All posts by Richard

Minimizing Your PC’s Boot Up Time

Crud! The first day you bring a computer home from the store, with each software install it becomes increasing inefficient. Every utility adds its own little bit of code to your startup process, and often if you're not careful, a lot of junk. The end result is a long, slow, and sometimes painful startup / boot process.

Right now I am evaluating a free tool named Soluto. This service allows the user to add up to five computers per account, and manage the boot / startup process and browser configurations. In addition to managing your own computers, this can be a godsend in terms of helping optimize those other computers you support for families and friends. Soluto lets you manage remote computers once the software is installed and management rights granted.

Although I consider myself extremely careful in terms of what I install on my computer, and always read the fine print while installing software to avoid "junkware", Soluto still found quite a few apps I could disable or delay upon boot for my Windows 8 system. The analysis of my browser did not turn up any add-ins which needed disabling.

Here are some screenshots. Soluto is worth a try. For the services it recognizes it gives you a clear definition of the process, and the advantages / disadvantages for either disabling or delaying the specific process upon boot. This service is easy to use; you need not be a computer geek like myself!

Please realize the installation takes a while. Be patient, and then do a cold boot of your system. You will start to get good data within 5 to 10 minutes. It's worth the wait!

Click upon any image to maximize and view at full size.

1. Installation Process
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Soluto-1

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2. After ReBoot – Waiting for Data
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Soluto-2

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3. Boot Apps – Possible Removal: Microsoft Search App
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Soluto-3

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4. Results – Boot Apps Removed
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Soluto-4

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5. Browser – Settings & Possible Actions
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Soluto-7

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6. Hardware Settings Report
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Soluto-5

End of blog post.

 

Libraries, Encyclopedias and DoDo Birds

What is the common thread connecting each of these items? Extinction (past or coming soon). By now many of you have heard that after 244 years, the Encyclopedia Britannica has published its last hard copy version (WSJ news article). While I love Wikipedia, the demise of the printed book brings us closer and closer to the fictitious world of Fahrenheit 451. Although physical books are not outlawed in our society, their future is in jeopardy.

Why do libraries and Encyclopedia publishers need to adapt?

First a historical perspective is required in terms of what happens to organizations which don't change given how the world wide web affects distribution chains. How many engineers remember NTU (National Technological University). In it's time (the 1980's and early 90;s), it was a great idea. NTU's satellite network linked some of the best engineering university networks in the USA. Any NTU student could take courses and obtain a masters degree from over 30 of America's top engineering colleges. However, satellite networks as distribution systems are expensive. When the the internet first made video course distribution possible. I was serving on NTU's Executive Advisory Board. However, I led my company's charge away from NTU. Due to the cheaper distribution system provided by the web, Stanford Online gave my engineers access to Silicon Valley's finest minds for a fraction of NTU's cost. Many Stanford courses are still part of my engineering learning portal.

My second example is the newspaper industry. Newspapers in their current form will soon be dead. The combination of newsprint, printing press operations, and delivering the paper to your doorstep creates a cost structure which can not beat electrons. 

Have you ever heard of the fourth estate? This quote is from a post which dates back to January 2007 on NorthStarNerd.

"In the year 2014, the New York Times has gone off line. The fourth estate's fortunes have waned. What happened to the news? And what is EPIC?" … "Given this event, I invite you to pretend It's 2014, and GoogleZon rules media, and the net. Take a trip back in time.  It will take you on a tour of media, and the net, from it's inception in 1989, right up to present day in the year 2014!
(watch the video

Please watch the video. It was created over 5 years ago. In addition to being entertained, you should be amazed at its accuracy. How many newspapers are now defunct? In my own case, I read daily the USA Today app via my iPad. This modern newspaper (minus the physical) delivers news integrated with multimedia. Much of that news is also personalized to the individual. You may not realize that the USA Today is the newspaper of the Northland! The key fact is my newspaper is not your newspaper. Click upon either image given below to maximize and view. I think you'll understand (read my blog post on the USA Today).

USA-Today-1  USA-Today-2

For both NTU and a many newspapers, a common theme was their deaths were slow and painful. 

Ending this blog post now would be a cop out. It is always easy to comment on what is wrong, but it is more important to suggest ideas for improvement and move forward. Thus, the rest of this post includes two ideas … one for each industry. The suggestions are small, and by themselves would not solve the overall problems faced by libraries and encyclopedias, but they do represent attempts to work and move into the future. 

First let's address libraries. In theory the future of the library should be rosy. The internet has resulted in an explosion of information. However, there is increasingly little need to actually visit the physical library. Since last Summer (9 months ago), I have not set foot in my local library. However, from all over the world including Europe, I have read hundreds of journals, and downloaded countless books from my library. Thus, you can see I value my library, but it is losing its physical connection with the customer. This loss can be dangerous. It is important for a customer to identify with the product.

Consider services these two services which should cause my library to be worried:

  • Amazon Prime allows me to download books as part of my membership fee
  • Pixel of Ink reviews free Kindle Books

Large buildings are expensive (i.e. libraries), and increasingly providing less value to the customer. In addition, in a virtual world, town, city or state geographic boundaries which currently define / limit a library's customers make no sense. Organizations like Amazon or Pixel of Ink do not see physical boundaries. The Kindle Fire was sold below the cost of production … think about it!

My first proposal …

What if your local library (or mine) got rid of their bricks and mortar, and instead entered into an agreement with a coffee house chain like Starbucks? The coffee houses already have physical locations, and provide wireless access. Librarians could maintain hours at designated coffee houses where they could help patrons access the library's web based services. Think of a library kiosk at one of your local coffee houses. The idea may seem a bit crazy, but it represents a different way of approaching the distribution and customer idea.

