Ken Lupo -- Resident Geek

Tech Tip of the day

Bookmarks(or Favorites in Internet Explorer) are often a mangled mess of links that you don't always know where they go or you have a different collection on each computer, one set for your work computer and one set for your home computer.


Enter Google Bookmarks(http://www.google.com/bookmarks), google allows you to keep track of all your bookmarks online. And the great thing is if you use Firefox( if you're not you should be) is that they have a great addon to help ease the use of google bookmarks. Here is the addon: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/2448, so no matter where you are you will always have your bookmarks with you.


Another great thing about google bookmarks is that you can assign categories(I know IE and Firefox do this too) to make is easier to manage those links you were saving and to make it a bit easier on the eyes to sort through.


Words of Wisdom: Organizing your life with online access makes it much easier to work from anywhere at anytime.

Here's a great resource for free online learning.

Til next time,
Ken

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Tech Tip

My topic for today is creating pdf files from any document.

On the Mac this is easily done. From the application you are working in go to File->Print(or ⌘ P for you short key people). When the print menu comes up you'll see in the lower left hand corner a 'pdf" button. Click the "pdf" button and select "Save as a PDF". Here's a picture:


On a PC it's a little harder but not much. You'll need to download an application called PDFCreator. The nice thing is it's free and it works great. You can download it here. I've used PDFCreator for years and it has always worked great. Once you have it installed and you have your document open you want to create a PDF with go to File->Print or Alt+P(shortcut key) and choose the PDFCreator printer. That's it! You're done.


For Saline Area Schools Staff to quote Eddie:

"Keep in mind you staff out there that the Windows tip above will not work for you here in the district. Since you can not install any software on a district workstation, you should go to our PDF Creator on the Printserver instead (Start>Run then enter \\printserver and then double click to install it in your profile). After you have printed to it, you then go to the Commons folder and then go to the PDF folder within. Your document will be inside. Remember to delete it afterwords, please. ;-) On the Mac it still works the same way as above."

Thanks Eddie.

Words of Wisdom: Don't always think you need to buy software to do the task at hand, lots of time with a little googling around I've been able to find a solution that is free or nearly free.

If you have the time, here's an interesting website I found for all the parents out there.



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Tech Tip of the Day

Let's talk about Spam...

Lately, I have been working diligently to get Saline up and running with our own Spam filter and here are some quick statistics since it's been up and running. 

2 day total volume: 78,941 email messages
percentage of Spam: 87.4%
dropped for no known user: 3,241
dropped because server is on a blacklist: 36,417

As you can seen very little email is actually valid email, it's absolutely amazing how much junk comes in. So here's a few tips to help reduce Spam:

1. Don't sign up for lists - when given the option when you're buying something and looking at a product, DO NOT sign up on their mailing list, make sure you uncheck that little box that says "keep me updated" or "send me emails".
2. Do not respond to Spam or click any of the links in a spam message ever.
3. Think of your email as your personal phone number, only give it to people you would trust to call you either at home or the office.
4. Disguise your email address if you have to post it on a website, forum or blog. For example: user@user.com would be user(at)user(dot)com, this way the data miners won't be able to pull out your email.
5. If you do want to sign up for things use an alternate email address. I myself use my gmail account for all purchases, mailing list info,etc. You have to remember that your school email is for school business only.

Words of Wisdom: Avoid using the "@" sign on the internet at all costs.

For those of you math nuts out there, this made me laugh:




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Tech Tip of the Day

Many of my tech tips often refer to productivity on a computer, the reason for this is that I believe that computers should allow you to do your tasks quicker and easier. I mean wasn't that the original intent for the creation of computers to begin with? I don't think it was to make things more difficult or more time consuming, in fact it was just the opposite. Today tip covers shortcut keys, below are two links to shortcut keys for Mac or PC:


Mac shortcut keys


PC shortcut keys

Words of Wisdom: Check where you are printing before you click print, I can't tell you how many times I've had users not look and end up printing to a different building on accident.

