Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Media Bias

Unbelievable headlines.  Strange news stories. Can't-possibly-be-true Facebook posts. How do you know what to believe?
You've all probably heard cautions like: "If it sounds totally unbelievable, it probably is," or "It's too good to be true," or "consider the source."  Those are all good tips and I'd encourage you to NEVER respond to something that seems questionable.

I'd also encourage you to consider the source before responding, sharing, or reposting something you read online.  Recently, a previous student of mine shared a resource he uses when trying to decide if news is being accurately represented.  The chart is created by a group that regularly analyzes published content and then categorizes those media sources.

The Media Bias Chart can be found here; it can be enlarged by clicking on the chart. For those of you who know much more about this than me, I'd be interested in your thoughts about this chart.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Use your smartphone as a magnifier

Need a magnifying glass?  Did you know your smartphone has that capability?

The easiest and quickest way to enlarge text or small items:
*Open the Camera.
*Spread two fingers apart on the screen to Zoom in.
Quick and easy!

There are other ways to magnify using your phone:
1) Turn on Magnifier on your phone by accessing Settings - Accessibility - Magnifier on iPhones or Settings - Accessibility - Magnification on Android devices.

2)  Explore Magnifier apps to install on your phone:
iOS: Over 40 Magnifier and Flashlight  $1.99
Android: Magnificent Magnifier Free

I'm wishing the weather we are having today could be "magnified" many times over; it is absolutely beautiful this morning! Have a terrific Tuesday!

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Breach Report

It is your responsibility to keep yourself safe online, and education is your best defense!

Hackers are working 24/7 to "steal" names, addresses, email addresses and passwords.  Why? Profits are to be made by selling this information on the dark web.

What can you do about it?
1) Become informed.  Use Breach Report regularly to check your email address(es).  It is free to use and a service that is regularly monitoring the dark web for compromised data.  It not only shows you when your data was breached but also the company or website and the password that was being used by you at that time.  Breach Report continually monitors the dark web to provide this information. Definitely worth checking out!

2) Have good password management: use unique passwords for each account and consider using a password manager (like Last Pass)

3) Use 2-Factor Authentication whenever possible (in addition to your email and password, an additional piece of information is required for logins).

4) Use a decoy email address (created in Gmail) to use when you're not sure about giving out your "real" address

The internet is such an integral part of our lives that it is imperative we do all that we can to keep ourselves safe online.  Starting today.

Have a terrific Tech Tuesday wherever this may find you - in the sunshine, heat or maybe even where it is cool on this late spring day.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Quickly digitize old photos, negatives and slides

Does the thought of scanning in old photos, negatives and slides give you a headache?  It just seems overwhelming to me.  Until now.

John has gone through most of our old photos (pre-digital)  and organized them the last several months, but our question throughout the process has been "how can we best keep them" for the future.  Should we scan them ourselves or have a company do that for us?  What should we do with the negatives?  What about slides (from the dark ages)?  :-)

This 8 minute video - "How to Quickly Digitize Photos, Slides and Negatives"  just popped up this morning on my feed and it may be the answer!  Using your phone along with setting up a little jig allows you to scan photos at a fairly rapid rate using an app called Photomyne.  There is a cost associated with using it, but you could pay for one month just to try it out OR to scan like crazy and get all your photos scanned!
Two additional apps you may want or need:
Filmbox for 
negatives
SlideScan for slides

For several years, I've been using Google PhotoScan which is a GREAT free photo scanning app for your phone if you just need to scan in an occasional photo. It's a great tool, but just not as quick as PhotoMyne and it doesn't do negatives and slides.

Happy scanning!