
Social networking is going to work its way into your organization's routine activities in the next year or two. If you don't think so, remember back when email first appeared and how you thought there was no use for it in your organization. I've been watching the goings-on in the Web 2.0 craze with great interest in how it might prove useful to my Indianapolis computer consulting customers. We're not diving in and having them all Twitter their customers, or build a presence on MySpace or Facebook. We are having some of them create blogs. We've asked all of them to create a LinkedIn account. Many are using Google Apps to collaborate on projects.
There are so many Web 2.0 sites that do similar things. It's too messy right now for those to whom I provide business computer support. So instead I play with these things and bring the ideas I find back to them. If you have a computer outsourcing arrangement in your office, you should start hearing about how some of these online services may help your business. The web isn't just for advertising. There are tools out there now that can make you more efficient.


It has been kind of embarrassing to have my Indianapolis computer consulting customers ask me why I didn't have a contingency plan for a telephone service outage. My first response was that there really isn't one. Now that I've lived thru a week without service, I realize that there are some contingencies. We've already started the process of establishing the ability to remote call forward our two main numbers so we can have cell phones ring. We're looking into the possibility of phone service from Brighthouse, our cable company. We won't get stuck in this situation again (unless our phone service is down tomorrow morning).
User generated content is the key defining element of the Web 2.0 movement. Social networking is close behind. This makes sites that allow people to rate the quality of various items or providers seem the logical best step for a killer new web site. If you're thinking you have a great idea for a site where people can rate things, that ship has already sailed.
I saw a fax machine for the first time when I arrived at Los Angeles Air Force Base in 1984. It was a large device and we cherished the fact that we had one. We could send papers across the country to our colleagues in Boston or DC instantly! There just couldn't be anything better, we thought.
Cloud computing is one of the hot topics in computer network consulting these days. Many of our Indianapolis computer consulting customers have asked us to explain what it's all about. In a sense, cloud computing is just another form of client/server computing. The difference is that the server is not in your office. It's somewhere out there in the Internet cloud.
A recent study conducted at DePaul, Lehigh, and Rutgers Universities found that people are more prone to lie in email than they are in written communication. When subjects were asked to share an amount of money with another person, they lied about the total amount 64 percent of the time when telling their partner in writing, but the rate of lying went to an amazing 92 percent of the time when the communication happened via email. Email is one of the most critical of my Indianapolis computer consulting customers' IT support services. It's number one or two on their lists of capabilities needed to recover first after a disaster. Imagine what it means to know that the likelihood that your correspondent is lying to you goes up when the method of communication changes.
I met basketball legend Hallie Bryant a couple of weeks ago. He was Indiana's Mr. Basketball in 1953 and after starring at IU, went on to a career with the Harlem Globetrotters that lasted nearly three decades. Hallie and his lovely wife have settled in Indianapolis. He does motivational speaking and has written a book filled with his insights about life.
There are some things I do as a part of my job as an Indianapolis Computer Consultant that I would do anyway. Having the business computer support job just makes it easier to justify in the same way that it's easier to play in a toy store if you have a little kid with you.
them several minutes per document, not to mention paper and white-out. They hadn’t asked before because they thought the cost to have it changed would be burdensome.
I attended the Dealmaker Media Under the Radar conference yesterday. This is a speed dating style conference where companies that are doing new things in Information Technology get six minutes to pitch their company before a room full of potential investors and business partners. Chip Heath, co-author of "Made to Stick," did a brief presentation on the secret to pitching in a short time. It's amazing how much one can present in only a minute. Unfortunately, one cannot pitch everything in one minute. Heath's advice: Pitch the single most important thing and leave the audience with questions that will lead to future conversations.