If you have time check out this great resource for educators here.


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Tech Tip of the Day

Mac: For productivity, one of the best but often overlooked feature of Mac OS X is the possibility of hiding the Dock. A fast,easy way to do this is go to the Apple in the upper left hand side of your desktop, click it, navigate to dock and enable hiding. You can also get to the Dock preferences through System preferences, there you can select to not only hide your Dock but modify the magnification and choose which side you want the dock to be on.
Here's a screenshot of mine:



PC: You can also hide the taskbar to give you more screen real estate. Right click on the task bar, go to properties and click auto-hide.


Words of Wisdom: More screen space cn make you more productive, it's even been written about in this article.


If you have time for an interesting article about 15 great tools for techs click here.

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Tech Tip of the Day

Mac: If you are running 10.5(Leopard) you can turn on Spaces to give you multiple virtual desktops. To enable Spaces go to System Preferences->Expose & Spaces and check the "Enable Spaces" checkbox. I also like to check the box "Show Spaces in Menu Bar". After you have turned it on you can use Fn+F8 to get a bird's eye view or control+arrow keys to move from one desktop to another. This can be really handy when you're working on multiple projects. For me, I like to put my mail in one and work on another one, just to make getting to my mail quick and easy.


PC: Windows has an application that can give you multiple desktops, it's an addon from Microsoft. You can download it here.


Words of Wisdom: Using keyboard shortcuts to navigate in multile desktops and multiple aplications can speed up your productivity.

Here's a great resource for all you web designers out there.

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Tech Tip of the Day

Today's Tech Tip of the day is pretty simple and it applies to PC, Mac, Linux or any other operating system that might be out there, it's a basic concept that most people don't do and regretably should.


BACKUP YOUR WORK!! Save often, make a copy of items that are really important and put them on a usb drive. Nothing is more horrifying than to realize that you accidentally deleted your word doc that you've been working on for a week or a presentation that you're getting ready to show.


One note to this: Do not make copies of items in the same place. This is not a form of backup. A backup is copying your files to some other location, a usb drive, burned to a CD-ROM, copied to your local machine as well as in your server space.


The people I know that do good backups are usually only those who have lost something at some point and know the agony. Spread the word on how important backup are, be proactive instead of reactive. To make things easier on yourself you can always use syncing software to sync your USB device with your computer, this makes backups simple, easy and you won't forget to do it. I recommend Allway Sync or MIcrosoft SyncToy.


Words of Wisdom: Before you upgrade, make a backup.

If you're interested, here's an interesting article about the mysterious cattywampus.

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Tech Tip of the Day

Tech Tip:


Mac: Pressing ⌘+tab you can scroll through your open programs, this is a nice quick way to bounce between applications. For example, your doing work on a website and you want to check your mail, press ⌘+tab and choose your mail icon, Boom! your in Mail and the best part is you have all your shortcut keys available.

PC:Pressing Alt+tab has the same effect on a PC, easily scroll through all your open applications. This can be especially nice if you're doing some copy and paste work.

Words of Wisdom: Use the keyboard more and mouse less, you will increase your efficiency.


If you have the time and are interested here are the hundred greatest math theorems all in one place.

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Tech Tip of the Day

Tech Tip:


Mac: Pressing F11 brings up your Desktop, no matter how much stuff you have open, it clears a path and gives you your Desktop. This is very useful when you need to clear your head and your Desktop, one button does both.


PC: Pressing Windows Key+r gives you the run window, from here you can run any program on your computer. Try it. Press Windows Key+r and then type "excel" or "winword", it will open excel or word and if you really want to help your IT guy do this: Windows key+r, type "cmd"(without the quotes) ->enter and then in the command box type "ipconfig", now you can see your IP Address on the network.


Words of Wisdom: When in doubt...Restart


And if you have time for a decent read check this out Teaching Binary to Third Graders

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Olivia and the old man

This is Me and Olivia in the Summertime..
Livie and Dad

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