Five Laptop Upgrades You Can Do Yourself

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Foreword By The Editor

Five laptop upgrades you can do yourself are covered in this excellent article by Francua Smith. Most people, even those who are basically familiar with the workings of their tower PC, do not realize how easy it is to keep a laptop in good order. If you are one of those, the following processes will probably help.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Tired Laptop Needs A Tune-Up?

Do you have an aged laptop which you feel is in need of an upgrade? Well, the possibilities for upgrading an existing laptop are, fortunately, quite good. From Bluetooth to wireless adapters, extra RAM to a fresh tough drive, there are many things you can do to upgrade your existing laptop. In this article we will lookat five laptop upgrades you can do very simply yourself, without taking the machine to the manufacturer.

Upgrade Number One

Increase the memory of your laptop. Now, dollar for dollar, increasing your system’s RAM is the most value for money upgrade you can perform. If your Windows Vista is chugging along with a lot of hard disk swapping and slowing down terribly, pump in another 2 GB of RAM and watch what happens. You’ll be amazed at the speed improvement. Head over to Crucial.com to check out some good laptop RAM deals.

Upgrade Number Two

Install a new hard drive. Another favorite improvement can be the laptop tough drive. I used to have a miserable 60 GB tough drive in one of my aged laptops and I can say to you now that in this day of enormous videos and MP3 music, 60 GB is not enough. Do yourself a favor and improve that tough drive to something like 160 GB. The other option is to get an external tough drive (say a 320 GB monster) and then you can forget about running out of tough drive space.

Upgrade Number Three

Arrange Bluetooth connectivity. Bluetooth technology is incorporated in some laptops but not others. For laptops without in-built Bluetooth, you can buy a USB dongle with Bluetooth capability from any good computer shop. This usually comes with some software which allows you to install Bluetooth capability into your laptop. Very important for those you like to synch their Bluetooth enabled mobile phones to their laptop.

Upgrade Number Four

Get a laptop stand. Ok, this is not precisely an upgrade, but I find laptop stands increasingly the favored improvement with the mobile computing crowd. Laptop stands are good for your posture and some of them also allow your laptop to cool better. It’s surely a fine ‘upgrade’ to assume, whether you leave your laptop at home a lot or not. Just plonk the laptop stand on the desk and you’ll be able to enjoy better computing without ruining your posture from then on.

Upgrade Number Five

Invest in an extra battery. If you’re on the road a lot, you should really consider buying an extra battery. In particular, if your laptop runs out of battery juice quickly, a second battery is almost a must. I bought an extra battery for my ThinkPad X61 and I can sit at a cafe typing away for 8 solid hours, without requiring a recharge. Heaven!

Conclusion

Well, now you know about five laptop upgrades you can easily perform yourself. The next time you feel your laptop needs a bit of a tune up, look to the above list and see what components you can upgrade. Sometimes a small upgrade (especially additional RAM) will do wonders for your laptop and overall computing experience. By the way, if you’re interested in learning more about the ins and outs of laptops, you may want to check out my laptop guide.

About the Author

Francua Smith is a computer specialist who has a lot of experience on laptop computers. He will help you to choose your own good laptop computer.

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Posted by Mike Alexander | Computer Topics | Tuesday 10 November 2009 14:40

The Way The World Wide Web Works

Foreword By The Author

The World Wide Web (WWW), unbeknown to many, was actually a European innovation. It was invented by an Englishman, Tim Berners-Lee, and was created in 1990 while he was working as a scientist for CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland. Some people, short on knowledge about how ‘cyberspace’ developed, think he invented the Internet itself, which of course, he definitely did not. The Internet was already in existence (and thriving) and had grown out of ARPAnet, a research network founded (and funded) by the U.S. military. But Internet protocols (the ‘rules’ governing how data is to be transmitted and received) were defined by obscure prefixes such as ‘gopher://’, ‘wais://’, ‘ftp://’, etc. These, and others, are still in use but, because of the WWW, no longer dominate as they once did. Usenet (‘news://’) is still popular though, as is SMTP, one of the original protocols for the most popular (and still fastest growing) of all information dissemination systems, the ever ubiquitous ‘email’.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

The Original Internet

LONDON - FEBRUARY 12:  Queen Elizabeth II meet...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Prior to the WWW, the Internet consisted mainly of thousands of sets of individual files and text-based messages transmitted by the various transport protocols mentioned above. Most were categorized and stored in databases on computers housed in universities across the USA and around the world. They were accessible only by those who understood the protocols and the intimidatory command systems necessary for their operation.

The Birth of the Web

What Tim Berners-Lee introduced to the Internet, and named the World Wide Web, was the ability to ‘link’ data together, whether that data was located in files on the same server or on servers half a world away. He did this by bringing together three main elements: HTTP—the WWW protocol; HTML—the ‘language’ of the web; and the URL system—for ‘addressing’ websites anywhere in the world (a website being simply an area of disk space on a computer). The use of these three elements would transform the Internet into what he called “a single, global information space”. It would allow, for the first time, transmission and retrieval of ‘pages’ that could each consist of many files. These might be graphics files, text files, sound files, or indeed any other type of file, since the only restriction would be in the application that could interpret the language and present the results as viewable pages (these applications came to be known as ‘browsers’). Thus rich, interactive, multimedia documents, each capable of being linked to any other file on the Internet, suddenly became accessible to everyone.

