Ben’s Computer Services

Setting up a brand-new computer or Android mobile device is not a problem once our remote access software has been installed (phone support is always available to help you get your new item out of the box and connected to the internet). If you have purchased a NAS box, router, printer, or any other network device and do not know how to set it up and secure it we can assist you once you have connected it to the router (if we are setting up a router it needs to be connected to the modem and computer). Helping you setup a proper backup plan for your new external drive is easy once you have it plugged into the computer or network. Need help with an interesting and unique issue that we haven’t mentioned? Give us a call today! Is your computer infected with malware or a virus? Are you worried about ransomware? If so, we can help as long as your computer is able to still get online and install our remote access software. We will remove the infection and help you try not to get infected again. To help protect you from ransomware you will need to setup some form of offline backup that you update often and we can assist with that.

The pandemic has helped increase sales of Apple’s legacy products. Students and employees forced to work from home found value in upgrading to the latest versions of its iPhones, iPads and Mac computers. ’s sales last year by 33 percent to $366 billion. On Monday, Apple looked to further the momentum of its Macs by updating its most popular computer, the MacBook Air. The new version sheds a decade-old wedge-shaped case in favor of a slender, rectangular laptop. The computer comes in a multitude of colors, including silver, space gray, gold and dark blue. The new model is 20 percent smaller than its predecessor and weighs 2.7 pounds, the company said. The MacBook Air features Apple’s newest processor, the M2, which the company said offered increased performance even as it required less battery power. The company said it was bringing more personalization to the iPhone, with the ability to customize the lock screen with colors, widgets and live activities. The new software will let iPhone users create custom lock screens for different purposes - like a screen for work that shows a preview of a calendar, or a personal screen that shows exercise activity data.

Need help finding the right job offer? You don’t have the basic computer skills you need to get the job you want. There are great online classes to beef up your software skills fast. Here’s a list of PC skills classes to get you on your way. You can do most in a few hours. All of them look great on resumes. MS Office. Get official Microsoft training and certification, or try third-party paid training. There’s also some great free YouTube tutorials out there. Google Drive. Check out the GSuite Learning Center, or a Lynda tutorial to beef up your Drive computer skills. Spreadsheets. Unlimited classes from Skillshare (for $8 a month) can help your rows-and-columns computer skills. Email. Lynda and Microsoft offer MS Outlook courses. You can also learn to do a mail merge here. Powerpoint. Try a free Microsoft online class or a Lynda course. An ONLC certification looks good on a resume.

It’s superficially similar to the diving event from Summer Games, as seen in my very first video above, but the difference is night and day. I speak not just of the heightened drama inherit in jumping off a rocky cliffside as opposed to a diving board, although that’s certainly part of it. Look also at the improved graphics, the addition of music, all of the little juicy touches that add personality and interest: the way the diver fidgets nervously as he waits to take the plunge, the way you can send him careening off the rocks in various viscerally painful ways, the seagull at the bottom of the cliff who will turn and fly off if you wait long enough. California Games, the fifth entry in the series and the culmination of the audiovisual progression we’ve been charting, was done completely in-house at Epyx. Indeed, it was also inspired much closer to home than any of the games that had come before.

This data has ​be​en written  by G SA C᠎ontent Gene᠎rato᠎r DEMO​!

Our computers, ourselves: digital vs. Though by night I fight malware alongside the rest of the Malwarebytes research team, by day I work as a doctoral student in Immunobiology at Yale University, where I study the development of the immune system in your bone marrow. This grants me a unique perspective, as I’ve studied both the evolution of malware over the past decade, and the evolution of the microscopic organisms that make us sick. “Computer virus” has become the catch-all term that people use to describe all types of malicious software-Trojans, ransomware, adware-you name it. When grandma asks for help with her computer, the phrase “I think there’s a virus” likely rings familiar. A similar pattern also emerges when people describe biological infections; we often begrudgingly conclude, “I caught a virus,” as we lay painstakingly on the couch waiting for the fever to break. Studying these two similarly-named phenomena in parallel had led me to the inevitable question: Are these two types of infections so different?

Post a Comment

0 Comments

##copyrightlink## ##copyrightlink## ##AICP##