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Riding Shotgun with Rick

The Next Great Novel

The next great novel is gone. Why? Because there was no backup copy of the document and the original has disappeared. This was one of the voice mail message I retrieved this morning as I started my week. It breaks my heart, but it is a hard lesson that the computer user will never again forget. With the plethora of backup options available to us today (online, second computer, hard drive, ZIP drive, flash drive, and even the lowly floppy disk), it seems absolutely ridiculous that more computer users don't heed the warning.

We harp on backup here at HelpMeRick.com and on the radio show because backup should be the number one tool in your computer security approach. Hopefully, our listeners and web site visitors have heeded our warnings over the years and won't fall in the depressing situation that the young author did who left me the message this weekend.

I am worth $1,879,756.80…

As of the close of market today, that is. How did I arrive at that figure? I have heard it many times before, but this week I heard it from three different customers, "You are worth your weight in gold."  Today, gold closed $611.90 and I'll let you do the rest of the math.

When I hear that phrase, or "thanks a million" (which I also use), I think, "Ah, if only…" Heck, I will settle for 50% of market value!!

On a serious note, I also get the question regarding whether I get bored doing what I do, and I truly do not. Helping people out of a pickle, teaching computer users how to shave a few seconds from a computer task, or seeing someone marvel at what is available when they log onto the Internet for the first time is awesome. Even if I'm not literally worth my weight in gold, I enjoy each and every day that I head out for new computer and tech adventures.

Should You Leave Your Computer On or Shut it off?

Ah, the age old question about our computers. Since computers came into the home, users have asked; 'should I turn it off or leave it on?' I'm going to try and not muddy the waters any more than they already are in this short article. I will share some facts and some opinions in this article that will help you make the decision for yourself.

First, let me say that there is no definitive answer on this subject and if you ask twenty computer people whether to leave your computer on over night, you will probably get 50% on one side of the fence and 50% on the other side.

That being said, let me present the facts about computer energy consumption:

Toyota Prius, Mopeds, and Bicycles

In a typical week, I put about 350 miles on my truck traveling between customers. As gasoline has crept up this past couple of years and peaked at over $3 per gallon this summer, I have noticed a difference in the vehicles on the road. I see many more Toyota Priuses and other hybrids on the road. High oil prices or not, I personally think that hybrid vehicles should be a standard in the 21st century with all of our technologies. 

As a technology expert and fan, I find it not only absurd, but also disgusting that since 1980, American vehicles have increased average miles per gallon by only 0.5 MPG.

“That’s such old technology”

I was reading a review of smart phones the other day and had to comment on a topic that comes up frequently in technology…old technology. You all know that my philosophy is 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it'. Too often, I think companies roll out upgrades simply for the sake of upgrading when their original product functioned perfectly. Think about products like Norton AntiVirus, Microsoft Word, McAfee, Acrobat Reader, and others that hit a peak of performance and features about six or seven years ago and did their jobs well. After that, the company's programmers (maybe pushed by managers) continued to roll out product after product with very little extra functionality, but an awful lot of extra junk that was not needed nor is it used. All leading to products that slowed down computers and didn't increase efficiency in any way.

I still think that we are in the infancy of the technology age and many products and technologies need to be continually pushed and improved, but sometimes products perform all the needed functions and need not be over laden with the extra weight of unnecessary code. Microsoft Word worked great in the 1997 version and no

Another reason to use Picasa

I mentioned in yesterday's Shotgun that I took nearly 900 photos on my recent vacation. You have read and heard us hype the free Picasa digital photography software from Google many times. The features and execution of the features are nothing short of wonderful. I use Picasa to upload and organize my photos after a trip. Then I usually upload the photos I want to print to my favorite online photo developer (Shutterfly ) and get a bound book made of my favorite 100 or so photos for less than the cost of developing three rolls of film.

Unplugged and loving it!

When I talk about wanting to live in the 1800's, people are always surprised. A tech guy, an expert wanting to live in a time when the Pony Express was high tech? It's true I tell you. As much as I love technology, I also see how much time it can eat up as well. On our old fashioned road trip vacation, I took my laptop (used it twice for a total of about fifteen minutes), my GPS (used it once), my beloved Treo (used once, although I checked for signal multiple times), my MP3 player (never used it), and our portable DVD player (I watched one movie on it, but my son used it in the car while we drove).

I intended to use the computer more and submit Shotguns for our site, but wi-fi was extremely hard to find in the places we stayed and visited. And when I did find it, it was either for a fee or required me to hike to the hot spot…I didn't need it that bad. In fact, I actually enjoyed being "unplugged" for nearly 11 days and didn't miss Google, voice mail, SMS, email or any of it. I crave information and love the Internet for information gathering, but I also thoroughly enjoy exploring new places, meeting new people, and driving new roads (Northern Nevada is UGLY). I think that if I had the means, I would have no problem separating from technology and seeing the world in my Eurovan with my family. But since I don't have the means, I will continue to gather information on the web, SMS my friends, check email periodically, and continue to marvel at what technology continues to roll out every day.

Oh, one piece of technology that I did take and use extensively was my digital camera (Canon S2IS)…I took more than 900 photos of Oregon and Northern California…none of desolate northern Nevada.

Doing laundry and accessing wi-fi

We have made it to the far north California coast and found a great camp ground. Laundry has stacked up so we went to the campground laundry room and lo and behold, I found a wi-fi hot spot there as well. So, while doing the mundane laundry routine, I can catch up a little on the news that I haven't missed and make a quick entry here at HMR (I love this acronym that some of you adpoted in your comments). We appreciate all your support and also love that you are spreading the word about HMR. 

Vacation hair cut

Rick's vacation hair cut

When we go on vacation (especially camping), I don't like to waste time trimming my beard and shaving, so I usually shave the beard off. This year I did that again…and a little more. Now, I can spend my extra time monitoring my home surveillance equipment with my Treo!

Even though I have been on vacation, I still plan on submitting articles to our Shotgun series. Most will probably have a travel theme to them (like my wireless hints yesterday). I will be traveling with my MP3 player (Rio Nitrus), laptop (Averatec ultra-portable), digital camera (Canon S2IS), and of course my cell phone/portable Internet and email/maps/calendar/camera phone/a million other things (Palm Treo 650). We also loaded up the bikes for their first foray outside of Colorado. Surely all of this technology and madness will present ample opportunities for some good Shotgun fodder.