The Vision

His vision of the web was, in his own words, “about anything being potentially connected with anything. It is a vision that provides us with new freedom, and allows us to grow faster than we ever could when we were fettered by the hierarchical classification systems into which we (formerly) bound ourselves. It leaves the entirety of our previous ways of working as just one tool among many. It leaves our previous fears for the future as one set among many. And it brings the workings of society closer to the workings of our minds.” *

One of the analogies he used to explain what he meant was how a strong smell of coffee could trigger a response in his mind and instantly transport him back to a small room over a corner coffeehouse in Oxford, England, where he once studied. The brain, and therefore the human mind, works by using a web-like structure of connections, or links, he reasoned, and therefore the nearer his ‘global information space’ could come to using a similar structure, the more viable—and versatile—it would be. It would also, like the mind, be the ultimate expression of freedom, with no governing body or stultifying bureaucracy to restrict its development.

The Commercial Web

He foresaw the rise of commercialism on the Internet but welcomed it as inevitable anyway. The anti-commercial bias evident among some academics, particularly those who had used the Internet prior to the introduction of the World Wide Web, was not something he subscribed to.

He was nevertheless wary of the potential for predatory behavior by some parts of the business sector and his work as head of the WWW Consortium, the body set up to lead the web to its full potential, must inevitably have involved pressure being applied to his philosophy from time to time. But his vision was clear and incorruptible. He never considered using his ownership of such unique intellectual property for personal commercial gain. As it turned out though, even he was surprised by the speed and scope of entrepreneurial exploitation of the web. Its potential as a new marketing medium was taken up with almost evangelical fervor and it became firmly established almost overnight.

Newcomers immediately started to get exasperated by the seeming lack of structure they found as they tried to cope with this new non-hierarchical entity. “Who’s in charge of this thing?” marketers asked, and “Where’s the directory of participants?”. This led to the establishment of a whole new industry in its own right, as attempts were frantically made to categorize and map the web.

Search Engines and Portals

Search engines and directories (or portals, as they have come to be known) swiftly came into being and those that gained dominance soon started marketing their services as being indispensable to the ‘surfing’ public. (The irony is that the very term ‘surfing’ sprang from the fact that hopping from one site to another via their links was analogous to the way surfers hopped on a wave not knowing where it would take them but simply to enjoy the ride.) If they were even remotely as reliable as telephone directories, these claims to indispensability might have some justification. But they’re not, and never will be. Both large and small portals and search engines can sometimes be extremely useful tools, of course, but that’s basically all they are, helpful tools, among many other helpful tools. One reason is that the web is growing and evolving at such a phenomenal pace that it’s impossible to keep up with developments. The major search engines and search directories that most people use when trying to find things don’t even come close to categorizing and recording everything. Nor do they, as things are now, have a hope of ever doing so.

Which is one of the reasons why website developers who recognize these facts devote special pages of links to other sites. They understand the non-hierarchical structure of the web, where any data can be linked to any other. So they provide links to other information that their visitors might find useful, thereby enhancing the usefulness of their own site.

The Way Forward

The World Wide Web, precisely as its creator Tim Berners-Lee predicted, has become such a vast and rapidly growing network of sites that practically every topic and subject under the sun is represented on it somewhere.

The fact that there is no official map of what data is available and where it can be found, is sometimes a source of great frustration though, both for users of the Internet, and those who wish to present information for them to find. The surest way to improve the situation for everyone is for website authors and managers to recognize the validity of Tim Berners-Lee’s original vision and to respond to link exchange requests in as positive a way as possible. Even the big search engines and portals are at last beginning to recognize the wisdom of doing so. I predict that the number of incoming and outgoing links a site has will soon become a major factor that they will consider when ‘ranking’ it in their search results.

© Mike Alexander 2002

For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

* Weaving The Web by Tim Berners-Lee 1999. ISBN 0 75282 090 7

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Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Friday 2 October 2009 13:28

Ways To Extend Your Laptop’s Life

Foreword By The Editor

I think it’s fair to say that laptops and netbooks have now become an essential part of everyday life, at least in our affluent western society. This excellent article by Francua Smith highlights some of the best ways to get the most out of them.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Make It Last

You definitely want to try and make your laptop last as long as possible, whether to save having to buy a new machine every year or two or to get the best deal for it when you’re ready to change. If you want to extend your laptop’s life, there are some specific things you can do. No matter what it originally cost you, you’d do well to learn the following tips to extend its life.

