Sunday, January 8, 2012

Instant Messaging on Your BlackBerry

!±8± Instant Messaging on Your BlackBerry

There are three instant messaging networks that are commonly used in the US - AOL Instant Messenger (AIM), Yahoo! Messenger, and ICQ Instant Messenger. The first Messenger that could run on a PC is ICQ. Other common Messengers are MSN Messenger from Microsoft, iChat AV compatible with Macintosh, Jabber. It seems that a whole lot of people have discovered the advantages of an instant messenger, as it is a great time and money saver. Now, a great thing about BlackBerry is that it offers you the possibility to use a messenger...instantly, thanks to the powerful Internet device.

So what to do in order to use the IM (Instant Messenger) on your Blackberry? You already have an account, right? You only need your ID and password and pay a little attention to these following steps:

- select Messages from the Home screen, press the trackwheel
- you are shown a list with instant messaging networks; choose one of them, press Enter
- the login screen appears, asking you to type your ID and password; you have the option to choose saving your ID and password so that you wouldn't have to type them every time you login
- press the trackwheel, click on Sign in and there you are
- the list of contacts appears on the screen; now, simply select the contact you want to chat with and press the trackwheel; this way, form the appearing menu, you can also add or delete a contact, or save conversations you consider to be the most important


Instant Messaging on Your BlackBerry

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Apple Laptops - Factory Installed Software Packages

!±8± Apple Laptops - Factory Installed Software Packages

When it comes to factory installed software, Apple laptops are very proficient at anticipating the wants and needs of their target audience. The Apple ibook G4 and PowerBook G4 computers come standard with a variety of Apple software titles that appeal to the young and creative notebook computer users that Apple is famous for attracting.

Apple ibook and PowerBook Software Titles
The main focus of much of the Apple computers software is to have laptop computers take the spot of the other electronics in your life while adding the feature of mobility. The Apple ibook and Apple PowerBook models come with the MAC OS Tiger operating system from Apple that features state of the art search technology allowing a laptop computer user to search for certain content in their image files, calendar files, media files, and other files. Apple notebooks also include a feature called Dashboard that allows the customization of laptops to display information from the internet such as flight times, weather, stocks, and currency conversion.

Apple also offers advanced communications software as a standard feature on their ibook G4 and PowerBook G4 notebook computers. This Apple software includes Safari, which automatically sifts through sites such as Google, Yahoo, and Sports Illustrated to find articles and information relative to search terms you have customized it with. The Apple ibook and Apple PowerBook also come standard with iChat AV to allow you to use Apple notebooks for audio and video conferencing.

Apple has also created a software package that comes standard with the Apple PowerBook and Apple ibook that allows you to use Apple computers as a media studio with mobility. This package includes Photo5, iMovie HD, iDVD, iTunes, and Garageband. Many used laptops can also be updated with this Apple software package. However you use your iBook G4 - surfing the Internet, playing games, reading email, browsing your iPhoto library or editing movies on the go - you're bound to appreciate its speed, responsiveness and durability.

Go ahead and pinch yourself. You really do see a fast, full-featured notebook computer that weighs less than five pounds and gives you the power to burn your own CDs and DVDs. Of course, that's only one of many bells and whistles built into the 4.6-pound, 12-inch PowerBook G4. And at 5.6 pounds and 6.9 pounds, respectively, the 15-inch and 17-inch models continue to astonish even the die-hard road warrior.


Apple Laptops - Factory Installed Software Packages

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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

How To Talk Face-To-Face With Friends and Family Over Hundreds or Thousands of Miles For Free

!±8± How To Talk Face-To-Face With Friends and Family Over Hundreds or Thousands of Miles For Free

Back in the eighties, it wasn't that usual to have a modem in your computer, if you even had one. These days, there are different kinds of modems - cable modems, DSL modems, and dialup modems like I used to have.

Even though dialup modems seem incredibly slow these days, compared to "broadband" connections like DSL and cable, they are amazingly fast compared to the ones you could get back in the 80s.

I remember that when I got my first dialup modem for my first computer. Back then, most computers didn't have modems; modems have been standard in most computers for years now, but are starting to get phased out because they're so out of date.

The dialup modems you get now, while much much slower than "broadband" (high speed) connections like DSL or cable, are incredibly fast compared to what you could get in the mid '80s.

Back then, the modem in my PC ran at "1200 baud" (as opposed to current dialup modems which are about 50 times faster). Some of my friends had 300 baud modems. They were so slow, that if I went to read an email online, I could actually read faster than the words would appear on the screen, letter by letter.

Later, when I shelled out over 0 for a whopping 2400 baud modem, I was amazed that the words appeared too fast to read!

Of course, it was still so slow by modern standards, that if I'd tried to download even a picture like you'd find on a website of today - even a very small picture - it could take hours. And a dialup modem these days costs less than .

So times change. Especially when it comes to computers.

Of course, the great thing about that is all the cool stuff you can do now that would've seemed like science fiction back in the '80s.

But really, I think the best thing about the technology we have today is how it can bring people together. These days we think nothing of sending an email across the world and have it arrive in moments. Back in the '80s, it was possible to do that, but it was a lot harder to do, and much more expensive.

And of course most people hadn't even heard of email back then.

One of the best ways people can connect, either for business or with friends or family, is video chats. Video chats have been around for years, but only fairly recently have gotten good enough to be like the video phones on the old Jetsons cartoons.

I moved out to Hawaii in 2001, about five thousand miles from where I grew up, in upstate NY. My parents still live there, and while my brother is a little closer, he's still a long way away in California.

One of the ways we keep in touch is with video chats - if you don't know what I'm talking about, you've probably been in an electronics store where they have a camcorder hooked up to a TV so people can wave at themselves when they come in. With a good chat program, a good quality web cam, and a fast internet connection, the picture can look almost as good as that.

So it's about the next best thing to actually being with friends or family, when they're a long way away. It's almost like I get to visit with my parents, or hang out with my brother.

Plus in the winter, my parents can point the camera out the window and I can see the snow fall, and I can make them jealous by showing them my view of the sun shining off the deep blue sea.

It also doesn't cost a thing, so if you talk long distance a lot, it can really save a lot of money.

There are a lot of chat programs that let you do free video or audio chats (audio chats are like regular phone calls, and in some cases you can even call from your computer to a regular phone).

You can use programs such as AOL Instant Messenger, Skype, and Yahoo Messenger for audio and/or video chats. There are versions of these programs for both Mac and PC, but the majority of Mac users use iChat AV (which is what I use to talk to my family and friends), which comes on all Macs made in the last few years.

While not a perfect program, Skype is probably your best bet for a program that will work equally well to allow video and audio chats between Macs and PCs instead of just Mac to Mac or PC to PC. And of course, newer cell phones such as the Apple iPhone are starting to include it too.

So remember, computers can be useful tools, but one of the greatest things about them is how they can bring us all together, no matter how many miles we are apart.


How To Talk Face-To-Face With Friends and Family Over Hundreds or Thousands of Miles For Free

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