Thursday, September 29, 2016

Awkward Places to Play Pokemon Go



Almost everywhere, you would see people engrossed with their smartphones and you're wondering why they look like they're looking for something. Yes, they're playing the much-obsessed Pokemon Go. They're popping up everywhere and when you've "gotta catch 'em all" it seems no time or place is inappropriate.

The digital creatures, which were unleashed into the world with the launch of Pokemon Go recently have been spotted in shopping malls, parks, even in toilets and funerals. Pokemon fans from around the world have uploaded images of the creatures in challenging, and sometimes even awkward situations and if you're curious on how ridiculous it can get, check out these photos.

In the Birthing Room

This photo went viral after the soon-to-be-dad posted it, with 82,000 views on Imgur and over 100 comments on Reddit. Whilst some people commented on the photo that Mr. Theriot was being a bad husband, he said that his wife didn't care.

He adds, "I'm lucky enough to have a wife that supports my Pokemon lifestyle. She drew the line at me wandering around the hospital searching for more. At least until the baby is out!"

The Holocaust Museum

The Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. is a living document to the atrocities committed by the Nazi regime. Unfortunately, it's also home to three different PokeStops. According to a report from the Washington Post, the museum is currently investigating ways to be excluded from the game.


At a Funeral

A Squirtle made an appearance, unfortunately, on top of a coffin at a funeral -- it is not known whether the Pokemon enthusiast decided to catch the popular water Pokemon.


Fighting ISIS

A Facebook post (since made private) by 26-year-old American Louis Park went viral when he announced that he caught the first Pokemon on a battlefield near Mosul. Like a handful of Americans, Park has volunteered to battle ISIS alongside the Kurdish Peshmerga. During some downtime on the frontline, he posted about finding his first Pokemon. The post, pardon the pun, blew up. For his part, Park has actually not welcomed the attention, writing in a public post: "I hope this all helps draw attention to the Peshmerga and Dwehk. Sad that it takes pop culture to do that."


Ancient Shinto Shrine


Oddly enough, Pokemon Go arrived late in Japan. But now that the phenomenon has made its debut in the Land of the Rising Sun, authorities are rushing to put limits on IRL gameplay. Izumo-taisha, which many believe to be the nation's oldest Shinto shrine, has outright banned the playing of Pokemon Go anywhere on its premises. The Poke-ban joins the contraband list along with drones.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Services Every Startup Business Should Have

When we say “startup,” it usually means the business begins at a relatively small scale, but still needs to have services even if they don’t have sufficient budget or personnel to provide such. Remember that you still need to compete with other companies that may have the resources to hire expert staff dedicated to specific services. Fortunately, the beauty of today’s technology and the Internet can cut down or provide these services at reasonable cost or at no cost at all.

General Marketing
Almost every startup business and existing ones today has a website, as it should be since this is the digital age. Having a website is one of the biggest steps in marketing in order to give exposure to your products or brand. And it’s one thing to have a really nice website (an ugly site won’t get you visitors, by the way) and it’s another matter to have good analytics, page authority rankings, inbound links, and search engine optimization (SEO) so people can find your website.

Social Media Management
This is also the age of social media so not having any form of social media marketing is a form of startup suicide. In today’s competitive social media environment, startup businesses need several social media accounts, often just for people to find the actual business website. In fact, just having a website is no guarantee people will find your business. Social media services allow potential customers real-time inquiries that should also be responded to in real-time. In some cases, some sales can even be closed on social media without the buyer even visiting the startup’s website.

Customer Relationship Management
This is quite different from the customer relationships you strike up on the website and social media. It’s more of keeping track and following up on potential and present customers. It’s one thing to make a sale, but it’s another thing to keep track of that customer and get that person to talk about your product or brand to other people. This management aspect also needs to keep track of e-mail and hangout conversations (some customers still prefer the good ‘ol e-mail), as well as contacts and deals made with other companies or suppliers. This includes all current deals existing and recent tasks involving suppliers. It also involves creating a list of contact fields for all present customers.

