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Wednesday, 5 September 2012

30 Things To Do When you are Bored and have a Computer

  1. Read technical blogs – There are several technical blogs out there, that produce high quality content everyday. There are 9600+ technology blogs listed in the technorati website. Browse the technology blog list and read the blogs that interests you. As always you can browse our blog archive section for Linux related articles that you might have missed.

  • Backup your laptop – You should do a full back-up of your laptop / desktop every month at a minimum. If not, do it now. Use rsnapshot for Unix and GFI free backup tool for Windows.
  • Seriously! Don’t have a backup? Stop reading this article and backup you laptop now!
  • De-clutter your laptop – Organize the files and directories in your laptop. If you have tons of sub-directories, it gets difficult to find the right sub-directory to store your file. I used to have tons of nested sub-directories before. Now, I have only 5 high level directory structure under my home directory. Use Windows Google Desktop on Linux Google Desktop software to search your files quickly.
  • Social networking sites – Create an account for yourself on Linkedin, delicious, Stumble Upon, Facebook, Digg, Twitter. Even if you don’t post something on these sites, you can still browse their popular pages and read all the articles.
  • Clear out all your emails. Process every email in your in-box and archive it. Don’t leave any emails unprocessed.
  • Change passwords – When is the last time you’ve changed your on-line banking password (or) your primary email password? Make sure to create a yearly password routine and change all your online passwords to something unique and strong. Use multi-platform password manager to store all your password on your laptop securely. Follow the password best practices. Change passwords for at least few of your critical online accounts now!
  • Plan your exercise schedule – If you are like me, you may be looking for motivation from all sources to exercise regularly. Create a simple exercise schedule (it could even be for 15 mins a day) and share it with your family and friends. Ask them to check on you regularly to make sure you are following your schedule on track. Explore sites like fitday, dailymile, and dailyplate will help you track and organize your fitness related stuff.
  • Customize your home page portal. If you don’t have it, create one at either iGoogle or myYahoo.
  • Reconnect with friends and family – Send an email to an old friend, colleague, or family member with whom you might have lost touch.
  • Pursue your dream job – If you are not happy with your current job, take time to think about what would be your dream job. Create a document and list down all the items that you don’t like about your current job and all the things that you would want in your dream job. Once you have a clear idea, search job sites like the ladders – where all the jobs are $100K+
  • Read Wikipedia – Browse the Wikipedia technology portal for topics that interests you. Outline of computer science and list of information technology topics are a good place to start in Wikipedia. You can spend hours together reading these topics.
  • Send a Thank You note to someone who did some nice things for you.
  • Organize your photos online – Create an account for yourself on picasaweb, or flickr and organize all your pictures online.
  • Browse YouTube – Go to youtube.com and search for linux, to view all linux related videos (or) Browse these technology channels on youtube — Google, Windows, TechCrunch.
  • Explore a Technical Hobby – It may be tweaking the Linux OS by building custom kernels, exploring ethical hacking, exploring amateur ham radio (or) any technical stuff that you were always interested to explore, but never got the time to do.
  • Set Goals – Jan 1st is not the only time to set goals for the year. Take some time to think through and list out all the major personal projects you would like to complete this year. Create actionable tasks to get those projects completed. Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity is an excellent resource that will help you to get organized and be productive.
  • Write - If you are bored and don’t know what to do, start writing. This doesn’t need to be technical writing. When is the last time you’ve written a well thought out letter to someone who you love? Take the time to write a letter and send it in an email to your loved ones.
  • Get Personal Finance in Order – Take time to review your current financial status, review bank balance, consolidate credit cards, sign-up for online bill pay, move money from low interest bank account to high interest bank account, research re-financing your home mortgage for lower rate.
  • Use online Word, Excel, Powerpoint – I’ve moved almost all my local documents to Google documents. I can access my personal documents from any computer. No need to worry about backing up local documents on your laptop on an on-going basis, if all your documents are online. You can also share selective documents with your friends and family.
  • Add items to your shopping wishlist – Take time to research on the electronic gadgets, or technical books that you wanted to purchase. Read some review and collect as much as information you need about the item before your purchase. Most importantly, create a wish-list in your favorite online shopping site and populate it with your favorite items or books you would like to purchase some day. I use amazon amazon wish-list.
  • Defrag your hard-drive. If you are using Windows OS, defarg your hard-drive. Since we all use *nix, call your Windows friends and brag about how *nix doesn’t need defrag.
  • Browse firefox add-on repository and play around with any add-on that you find interesting.
  • Create check-list and routines. List out all the repetitive tasks that you perform. Create a routine for those tasks. See whether you can automate or delegate some of those repetitive tasks.
  • Flip through the unix man page. Even for the commands you are very familiar with, check out the man page. When you do ‘man ls’, you might be surprised that you didn’t know few of the capabilities, even on simple command like ls.
  • Virus Scan. If you are using Windows OS, run a virus-scan on your laptop. I prefer Spybot search and destory, which will protect your laptop from spyware.
  • Delete unwanted program. On Linux, see whether you are running any unwanted services and disable them. If you have any unwanted packages installed, remove them. On windows, go to Add/Remove program, and see whether you can delete any unwanted programs from the system. This might give you both additional disk space and performance.
  • Create online book catalog for all your books. Library Things lets you add 200 books to your catalog for free.
  • Watch Funny Videos. If you are really bored and doesn’t want to do any work that requires brain power, simply watch these funny videos.
  • Learn keyboard shortcuts for your favorite application. For example, gmail keyboard shortcuts, firefox keyboard shortcuts, Ubuntu keyboard shortcuts.
  • Over to you…

