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Archive for June, 2009

Different ways of learning

Research into learning retention rates (National Training Laboratory Institute for Applied Behavioral Science from “Different Ways of Learning”) has proven:

Teaching Method Knowledge Retention
See/Hear – Lecture 5%
Reading 10%
Audio Visual / Video 20%
Demonstration 30%
Discussion Group 50%
Practice by Doing 75%
Teaching Others 90%
Immediate application of learning in a real situation 90%

How to learn how to do anything

One of the most exciting things about the internet is the sheer volume of information you can find and educate yourself.  You can learn about everything from history of Ancient Greece, to motorcycle repair, to the lifestyles of capucine monkeys.

For those of us who are perpetually curious, the internet offers boundless resources for life-long learning.  And while some of the resources are paid, many are free.

One of my favorite free sites is Videojug.com.

Videojug is an online encyclopedia of life skills.  It’s clean and intuitive interface offers a wealth of knowledge in the form of well-cataloged instructional videos. The channels include beauty and style, creative and culture, family and education, food and drink, health and well being, lifestyle and home, love and dating, money and career, sports and outdoors, and technology and cars.  Each video is professionally made by an expert in that field.  Be it an expert in speed-folding T-shirts, putting custom ring tones on your iPhone, or making a business plan, Videojug has it all

The site was created in 2006 by David Tabizel after he got a flat tire and could not find a good instructional video on how to fix it. Three years later, it’s one of the largest online libraries of free videos. While all of its high-definition videos are produced by experts, common users can upload their own videos and also participate in forums.  Users can also comment on videos and suggest ideas for new videos.

Some videos are funny and goofy, especially in the love and dating section.  For example, to initiate a good night kiss after a first date, Videojug advises to first “create an awkward pause” the conversation.  If the first stage of dating went well, you may follow the advice on “how to avoid trapped arm while cuddling in bed.”

One of the most useful sections of this site is the Lifestyle & Home category.  It contains simple and easy to understand instructions on home decor, plumbing, tiling, etc.

Another good section is Money & Careers.  You can hear from a commercial airline pilot how to become a pilot, cocktail-mixing tips from a bartender, and how to select an estate planning attorney versus an estate planning attorney.  Throw in a ton of cooking videos, salsa and makeup lessons, and you can spend all day learning stuff you always wanted to learn.

In many respects, Videojug is similar to YouTube’s How To & Style section.  However, the comparison is not in YouTube’s favor, since YouTube is riddled with poorly-produced videos and lacks organization.  Search “yoga” on Youtube returns 73,000 results, including “The Inappropriate Yoga Guy”, Dilbert cartoon, and yoga sandals. Videojug, on the other hand, generated a concise 18 pages of detailed instructions on specific yoga techniques.

Finally, in Videojug’s Discussion section, you can find other users’ advice on such life’s pressing questions as: How Can I Remove Dog Urine Stains From A Wool Rug? and How Can One Get Rid Of The Big Belly?

Have fun poking around Videojug.  It’s well worth the time.

James Kerr is Chief Geek of SuperGeeks.  He can be reached at www.SuperGeeks.net.  You can also follow him on Twitter: supergeeks.


SuperGeeks’ Top 10 Outlook Tips

Love it or hate it, chances are you are using Outlook for your email at work.  It’s a good program with many useful features.  Some would say too many.  I am hoping that some of the tips below can help make your experience with the Outlook into a more productive and easy one.

1. Set a reminder to reply to a message. This is my most favorite tip.  With my hectic and ever-expanding schedule, occasionally I forget to follow up on an important email.  To avoid this, you can right-click the important message, select Follow Up, and click Add Reminder. You can select the follow up day or select a custom reminder.

2. Send group email without revealing other recipients’ identities. It’s basic email etiquette to avoid listing all of your friends’ emails in CC (carbon copy) field of your email.  It looks bad and it discloses your friends’ email addresses to random people.  Instead, use the Bcc (blind carbon copy) line in the message.