Accounting
Of course accounting is important because accounting doesn’t just involve overheads and operational expenses and counting profits. Accounting involves invoicing, sales, payments, and billings that all involve customers. Keeping monetary track of what your customers are buying and repeatedly buying will translate later to marketing analytics. Also, showing your customers that you can provide effective billing, invoicing, etc. is showing them that you are an effective and competent business.

Project Management
If your startup business is into providing some form of service rather than products, then you need to rely on a really effective project management in order to provide your customers the service they truly deserve, and are paying for. You need to monitor your workforce, keep proper files, resources, to-do lists, and constant updates of everything that is conveniently organized.

Thursday, September 22, 2016

The Best Budget and Long-lasting Laptops for College Students

If you’re soon off to college, then you (and your parents, since they’re buying) need to realize that a laptop in college is as essential as your textbooks and grades. Half of the time you’ll be doing your schoolwork and research on it while half the time you’ll be on social networking, watching movies, listening to music, posting photos, maybe gaming, and video chatting with the parents back home. Also, though affordable, the best laptops for college students need to last the long haul, maybe 4 years of undergrad and maybe a year of grad work (5 years if it’s an engineering course).

When considering a list of affordable but long-lasting laptops for college, always consider the specific system requirements of your college or university, how light the laptop is (you’ll be lugging it in your backpack most of the day), how much power and storage solutions there is, the battery life, and if the warranty is good.

Acer Chromebook 14
This Chromebook 14 gives you just about all the features and quality you need from a basic laptop, plus really nice extras like a metal body and almost 12 hours of battery life (how’s that for long life?).

Dell Inspiron 11 3000 Series (3162)
This affordable Dell Inspiron is a competent performer with all the basic features and functionality you want in a budget ultraportable laptop, plus 64-bit Windows 10, long battery life, and a sturdy build.

Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series (3558)
It’s not surprising that Dell has two models featured on this list. The Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series (3558) is a capable desktop-replacement laptop with solid specs, plenty of storage, and long battery life-all that comes at an affordable price.

Lenovo Idea Pad 100S-11
The Lenovo Idea Pad 100S-11 is a well-built ultraportable laptop that features a lightweight design, competent performance, and more than 11 hours of battery life, at a very low price. Lenovo has always been a reliable favorite with college students.

Asus VivoBook E403SA-US21
The Asus VivoBook E403SA-US21 is an inexpensive yet fully featured laptop with lots of extras. It has brushed aluminum on visible surfaces and plentiful flash storage.

CTL J5 Chromebook
Built for school use, the CTL J5 Chromebook is a fine choice for students or anyone who needs a simple, inexpensive, and sturdy 2-in-1 laptop for use around the house. This specific Chromebook is also made for small mobile businesses due to its durability.

HP Chromebook 14
The HP Chromebook 14 is no performance powerhouse, but the Chrome OS fast speed, combined with a funky blue case, makes this one fun notebook to use. For classwork, this laptop is ideal for those pursuing degrees in liberal arts because of its low cost and simplicity in its use and maintenance while providing the access to nearly every major app and service an undergrad would need.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Do Startups Need a Dedicated Tech Support Team?

Since startup businesses will always start small or medium in size, one essential on its to-do list is a dedicated tech support team.

Some of the young entrepreneurs may simply counter this by saying that a dedicated tech support team is expensive and besides they just plan to put all their hard earned money in the bank while launching their startup. But the fact is, plain hard work is not the only element to a successful and growing business. A dedicated tech support team maximizes the probability of success.

No business today can avoid using technology
And today’s technology deals with computers, the Internet, gadgets, etc. No business today can run itself without technology, even if you’re only selling bananas. In the early days, all you needed to hire aside from employees was an excellent lawyer and business and tax consultants. Today, you need to include a good IT guy that eventually becomes a small IT team and this includes the guys for tech support. It’s not enough to just buy computers and use them.

Analyzing the tools you need
Your tech support or IT team can analyze and guide you to the proper online or offline applications that your business needs to be more efficient. No business lives anymore on just Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. And you don’t even need to spend so much because your tech support team can show you the free (Yes, free!) that’s out there and ready to use.