Keep It Cool

NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 1:  Customers at the midto...
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The first thing I always do to extend my laptop’s life? Well, it’s simple. Keep it cool. The more heat your laptop accumulates, the more likely it is to suffer from component failure. Note that, if you like to slump into a couch to type on your laptop, you will most likely block the machine’s air vents and prevent the air from circulating. This spells heat for the machine; which is not  a good thing at all. To cool a laptop, one good way is to get a cooling pad. These things draw heat away from the system and usually cost about $30. You will, at the same time, prevent your laptop’s internal fans from spinning unnecessarily, thereby saving your battery life as well.

Carry It Carefully

I’ve seen some folks treat and carry their laptop as if it’s a piece of junk. If you throw your laptop onto the bed and it lands on the floor, or you leave it in the hot sun on the back seat of your automobile… well, fine, and good luck! No laptop is going to survive long in those circumstances. You need to treat it with respect and carry it with care. As an extra precaution, get a bag that is specifically made to offer maximum protection. Targus is an excellent maker of laptop bags, many come complete with padded sidewalls with air-protection technology.

Choose An SSD

A solid-state drive (SSD) is a next generation kind of hard drive. There are no moving parts, no platters or read/write heads (hard drive jargon) and everything is stored in non-volatile flash memory, like in a pen drive. This does wonders for your laptop. You will have longer lifespan because you don’t have a moving hard drive that breaks down. It also generates less heat since there’s no hard drive whirring away in the background. Unfortunately, the prices of SSDs are still quite high and currently cost about $15 per GB of storage. These prices are, however, gradually coming down. I think the maximum size now is about 128 GB so they certainly have capacity. Remember to look out for them if you’re in the market for a new laptop.

Protect The Battery

Your laptop’s battery is really sensitive. Don’t charge and discharge it all the time. Whenever you plug your laptop into an outlet, make it a habit to unplug the battery. If you leave it in, the AC force could cause the battery to overheat and overcharge. Then, when running on battery power, utilize the laptop until you get a low-battery warning, then plug in the charger and let it recharge fully. That will extend the life of that battery.

Reformat The Hard Drive

If you find your laptop running really slow, one option is to reformat the hard drive. Remember, we all let all sorts of junk software clog up our operating systems but Windows tends to get bogged down by orphaned files, funny registry entries and spyware. Reformat the hard drive and install everything afresh (or get a friend or a shop to do it if you’re not sure how). I guarantee you will get your laptop functioning and running faster. One trick I like to use is to install all my essential software (Microsoft Office, Adobe Acrobat, etc.) then take a backup using imaging software (e.g. Acronis True Image). When you feel the laptop going sluggish, simply backup your data files and do an image restore. Your system will be refreshed with all the original clean, intact programs and it will run faster.

Avoid Standby Mode

One last thing is regarding the ‘Standby’ mode. It’s nice but it consumes battery power so you run the risk of reducing the life of your battery. Next time, use the ‘Hibernate’ mode instead of ‘Standby’. It preserves your laptop’s current state by writing it to the hard drive as a file. And it does not require any extra power. It takes a few extra seconds to use ‘Hibernate’, but it will extend your laptop battery life.

Conclusion

I hope you feel that this article has shown you some good tips for extending your laptop’s life. A laptop computer is a pricey investment; do your best to keep it safe and it will keep working for a long, long time.

About the Author

Francua Smith is a skilled Computer specialist who has a lot of experience on laptop computers. He can help you choose your own laptop computer. If you are interested in laptops or want to learn more about them, feel free to check out his free guide.

Posted by Mike Alexander | Computer Topics | Wednesday 16 September 2009 13:34

A Review Of ValuePaks

Foreword By The Author

What are ValuePaks? It’s the term we coined to describe a collection of software and/or ebooks focused on a particular theme or market segment and specially put together to sell at extreme bargain rates. There are currently six of them but more will be added as time goes by so as to widen the field and to keep the selection fresh for our affiliate sales force. Come back often to see the latest additions.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Bronze ValuePaks

The first in this collection is called the Motivation And Inspiration ValuePak, which is centered around the theme the title describes and consists of fifty valuable ebooks covering the subject from a variety of angles. The second is the Self Improvement For Success ValuePak, which is a similar concept and, once again, the title is descriptive of its content. This is also made up of fifty ebooks. Bronze ValuePaks sell at the amazing price of only $7.00 each.

Silver ValuePaks

The third is called Webmaster Tools (The Ultimate Collection) ValuePak, which almost exclusively consists of software, much of which is extremely useful, while the fourth in the series is called the Foreign Language Phrase Books ValuePak, which is made up entirely of ebooks. These two Silver ValuePaks sell for just $14.00 each.

Gold ValuePaks

The Web Advertising And Promotion ValuePak comes next, followed by Great Kitchen Recipes, both of which are Gold ValuePaks which are fantastic bargains at only $21.00 apiece.

Every one of these special collections was created exclusively for 101 Internet Answers and can only be bought through an appointed affiliate. Every one of them also represents extreme value such as you are very unlikely to find elsewhere.

Reviews

We shall be reviewing them individually in future articles so that you can get a greater appreciation of their value but if you have a particular current interest in any one (or more) of them, just click on its link below to get more information.

Posted by Mike Alexander | General Issues | Thursday 20 November 2008 16:26
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