Practical Technology

for practical people.

May 21, 2013
by sjvn01
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Google Voice integrating into Google Hangouts

For years, Google had multiple Voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP), instant messaging, and video-conferencing services. Now, Google is uniting those services under Google Hangouts. It wasn’t clear though  where Google Voice, its main VoIP program that crossed the gap between landline/cellular and Internet calls, was going to fit. We now know that it too is being integrated into Google Hangouts.

Google Voice integrating into Google Hangouts. More >

May 20, 2013
by sjvn01
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Google Glass will be a big deal, so deal with it

Perhaps no group has earned a borderline obscene pejorative as quickly as the wearers of Google Glass. I mean, the product, not due for release until early next year, is seen in the wild today only on the few thousand who are its early testers. And yet we already

have the term “glasshole.” Google Glass has also been banned ahead of its release. This all seems to stem from the belief, voiced by writers such as Jason Perlow, that Google Glass is evil, since “it’s a ‘stealth’ recording device.”

My advice to anyone freaking out over Glass: Get over it.

Google Glass will be a big deal, so deal with it. More >

May 20, 2013
by sjvn01
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Cloud Classification for beginners

OK, so by now you should know what a cloud really is — and at least one example of what a cloud really isn’t but you may still be wondering what specifically are all these cloud types floating about in the Internet. Well, let’s take a look.

Let’s start with the highest level and work our way down: public vs. private cloud. First, clouds are not this fuzzy magic thing that makes IT services happen. Behind all the technobabble fog, they’re servers in server racks, rooms, and data centers providing a variety of IT services.

Cloud Classification for beginners

May 15, 2013
by sjvn01
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Goodbye, Lotus 1-2-3

The first killer app was VisiCalc. This early spreadsheet turned the Apple II from a hobbyist toy to a business computer. VisiCalc came with room for improvement, though. In addition, a new architecture and operating system, the Intel-based IBM PC and MS-DOS, also needed a spreadsheet to be taken seriously. That spreadsheet, released in early 1983, would be Lotus 1-2-3, and it would change the world. It became the PC’s killer app, and the world would never be the same.

On May 14, IBM quietly announced the end of the road for 1-2-3, along with Lotus Organizer and the Lotus SmartSuite office suite. Lotus 1-2-3’s day is done.

Goodbye, Lotus 1-2-3. More >