The team can support you on social
You and the other employees may be too busy with the business details to worry about marketing stuff and social media support. Your tech support team can do that for you. Social media is free anyway so once you open accounts on it, you’ll need people to address those daily inquiries, perhaps on Facebook or Twitter.

Who’s gonna build up the business knowledgebase?
Even if you, the proprietor, are an IT guy, you couldn’t do it alone. And that knowledgebase will really come in handy when they’re available to support your customers in real-time. Your tech support team can organize, create a library of topics surrounding your business, introductory materials, tutorials, manuals, and online FAQ’s, just to mention a few.

… And if something breaks down…?
This is central crux of all the reasoning for having a dedicated tech support team. Should one of your computers, gadgets, or even your Internet breaks down, you’ll have a team available to immediately fix things rather than lugging everything to a repair shop.

Of course, if cost is really an issue and you don’t have enough of an overhead, you can always outsource your dedicated tech support team. For an annual subscription fee, this outsourced dedicated tech support team can do everything mentioned above, and more. So with this, you now have to two options to choose from, or perhaps combine the two if need be.

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

5 Free Tools That Can Help You Improve The Performance of Your Computer

The time will come when even that powerful personal computer you purchased more than 5 years ago will feel tired, slow, and sluggish. When this happens, you don’t need to break your bank account and buy a new PC. There are existing and downloadable tools for your PC that can make it run faster and smoothly and thus, push Windows to work at optimum speed with the interface you want and not just what the operating system left you with.

The best thing with these tools is that they’re free to use.

Advanced Windows Care V2 Personal
This free all-in one tool straightens out your Registry, handles Windows startup programs, erases your surfing history, removes spyware and protects you from future infections, and gives your system an all-around optimization. Just direct the program to scan your system, see what it wants to do, and let it do its business.

Glary Utilities
This great free tool will provide one-click cleanup and optimization, and has been proven to deliver on its promise. It scans your system for problems with the Registry, shortcuts, startup programs, and spyware, and then gives you the option of which to clean up. It also deletes traces of your Internet surfing and erases temporary files. This is a simple optimization at its best.

PC Decrapifier
When you purchase a new PC, it unfortunately comes with a number of “unnecessary software” or sometimes called bloatware. PC and computer manufacturers are paid to include it. To get rid of bloatware on a new PC, you can use PC Decrapifier, which will automatically remove known bloatware. However, it may not be able to identify all bloatware, so you’ll probably have to go into the Uninstall a Program pane in the Windows Control Panel and uninstall the software you don’t want yourself. If you’re not sure about whether a program is necessary on your PC or not, try doing a search engine on its name before uninstalling it.

Free Up Space
If you’ve been using your computer for a while, you can probably free up disk space by running this excellent and free CCleaner utility. It will scan your computer for temporary files and other unnecessary system files, then delete them and free up space. Of course, if you don’t want to install CCleaner, you can instead use the Disk Cleanup tool built into Windows.

Run an Antivirus Scan
Truly, this is the most oft-ignored free utility that most users forget about, and when your PC is full of viruses, malware, and spyware, it will either slow down or not function properly. With most Windows you already have Windows Defender installed. You can get slightly better protection by downloading and installing Microsoft’s free Microsoft Security Essentials. If you don’t want to use Microsoft’s antivirus programs for some reason, there are many free and solid antivirus programs out there like Avast, AVG, and Panda.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

A Guide on What You Need to Know on Buying a Laptop Lock



If you're operating your own business, making a book report on your dorm room, or writing the next great novel at a local coffee shop, then your laptop is at risk of being stolen. You can always buy remote-wiping software that you can use to erase all your data the next time the thief connects to the Internet. However, the best way to stop the thief right there and then is to use a lock to physically secure your laptop to a fixed object, say your table or desk.

It may sound a bit extreme to literally chain your laptop to a desk, but the cost of losing your device, as well as the files and data on it is definitely worth the effort. Here are five questions to consider if you're planning on buying one.

Where are You Going to Use It?

If your laptop rarely goes out your home and the house itself has all the proper security, then getting a laptop lock is probably not necessary. However, if you're storing your device in a place where a lot of people have access to it, then getting a laptop lock is definitely beneficial.


