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Showing posts from 2012

The Best Quote for Automotive Enthusiasts

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" Cheap and reliable won't be fast , Fast and cheap won't be reliable , Fast and reliable won't be cheap ." The terms above...cheap, fast, reliable are all relative terms, meaning they vary from person to person. But I think we can all agree the above is true. "Cheap and reliable won't be fast." Example: my 1998 Acura Integra. I bought it in January 2009 as a college student, so could you say it was cheap in price? I think so. Here are some replacement repairs I did besides the regular maintenance items: stuck calipers, trunk actuator, blower motor, thermostat, front wheel bearings. Considering the car is nearly 15 years old (in Feb 2013), I would say the car has been reliable. But is the car fast at 140hp? You tell me. It gets me from A to B reliably. "Fast and cheap won't be reliable." Example: any modified car with cheap parts.  To avoid controversy, I won't call out any specific vehicle; rather I'll mention that f

Facebook's Struggles

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When Facebook went public on May 18, 2012, there were two kinds of investors: those that jumped the gun and those that evaluated Facebook's profit model and decided to wait.  The IPO offering of FB was set at 38.00 and slowly spiraled downwards as the months went by, plummeting as low as 17.70 at one point in September 2012. Since the August 2012 time frame FB stock has been floating around the 18-21 mark. The stock price has dropped nearly 45% since the IPO. Facebook has struggles that it needs to overcome in order to satisfy investors and grow its profits. Is Facebook a necessity? Facebook began in 2004, around the time that Google decided to go public. By this time, Google was already establishing itself as the 800 lb. gorilla on the World Wide Web. In a world dominated by technology, Google has become a necessity both for personal and professional users. Although there is a rise in the number of Baby Boomers using Facebook in 2012, it does not come close to the number

CrossLoop: The Ultimate Collaboration Tool

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Need to collaborate on a document with a friend? Need to help someone fix a software issue? Need to shop for something with a friend? Look no further, CrossLoop gets the job done. I found out about CrossLoop in an IT magazine a few years ago and finally came around to reviewing it. CrossLoop allows two users view-only and full control to each others' computers. There are two modes: Access and Share . It doesn't take rocket science to know that when one person shares, the other will access. Click the Share  tab (above right) and hit Connect  and provide your buddy with the 12-digit Access Code that they will enter in their Access tab (above left) . You will notice a red X :   this denotes that you will allow view-only access. Clicking again removes the X and allows full control. Besides the features that allows CrossLoop to succeed, what lies underneath the GUIs and functionalities? Security. As technology advances and people communicate across the Internet, hackers hav