    What would you do when you are bored and have a computer in front of you? Leave your response.

    If you enjoyed this article, you might also like..

    1. 50 Linux Sysadmin Tutorials
    2. 50 Most Frequently Used Linux Commands (With Examples)
    3. Top 25 Best Linux Performance Monitoring and Debugging Tools
    4. Mommy, I found it! – 15 Practical Linux Find Command Examples
    5. Linux 101 Hacks 2nd Edition eBook Linux 101 Hacks Book

    Sunday, 24 June 2012

    Social insecurity: Got social media FOMO? [infographic]

    Rather than keeping us feeling in the loop, is social media actually ruining our good times by holding out the carrot of better things afoot? Are you suffering from a severe case of FOMO? Time to find out.

    Via timeRAZOR.

    Social media infographics.

    Saturday, 14 April 2012

    Thirty-eight percent of kids on Facebook under 12?

    A survey suggests that a large proportion of the kids on Facebook are just that--kids below the age of 12. But you're supposed to be at least 13. Is this another case of Facebook not policing itself?

    There's no reason to be worried that your kids are using Facebook. After all, the age limit is 13, so Facebook's expert surveillance tools will, like a fine barkeep, immediately spot an underage participator and toss him into purgatory for a year or two.

    Or not quite.

    A new survey suggests, in fact, that 38 percent of the kids on Facebook are not alright by Facebook's age rules. For they are aged 12 or younger.

    The survey perpetrated by a company called Minor Monitor -- yes, you can see the self-interest in these finding wafting in the wind here --offers that 4 percent of the kids on Facebook are 6 years old or less.

    Yes, in real age, rather than any mental equivalent.

    If this somehow approximates to the truth, one wonder how many of these children's parents actually know or even care. Seventeen percent of parents in this survey said that they don't track their children's Facebook activity at all -- though more than half admitted that they logged in to their kids' accounts just to see what was going on.

    Of course, almost three-quarters of the parents surveyed here said they were worried about their children's safety on Facebook. There lurk predators, bullies, and all sorts of unsavory characters in its pages. How can children so young be expected to be prepared for what they might find?

    But here's an interesting number for those who worry whether Facebook has simply become a default automatic human activity, like eating or watching "American Idol": 30 percent of the kids surveyed here were on Facebook for two or more hours a day.

    Some might wonder whether this might cut into their homework or their Romanian dancing practices. Fewer, perhaps, might wonder how this apparently large element of children on the site allows marketers to target them at a very young age.

    Though Facebook claims it throws out about 20,000 underage kids every day, one has to imagine how hard the company tries (or wants to try), given the ease with which its systems can apparently be circumvented.

    It's always the case that when you tell kids they can't do something, they will try only the harder to do it.

    Some parents, though, might be rather pleased that their kids have found an activity that they can pursue in relative peace and solitude.

    Though parents offer expressions of concern, how much are they secretly overjoyed that little Freda has lots of virtual friends, for whom there's no need to organize a house party at all?

    Tuesday, 20 March 2012

    Mobile Gaming

    If you've done any mobile gaming at all, you're probably familiar with Open Feint, Crystal, Plus+ or Apple's Game Center. Here we take a closer look at the big four Mobile Gaming Networks.

    Gaming_networks_igl-600x3060

    Sunday, 18 March 2012

    Facebook 2012

    Facebook's rise never ceases to amaze us- from a net income of $229 million in 2009 to a cool $1 billion last year, as illustrated in our latest infographic. Among other things, we look at the number of active Facebook users around the globe (Asia has the most users, but the U.S. has the largest penetration per population), what they actually do on Facebook (like uploading 250 million photos a day), the games they like to play, and some interesting facts from Facebook's recent IPO filing.

    Fb2012_960px-600x2498

    Teenagers: 1982 vs 2012 [infographic]

    Then-vs-now