaces used to be.

Some of the tasks in changing how team members think are connected to small modifications in the daily routine, and others are a bit larger and take more energy to accommodate. However, the same rules that guided a good team in the past are still very much operative. Cooperation and collaboration are essential, and there needs to be strong leaders with vision who have the larger picture always in mind. The real test, then, will be how well human beings can take the common sense applications from the past, and bring them into the present. The future is here, and it’s limits are only set by the limits of the imagination.

December 17, 2009: 2:41 pm: CraigInternet, Technology

From Swiftrank: There’s no doubt that we live in an age where we like to measure things.  This is a result of the kinds of holdovers from logical positivism, who saw its great moment at the end of the 19th century, when the industrial revolution, combined with the new advances in science, suggested that there was a knowable world out there, and we could understand everything if we just had the right tools.  In the field of naturalism, there were sudden attempts to catalogue everything in the known world, and we have some extraordinary works of art that came from these attempts to catalogue all the discoveries from the previous century’s explorations.

It may very well be that we’re finding ourselves at the end of measuring, in terms of recent philosophical shifts that are a result of the kinds of science that came after relativity exploded everything.  However, we still have the need to measure and to compare, and it’s a reflect to look at nearly everything and to give it a swiftrank in terms of popularity, elusive measurements of value, or personal interest. On good days, these attempts to rank everything seem very optimistic, but on most days, it is a kind of thinking that is nostalgic.  But it does enter into the field of popular culture in increasingly complex ways.

Any surface look at the recent youtube video listings will show a considerably baffling number of responses, and many of these responses begin with an attempt to catalogue the video based on a very personal scale of interest.  But they inevitably fall to a kind of self-promotion of personal opinions that often escalate into online flame wars.  While these flame wars may be fascinating as a new kind of cultural phenomenon, they also point to a much deeper illustration of the history of science in contemporary times.  While the initial responses are somewhat quantitative in nature, they very quickly devolve into a kind of chaos or entropy, and this is the same road that modern physics took when it moved from positivism into relativism, and the results of this turn are still being sorted out in the consciousness of the culture at large.

August 12, 2009: 12:43 pm: CraigSafety, Technology

Protecting your identity online is more than just worrying about what you put on your credit cards.  There is now an entire field of marketing dedicated to protecting something more precious than your bank account, your online reputation. Online reputation management is now an entire sector of marketing. It helps companies and individuals take back control of their online identity.

Because there is no internet police, literally anyone can write anything about you. The problem with most internet information is that it can have completely no basis in fact and still be designed to look like it is true.  Most of the information online does not have anything solid or particularly scholarly to back it up. While that is what makes the internet great, it is what also can make it a very frustrating way to receive information.

For example, the company Next Day Blinds has run into this. Despite having won numerous awards from customer service, it is still easy to hurt their reputation. If someone, or even their competition writes something online that is untrue about them is can cause Next Day Blinds review to come up in a search engine.  That might cause someone searching for the company to click on Next Day Blinds review.  Even if Next Day Blinds review are very few and far between.

This is just an example of how the internet can be unreliable and why managing your online reputation is so important. This is especially so if you are one of the many job seekers right now in America. Because you can bet that most employers are probably doing an internet search on you. It’s important to go ahead and Google yourself to see what kind of results come up. That way if you don’t like them you can try and change them.

May 27, 2009: 11:21 am: CraigTechnology

You can share with your friends, colleagues and other associates just what the sought-after data storage and backup company Carbonite can do for them, and probably get brownie points in return.

In addition to saving you TONS of worry regarding the loss of valued emails, documents, photos and the like, Carbonite offers special web-based protection, which acts like an accessible offsite server.

Carbonite, the data backup client offering data protection with a 15 Petabyte storage capacity, provides internet and computer users an indispensable service, at a bargain rate of only mere pennies a day. They offer a 15-day free trial, to introduce you to their services.

Carbonite uses a combination of encryption techniques, similar to those used by banks, to safeguard your data. Files are encrypted twice before they leave your computer and remain encrypted on our servers, making it virtually impossible for anyone to access your files without your secret password. Users are also given the option to manage their own encryption key.

If your computer crashes or is stolen, you can recover lost files to a new computer by visiting our website. Recovering small amounts of data (a few files here or there) will probably take only seconds or minutes. Restoring all of your data will take longer and depends on how much data you have and the speed of your Internet connection. Most DSL services will allow you to download about 600-800 MB per hour, or roughly 14-18GB per day. For an average user, complete data restoration is likely to take at most a day or two.

The Carbonite client is always looking for new data on your PC, once you’re online. When you add or modify files, Carbonite starts backing them up immediately. It backs up about 2GB per day over broadband. Carbonite’s backup solution works by placing colored dots on your files and folders. Different colors represent different “file states”:  1) If the file has been backed up, 2) will be backed up, or 3) will not be backed up.

December 1, 2008: 11:58 am: CraigBusiness, Economy, Finance, Investing, Technology

With the credit market still frozen in our ailing economy, businesses of all sizes are nervous about the potential of losing loans. Not only do new businesses worry about producing innovative and interesting products and services that will maintain their competitiveness, but fledgling companies now carry the burden of simply staying afloat while banks continue to die off. So if established businesses are failing, how can up-and-coming ideas gain capital, build business and move to the forefront in a wrecked economy?

Although times are tough, there are many venture capitalist companies that continue to thrive. Arthur Trueger is an example of a keen and devoted businessman who can see opportunities within the ruin. He is the chairman of Berkley Technology Limited, located in San Francisco, California. The company primarily serves the telecommunications and medical industry.

Arthur Trueger works in the epicenter of new technology, providing support to many leading businesses in Silicon Valley. He has helped fund approximately $2 billion in private equity investments for many of the most successful US technology companies.

In order for the U.S. to be a dominating force in the world’s economy, we must continue to push out new ideas and seek our fullest potential. Arthur Trueger is an example of a venture capatalist whose work ethic drives the development of the business sector.

February 27, 2008: 1:52 pm: CraigTechnology

Have you ever had to figure out how to export your address book on your computer?  Well I was having trouble figuring this out.  Anyway I did a search for export address book and found a site that showed me how to convert to Outlook. and it was easy.  The site was from a company called Connected Software.

I found lots of useful information on this site relating to address books and email.  This included information relating to the global address list to Blackberry and how to migrate from Eudora to Outlook.

This site contains a a large amount of information relating to migrating address books and email.

January 15, 2008: 12:09 pm: BernardTechnology

NanoGram Corporation, a leading developer and licensor of core process technology for the manufacture of unique nanostructured materials for optical, electronic and energy applications, today announced that it has closed on a third equity round of $32M to date to expand its solar technology and nano materials solutions businesses.

This about the time that Arthur Trueger and his company, BerkeleyVC would look to invest in a company; in the later stages of the start-up process. If you would like to read more about this story, click here.