Today’s basics column covers the basic process of finding out your device’s serial number and model number.
I was happy to pay the $95.75 yearly charge for HotspotVPN. However, when I decided to cancel, the problems started. HotspotVPN has charged me $95.75 for something I didn’t want and seems to have fallen off the face of the earth.
Given an exaggerated need to switch devices often, I thought I would share some of the strategies I use to make sure I can pick up and move forward quickly.
Today, I found NeverWet at a local Home Depot and decided to take the product for a spin and see if it protects as well as it says, how it looks and whether I might use it.
How much time is too much time in a coffee shop? How do they see us WiFi users? Where do we draw the line at Internet use in an establishment that offers free Wifi?
The basic idea is to keep files synchronized between two or more devices – much like Dropbox, but without storing these files on a server. Since I’ve had the chance to look at BitTorrent Sync back in April, a number of thoughts have come to mind that I thought I’d share.
When I recently published a sorry looking into the difficulties, InoReader’s creator, Yordan Yordanov, reached out by email to help explain some of his recent struggles and relate some of what it’s like to scale an application as intensive as an RSS Newsreader.
I’m going to offer some serious sins companies make when billing automatically and suggest some ways to improve the process.
This is an account of some of what I’ve done to replace this important and useful tool during these months – and a tool I eventually settled on.
Right now, Apple is at somewhat of a disadvantage as products like Android are leaping ahead with new tools and wearable devices. Much of the speculation about this event revolves around a possible watch and a new iPhone.