Any place where various people occupy can be dangerous, but businesses and schools pose certain risks. Kensington, which is a leading manufacturer of computer locks and security locks, 40 percent of laptops gets stolen in private offices. Another hotspot for notebook theft are college dorms, since most doors there are open and different people come in and out.

What Kind of Data is on It?

If you don't have any important personal or business data on your computer, then you may not have to consider getting a laptop lock. But if your computer usually stores data in the cloud such as a Chromebook, or if it's only used by a 5-year old, most likely the machine doesn't have too much valuable data or information that the perpetrator can use against you.

Whether you're using the laptop for personal or corporate use, the cost of having a laptop for work stolen is much greater that just the value of the hardware itself. Most hackers go for corporate laptops since it usually contains intellectual property such as company reports and consumer data. Cloud security company Bitglass' 2014 report shows that 68 percent of all health care data breaches come from stolen or lost devices, and not network intruders.


And because of the growing number of companies adopting BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) policies, an employee or contractor's personal laptop could be the source of data breach. For data-security reasons, companies should provide their employees and contractors with laptop locks that they can use at the office desks. Some companies provide lockers or pedestals where employees can store their laptops after hours, but that doesn't protect laptops during the workday, and it requires workers to waste time reconnecting their notebooks to power outlets and docks every time they take the machines out of the cabinets.

Do You Have a Good Anchor Point?

What's the point of getting a good laptop lock if you don't have a strong anchor point such as a desk or a cubicle wall to connect it to. There are lots of professional desks that have grommets you can thread a lock cable through. If your furniture doesn't have a hole that's the appropriate size and location, you can purchase a $15 to $20 attachable anchor that glues onto a table or snaps between the seams of an office partition.


It's recommended to attach the laptop lock to something large and stable. Though it's always possible that a very determined thief could cut through the cable with a wire cutter or yank the lock forcefully that it breaks a piece of laptop off with it, most criminals are looking to grab something quickly, without wasting a lot of time or making too much noise breaking locks.

What Kind of Lock Slot Does Your Laptop Have?

Most laptops have some kind of security slot built into their chassis. Locks can connect to this opening, which makes it hard for a thief to pull them out. There are three kinds of slots, and you need to buy a lock that matches.

Most companies that use the Kensington Security Slot, which is so common that manufacturers sometimes refer to it as a "lock slot," without mentioning the Kensington name anymore. Some laptops such as the Lenovo's Ideapad 310S/510S, ThinkPad X1 Tablet, and the Flex 3 use the company's new Mini Security Slot to save space.

However, a few Dell laptops, including the Latitude 14 7000, Precision M3800 and entire XPS line, use a different slot technology, which comes from Noble Locks, a company that specializes in physical security products for computers. Apple doesn't put lock slots on its MacBooks, but several enterprising accessory manufacturers have developed locks that attach to the Apple laptops' rubber feet or clamp tight onto the lid for those who want to add extra security.


If you don't have a Dell laptop but it has a lock slot, then most likely it's a Kensington Security Slot. However, if you have a very thin laptop, specifically a Lenovo, it's possible that you have the new Mini Security Slot. Locks that work with the mini slots are backward-compatible with the regular slots, but regular slots can't fit into the Mini Security Slots. To be on the safe side, check your instruction manual or the support info on the manufacturer's website.

Which Lock Do You Need?

If you have a laptop that's one of the majority that has a built-in Kensington Security Slot, you can choose from several different lock brands. The company makes dozens of different models that are compatible with the company's slots, which range from simple key and combination locks to units that have master keys and codes. Several other companies also create locks that fit the standard Kensington slots, including Targus and Belkin. Although there has been no known Kensington Mini Security Slot-compatible locks from third parties.


Bottom line here is, whether your device is a brand new $1,500 Ultrabook, a sub-$300 Chromebook, or even an older model, you need to protect it at all times. Not only because it is your investment, it contains important personal or business information that you definitely don't want to lose to a stranger. If your laptop is in your office, at school, or at a coffee shop, it's best to physically secure it especially if you're going to leave it even for a just a few minutes. Laptop locks provide an inexpensive, convenient, and effective way to protect both your hardware and your most valuable data from thieves.