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Tuesday’s Tip: Keeping Track of Software

By Mark Shead 9 Comments

Over the years, you've probably acquired a pretty decent collection of software. There are the software restore disks that came with your new computer, the operating system upgrade you purchased a year later, the word processor you used to use, the word processor you currently use, etc. It isn't uncommon to have 50 or more CDs from different pieces of software. For most people, these CDs are all stuck in a drawer somewhere. This is fine, but as the number of CDs grows, you'll eventually need to stash the incoming disks somewhere else and it is easy to lose track of where everything is kept. Worse, the packaging is different for each piece of software, so they don't really fit well in … [Read more...] about Tuesday’s Tip: Keeping Track of Software

Using Digg Productively

By Mark Shead Leave a Comment

Digg can be a horrible waste of time. With the constantly updating links to interesting things around the web, you can lose many hours hoping from site to site. On the other hand Digg can be a great way to make sure you don't miss something important. For example, I learned that Gmail had added IMAP access from a Digg post. What I have found to work well is checking Digg once a week or once every month. Choose the technology category and then view the top items for the last 7 days (or last 30 days). (If you do this with the front page category, you'll be sifting a bunch of photos and videos.) … [Read more...] about Using Digg Productively

My Experience Selecting a CPA

By Mark Shead 5 Comments

For the past year, I've been spending a lot of time learning about the IRS rules for income tax, particularly the rules for a business. After many hours of the IRS website and pouring through other books, I finally decided that I'd be better off sitting down with a CPA. I've talked with several and so far I'm not impressed.What I'm finding is that at least some CPAs seem to be very use to people just taking their advice and not asking any questions. A recent conversation went something like this: Me: It appears that my business can deduct X. Is that correct? CPA: No. Me: Why not? CPA: Because publication 15b says you can't. Me: I just read publication 15b and it says I can … [Read more...] about My Experience Selecting a CPA

IMAP for Gmail

By Mark Shead 4 Comments

Previously I wrote about why I prefer to use IMAP for my primary email accounts. Gmail recently enabled IMAP access for their accounts. Not only does it work for accounts at gmail.com, but it also works with their hosted apps account where you use your own domain. Productivity501.com uses Google's hosted apps for email, so IMAP is a very welcome addition. You can find this control by going to Settings > Forwarding POP & IMAP. Google did some creative things to make their concept of tags work within IMAP. Basically each tag becomes a folder, but that means it is possible to have the same item in multiple folders. There is also a folder called "All Mail" that will hold your … [Read more...] about IMAP for Gmail

Tuesday’s Tip: Label Your Warts

By Mark Shead 3 Comments

I'm referring to "Wall Warts" those blocks of plastic that transform standard house current into lower voltage needed by electronic devices. Modern electronic gadgets require power. And (if you haven't noticed) every device seems to require a slightly different type of power and slightly different type of connector. When you are setting up your office buying one item at a time, it isn't really any problem to figure out what goes where. However, if you have to move your office around, you are going to quickly discover that the power supplies all look pretty much the same and worse yet, some use the same connectors but supply different amounts of power. No big deal because you can just … [Read more...] about Tuesday’s Tip: Label Your Warts

Self Inflicted Insult

By Mark Shead 7 Comments

Most of the readers of Productivity501 are very nice and gracious.  That is why I was surprised when I found this comment in my moderation queue. When I read this, I was at first a little hurt.  I consoled myself by deciding it was some type of new blog spam or something.  As I got ready to delete the comment I realized that the ip address looked familiar. It turns out that I posted the comment as the first thing that came to mind when I was trying to solve a problem with the email notifications last week.  I had forgotten about it. I felt better knowing that my insult was self inflicted. In college I had a friend who would call himself and leave encouraging messages on his … [Read more...] about Self Inflicted Insult

USPS Online Orders

By Mark Shead 12 Comments

If you go to www.usps.com and order stamps, you'll find there is a $1 shipping/handling charge. This has always puzzled me. I would think that the Postal Service of all places would deliver stamps for free. Lets assume that the pricing is a well thought out business decision. Evidently it costs the Post Office roughly $1 more per stamp order to sell you a package of stamps online than it costs for you to walk in, talk to a clerk and deal with the transaction in person. This seems surprising to me. I would expect the cost of providing stamps from one centralized location would be cheaper than paying people to do it in person from the physical offices. Here are a couple reasons this … [Read more...] about USPS Online Orders

Dvorak Keyboard

By Mark Shead 35 Comments

Michael Sampson is trying to switch to the Dvorak keyboard. The Dvorak keyboard is arranged differently to help you type faster and with less finger movement. While the advantages sound promising, I have never quite understood why you'd want to switch to the Dvorak keyboard if you are already proficient at QWERTY. . I type somewhere between 50 to 75 words pre minute, but it is very rare for me to type at those speeds because I usually spend more time thinking about what I'm writing than I do actually writing. Maybe I just think slower than most people The basis for most of the claims of Dvorak's keyboard was done for the Navy in 1944. However, it appears that the report is fairly … [Read more...] about Dvorak Keyboard

Dealing with Signatures in a Paperless Office

By Mark Shead 10 Comments

With email, one of the main reasons I have to print things off is to sign them and fax or mail them back.  As I transition to a paperless office I'm having to look at ways to sign documents without printing them out. There are really two types of signatures.  The first is just an image of your handwritten signature.  The second is a digital addition to the file that "proves" you were the one that signed it.  By now digital signatures should be common, but they aren't.  I'm not saying they aren't used in big companies, but the average web user isn't signing emails or anything else digitally. Right now most of the paper that requires my signatures needs to be faxed to someone.  If I want … [Read more...] about Dealing with Signatures in a Paperless Office

Quick Update: Paperless Office

By Mark Shead 14 Comments

I am still working on my paperless office experiment. I've had an huge influx of consulting requests in the past 60 days, so I haven't dedicated as much time to this as I had originally planned. Here is a quick update on what I've found so far. Optical Character Recognition One of the most important parts of being able to search for your documents later is recognizing it as text. A generic scanning process simply recognizes the pixels and doesn't actually turn them into words. (A simple test to see if a PDF is storing data as pixels or text is to try to copy and paste a paragraph into a text editor.) I've found that for a proper workflow I need to make sure that the character … [Read more...] about Quick Update: Paperless Office

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