My second proposal relates to encyclopedias

Encyclopedia Britannica is ending their print version due to high production costs. Putting aside the concept of whether Wikipedia or Britannica is a better encyclopdea, what if Encyclopedia Britannica could create physical encyclopedias, but deliver them via the web?

Back in September of 2010, I published a blog post titled The Art of the Browse. In that post I lamented whether I could find it in my heart to give away my World Book Encyclopedia. You see, I like to take a encyclopedia vloume off the bookshelf and read … to browse the letter "Q", or "T". In the Fall of 2010 there was no web solution to this problem, but the world has since evolved … enter the Wikipedia Make Book Capability! Britannica should take a hint!

Here is how create you may manufacture your own Wikipedia books. Later I'll provide examples I created.

Wikipeda Create Book Process

  • Link to Wikipedia
  • Click upon the <Create A Book> link found in the left menu
  • Start Book Creator
  • Add your book's articles … hover and click over a desired link
  • Save and download
  • It's that easy!
  • Here are four screenshots outlining steps #2 through #5. Click to maximize.

    Steps #2 and #3

    Wikipedia-1  Wikipedia-2

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    Steps #4 and #5

    Wikipedia-3  Wikipedia-4

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    Here are my two Wikipedia encyclopedias! (pdf files)

    These are just two examples of browsing an encylopedia. In my case, I can now put my feet up on the couch and read encylopedias via my iPad. The Art of the Browse is back! For instance, did you know that two different European countries still have colonies in North America (the northern tier). Read and learn!

    Here is more information on the Kindle and GoodReader apps:

    1. Use the "Send to Kindle App" which is free from Amazon (50 mb upload limit)
      • Once installed, right click upon any file via Windows Explorer
      • Select "Send to Kindle"
    2. GoodReader for the iPad (allows very large files … download via Dropbox)
      • Open GoodReader
      • Connect to dropbox (download … don't open)
      • Read!

    The Kindle app also works with my Kindle Fire! The first screenshot shows how easy it is to send your personal Wikipedia encyclopedia to your Kindle. The second screenshot is from my iPad. I'm reading the Encyclopedia Minnesota! Like always, click to maximize.

    Send-To-Kindle  Agate
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    Hopefully these ideas show there are always ways to respond and take advantage of the internet. Sitting back and waiting insures another organization will overtake you!

    Oh yes … the DoDo Bird!

    The 1,000 Kilometer Challenge!

    While compiling my Garmin data earlier today for this Winter's Nordic skiing, I discovered I was 5 kilometers shy of 1,000k. How could I resist? Out came the waxless classic skis I drove off in search of snow. After a short hike into the woods, I found about one kilometer which ranged from snow to ice to slush, but was very skiable.

    Success!

    My Winter's results now total 1,001 kilometers with a total elevation gain of 40,051 feet. All of this skiing was classic in the Lake Superior region. Click the image given below to see more details.

    IMG_1361  1000-km

    It was a Dark and Stormy Night!

    Bang! A shot rang out!

    Snoopy wondered aloud, what should be the next sentence of his Kindle eBook?

    Ever thought you could publish the great American novel? (or English, Chinese, etc.). Copyblogger has an excellent post which thoroughly reviews all the tasks required to self-publish your book on the Kindle platform. Even if you're not interested in publishing, you may be interested to learn what is involved. The steps outlined in detail are:

    1. Define your target audience
    2. Do you have a platform?
    3. Write your eBook
    4. Tools to download before formatting
    5. Formatting your eBook
    6. Before you upload, think this over
    7. Upload your eBook

    Dark-and-stormy-night

    Fantasy Baseball Stats (circa 1954)

    As we move through Spring training, and the United States gets ready for another season of America's favorite pastime, have you ever stopped to wonder how the computer may have changed baseball, or has it?!

    Right now thousands of fantasy baseball leagues are conducting drafts, and each manager who thinks he understands the game is utilizing a wealth of statistics. Now let's imagine that is the Spring of 1954, how would you play fantasy baseball? What kind of stats would you use?

    • The computer as we know it is years in the future
    • The ability to share data is difficult at best

    Enter Branch Rickey, the mechanical calculator and slide rule! Life Magazine published a fascinating article that Summer where many of the stats we now hold sacrosanct were first reviewed by Coach Rickey. Here is his formula:

    Stats-formula

    • H = Hits
    • BB = Base on Balls
    • AB = Times at Bats
    • HP = Hit by Pitch
    • TB = Total Bases
    • R = Runs
    • ER = Earned Runs
    • SO = Stike Outs
    • F = Fielding
    • G = Games

    Here is one other important stat about Mr. Rickey: (reprinted from Life Magazine:

    As the man who guided the St. Louis Cardinals to six National League pennants and the Brooklyn Dodgers to two. Branch Rickey, currently general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, is considered baseball's brainiest and most successful executive. He was among the first to use such revolutionary practices as the farm system and the mass tryout camp, the first executive to see the value of using baseball statistics in putting together and running his teams. 

    You can read a reprint of the Life Article via Baseball Think Factory, and an analysis with linkable follow-up stats via the Captain's Blog. Remember, in 1954 you would have had to pull out your trusty slider rule to calculate your statistics. Hmmm … that might have given the Northstar Nerd an advantage over the younger folks against whom I have played Fantasy Baseball in the past!

    Check this advertisement out from Superman Comics (circa 1958). You could actually purchase a custom slide rule focused specifically on batting averages!

    Batrule

    Here is one final image which says it all. Branch Rickey is explaining his statistical system to a computer nerd like myself. All I can say is … Play Ball!

    Life-Mag