Pages

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Apple Sale for College Students

As a follow up to the previous post about purchasing computers for college-bound students, you might be interested in knowing about Apple's new sale.  You can buy a Mac at the discounted/academic pricing and they'll discount an iPod -- including the iPod Touch, which is basically a pocket-sized computer.

EDIT:  I stand corrected.  The sale hasn't started yet.  It has happened every May or June for the last few years, so it will probably start soon.  Sorry if I got your hopes up.  Just try Apple's web site in a few weeks to see if its changed.

EDIT 2:  The sale just began today.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Customize Email's Look

Want to make email look better?  You can customize the background picture, colors, fonts, etc. of your email account.

This does not effect the look of email that you send.  So you can make a very personal working environment without worrying about looking unprofessional to anyone you email.

Fo details, check out Google's announcement of this new feature:

http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/custom-background-image-themes.html

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Making New Passwords

Passwords.  We all use them.  Most of us hate them.  Making a password that is hard for anyone else to guess means making it hard to remember, right?  Not at all.  You just need a system.

Here are three systems (with examples) that you can consider.  They will make your life easier and safer at the same time.

Methods:

  1. Sing.
  2. No vowels.
  3. Shuffle two words.



Method #1:  Sing

Pick a verse from a song that you know well.  Then take the first letter of each word, perhaps with some shorthand.

Example #1:  "One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do" becomes "oitlntyed" or even "1itl#tyed".  This is a really hard to guess, but its very easy for any Beatles fan to remember.


Example #2:  "Mary had a little lamb, who's fleece was white as snow" becomes "Mhallwfwwas".  If you want to make it harder to guess, add punctuation with "Mhall,wfwwas."  (Note that "." is part of the password.)



Method #2:  No Vowels

Pick a short phrase from a song, book, or other memorable source.  Take out all the vowels and capitalize the first letter of every word.  You could also replace the vowels with numbers.

Example #1:  "No such thing as a free lunch" becomes "NSchThngsFrLnch".


Example #2:  "Bottled water" becomes "BttldWtr" (for no vowels) or "B0ttl3dW4t3r" (for number substitutions.)

Hint:  Most vowels have a number that looks loosely like it.  "a" = "4", "e" = 3", "i" = "1", and "o" = "0".  For "u", you could use "\" and "/" together, or "^", or something that you pick.  Just be consistent, so that you can remember it later.  You can even choose to just leave out any "u".



Method #3:  Shuffle

Pick two words and interweave the letters.

This method takes a little practice, but its easy to reconstruct your password if you forget it.  As a bonus, you can effectively have the same password on lots of different websites while reducing the risks of password-reuse.

Example #1:  "milk" and "shake" become "msihlakke".

Example #2:  "water" and "exercise" become "weaxteerrcise".  You can also add some numbers to the sorter word to fill in the empty spots.  For example, "weaxteerrc1i2s3e".

Example #3:  Pick a word for your new, universal password system.  Then interleave it with the name of the site or service.  For example, if your word is "phone", then your Amazon.com password would be "pAhmoanzeon" and your eBay password would be "pehBoanye".