We've completed visiting all states in the lower 48! North Dakota was the last State needed to fill in our map.
August was mostly about The FMCA Convention in Redmond, Oregon. The weather was gorgeous, the rally ran like clockwork, and we had the biggest audience ever! Our 'Managing Digital Photos with Picasa' seminar had a count of 740 attendees in our live audience, PLUS, the seminar was webcast to 421 viewers around the country.
Ask us Questions on our New Website
If you've visited www.Geeksontour.com lately and logged on to the Members' area, you've seen a new website. GeeksOnTour.com will always be our main home page, but the Members' area is now hosted on www.GeeksonTour.TV. The 'Learning Library' includes all our tutorial videos on the topics shown at right. The Forum is new, and much easier to use than our old forum - one of the main reasons we made the switch.
Join Now
If you're interested in the topics shown at right, we promise you will enjoy being a member of our website. It's only $39 for one year. Amazingly, that includes access to our Forum, where you can ask questions and join in conversations (compare your membership fee with our normal $60/hr consultation fee - and you see why we call it amazing). We will monitor the forums and answer questions on all topics there.
We've reached the point where we simply cannot answer all the questions we receive via email anymore. We will answer them in the Forum - then everyone can see them!
Watch video on how to post to the Forum
Note: if you are a current, paid member on the old site, your membership has been migrated, and you should have received an introductory email from us. If not, please contact us.
Other Articles this past month
So you don't miss out on anything, here's a list of other articles we wrote this past month.
This month's articles: Updates, Clipart, and Windows 7 Maximize |
Updates, Updates, all those *maddening* updates. I just have to vent. Updates are important, and I will continue to accept them and wait for them to install, but OMG they've become SO numerous.
If you live in a house and have a hardwired Internet connection, you probably don't notice it so much. Just leave your computer on and update automatically. But for folks who travel and have spotty Internet connections, we can spend all of our time downloading updates. I bought a new computer last fall, but the old one still works OK and I keep it in the bedroom to play an occasional movie, or watch TV with a USB TV tuner. Last night I turned it on for the first time in a couple weeks. It had 28 updates waiting to download and install. I fell asleep before it finished!
Ten to fifteen years ago, when Jim was a network administrator, he would often put off updating for a couple months, until they had proven themselves. We don't have that luxury today, you must update.
Windows comes out with updates once each month, and sometimes more. There are two reasons for updates - to add functionality and to fix bugs. Most bugs today are about security. And, it's not just Windows. It seems like Adobe Acrobat (necessary for viewing .pdf files) has sent updates almost every week this last couple months. And, programs like your anti-virus software, and Picasa. And now I have updates for the operating system and apps on my Droid cellphone too!
You really need to plug those security holes so you need to get the updates installed ASAP. But, if you feel like cursing at all those updates ... I hear you!
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Includes all our Tutorial Videos
Picasa, Photo Story 3, Streets & Trips, Google Earth/Maps, Blogging, Boot Camp Class, Vista/Windows 7, Internet on the Road, Safe Computing
*Plus* Beginner's Guide to Picasa and Boot Camp Booklets in .pdf
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Clip Art and other Images |
We all know that pictures are worth a thousand words. But how do we find the picture that says the right thing? There are millions of images available to us now on the Internet. Did you know that you can 'google' for pictures just like you can google for anything else?
Let's say you wanted an image of a motorhome. You can just google for motorhome, then find the little link that says 'images.'
Now, instead of 41,000,000 results just for 'motorhome', you should be seeing around 1,250,000 images of motorhomes. If you see an image you like, you can right-click on it and either 'copy image' or 'save picture as' to grab yourself a copy of that image.
Copyright Free Images
But, those pictures that Google found for you may belong to someone else. If you're just using it for something for yourself, that's one thing, but if you want it for a brochure or website for example, that's something else. You should find images that are copyright free. If you google for copyright free clipart, you will find a lot, but many of them come with spyware attached. It's important to trust your source.
I use Microsoft clipart for free, copyright-free images. You can search for just about anything and you can get results that include drawings, or photographs or both. I searched for 'waiting' to get that image above of a person at their desk with cobwebs. Microsoft gets their images on a promotional basis from some of the best names in the business.
If I need really good images, I'm willing to pay a few dollars to iStockPhoto. It truly blows me away the quality of the photos you can get for just a few dollars. I use them for all the websites I build. When using a photo on a website, you only need the smallest image. It costs more for the larger ones, but they're really unneccessary on the web.
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Picasa, Photo Story 3, Streets & Trips, Google Earth/Maps, Blogging, Boot Camp Class, Vista/Windows 7, Internet on the Road, Safe Computing
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Windows 7: Snapping Windows |
Windows 7 has added several innovative ways to move your windows around the screen, and manage your desktop. A great way to familiarize yourself with them is to watch the Microsoft official Windows 7 videos.
I just want to tell you about one new windows management technique that I now use *all* the time. That is to Maximize the window just by dragging it to the top of your screen. No need to find that little maximize button and click it. No need to remember the keyboard shortcut, just click and drag the top of the window to the top of the screen. When it bumps into the top of the screen, it will 'snap' into the maximized state.
If you've got that ... then try snapping two windows. You can drag one to the left and the other to the right. They will 'snap' into place, taking up exactly half of the screen. This is a great way to arrange 2 windows so you can see both at the same time. For example, you could arrange your screen so that Picasa is on the left, and instructions from our PicasaTutorials.com website are on the right.
Note: if you use 2 monitors, like I do, you can only 'snap' to the left side of the left monitor and the right side of the right monitor.
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That's all for now. We hope you learned something. Your next issue will be next month. Any questions, please visit our forum. If you like this newsletter, please forward it on to your friends! If you received this issue forwarded by a friend you can subscribe to get your own copy delivered to your in box - it's free. To see the archives of past newsletters, go to www.geeksontour.com/newsletters.
Happy Computing!
The Geeks on Tour website is an online learning library for Travelers who want to learn to use their computers for managing digital photos, making blogs, using maps and other online resources. Anyone can watch our free videos, read articles on our Computer Tips for Travelers Blog, sign up for our free monthly newsletter, or Picasa weekly tips. A small fee makes you a 'member' and you can then view any of our 190+ video tutorials on these subjects. |
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