3. Increase font size of messages. This one is as easy as it is beautiful.    Open the message you would like to read.  Hold down Ctrl button and scroll the wheel on your mouse up.  Alternatively, you can increase font size under Other Actions->Zoom.

4. Retrieve new messages automatically. If you must know every single moment whether you received a new email, there is a feature for you.  Go to Tools->Send/Receive->Send/Receive Settings->Define Send/Receive Groups.  Highlight All Accounts group.  Check Schedule an automatic send/receive every “1″ minute.

5. Make your Outlook calendar into desktop calendar. It would be much easier to follow your appointments, if you could see them on your desktop, instead of clicking through a number of windows.  You can upload a free program at http://www.outlookonthedesktop.com/ It is surprisingly useful.  Try it.

6.  Avoid sender’s remorse. Have you ever sent an important email just to realize a moment later that you forgotten to attach something or made a silly typo?  You can give yourself a grace period by delaying sending your emails by a few minutes.  Go to Tools->Select Rules and Alerts -> New Rule. Under “Start from a blank rule”, choose Check messages after sending-> Next button-Next (again).  Answer “Yes” to notice that the rule will apply to all messages. Check the box for “defer delivery by a number of minutes”, and then click on “a number of” and change the defer minutes to 5 minutes (or another number that works for you).  Your messages will linger in the outbox where you can delete or edit offending messages before they go out.

7. Turbocharge your Outlook with Xobni. A nice little free program Xobni can greatly improve your experience with Outlook. You can see all of your email in/out data, detailed contact cards, faster indexed search including corporate hierarchy, and conversation history. You can get it at http://www.xobni.com/. As to a strange name, it’s just Inbox spelled backwards.

8. Quickly Find Related Messages. I get on average 300 emails a day (not including spam). When I wonder what was said before about the same topic, I open a message, select the Actions menu, choose Find All, and select Related Messages. Voila.  I can get more context for a current message right away.

9.  Permanently Delete Messages. Instead of deleting messages, then emptying the Deleting Items folder, you can hold down the Shift key when you hit Delete for any message.

10.  Add a Contact from an E-mail. If you want to save the sender of an e-mail to your contact list, with the e-mail open right-click on the person’s name in the From field and select Add to Contacts.

McAfee offers software to protect famly

McAfee Family Protection will offer blocking, monitoring, and parental notifications for most computer-based activities. The program will allow for up to 10 users on three different machines, utilizing several layers of algorithms to monitor behavior. Parents can outright block or merely monitor Web sites, social-networking behavior, and instant messaging including Facebook IM and multiprotocol chat clients, according to Javed Hasan, vice president of McAfee Product Management.

In addition to blanket blocks for subject matter and specific Web site blocks, parents can customize rules so that they can block all of YouTube, or just YouTube videos that have specific tags. Web sites protected by secure protocol, https, can also be blocked. They can also set up roadblocks that prevent specific applications from opening, such as peer-to-peer clients or media players, and parents can receive brief SMS notifications alongside more-detailed e-mail reports.

The program will also be able to restrict computer usage based on cumulative time used or by time of day. It uses a server-based clock, so tampering with the local system-based clock shouldn’t affect this feature.

McAfee says that Family Protection uses about 20MB of RAM when idle and can run on systems with as little as 128MB of RAM. A three-computer license for up to 10 users is available for $39.99.

New iPhone announcement expected this week

Apple CEO Steve Jobs is not expected at the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference, which starts today and runs all week at San Francisco’s Moscone Center. But Apple watchers are betting on an updated iPhone that is faster than the current iPhone 3G and equipped with more memory, a better camera, video recording capabilities and a compass.

Or we may see a couple of models introduced, possibly a more basic unit that sells at a lower price point.

Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, will deliver a speech today in place of Jobs, who is scheduled to return from a health-related absence at the end of the month. Schiller is expected to talk about the upcoming iPhone OS 3.0 operating system as well as Mac OS X Snow Leopard, the next operating system for Mac computers.