Chris Carroll

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Stories By Chris Carroll

  • Overlooked Needs when Buying a Computer

    What should the average consumer wanting to upgrade a laptop or computer actually focus on? How key features actually perform directly relates to feeling good or bad about a purchase. As a frequent purchaser of laptops / computers -- here are the performance areas I've found to be important and often lacking: keyboard, wifi, operating system pros and cons, speakers, and processors. IF you are going to stream video to a television then the graphics card also needs to meet some basic requirements. It does come down to how you want to use your computer. I type a lot. If you are willing to use an external keyboard, then the built in laptop keyboard is not an issue. However, most of us want a laptop keyboard that works well. I currently have 3 laptops. Only one of the laptops has a keyboard that performs. It keeps up with my speed of typing and the letters I hit are the ones recorded on screen. Yes, it seems I am describing baseline expectations. However, two of my laptops do not meet meet those. One keyboard consistently jumps around on the page, inserting letters I type in lines above or below the intended target. The other has a pressure issue. Push hard and dead on or get no letter at all. I cannot even use that laptop keyboard to type. It is now relegated to a streaming device hooked up to a tv. How do you avoid getting a laptop with a lousy keyboard? Local stores that have display models set up are one option. Find a program you can type in, such as notepad. Let's move on to wifi performance. I spend 45 minutes each morning cramming in quality work time prior to dashing out the door. This means I want to login and create what I've laid out the night before. I was finding with a new desktop and laptop that there was definite lag when working online compared to my older machine. I evaluated this from several angles. A straight-forward result was testing download speeds on each of the machines. The newer desktop and laptop were reporting speeds of around 11 mbps. My older laptop was still hitting the 40 to 50 mbps consistently also using wifi. All the machines showed the same wifi spec types yet were clearly getting different results. I began hardwiring the slower machines to evaluate if I could work more quickly compared to relying on wifi. I could. But why would I want sub par wifi in a newer machine? Note that the average consumer would believe they need to purchase a higher tier of faster internet service. That is throwing money away when the real issue is an inferior wifi card. There are online retailers that have customers who post detailed reviews on performance after a purchase. Reading some of these can reveal some of these issues pre-purchase. Reviewers who test out a computer also are helpful for narrowing down a list of potential purchases. Operating systems are becoming a differentiator for me. The average consumer will use the operating system installed at the point of purchase. I relied on the Microsoft systems for years. Each release had its pros and cons. I am less enamored with having my options managed for me and this is the current trend. I also perceive, rightly or wrongly, that Google docs is performing more quickly on my Chromebook compared to my two laptops running Microsoft operating systems. This is a big deal for me. I am an efficient worker. The Chromebook also has its inefficiencies, such as making printing so difficult. Even having purchased a printer that was supposed to be compatible with my Chromebook, it was not. I invested lots of time to try to set up the printer compatibility. I still work in an environment where the print option is needed a few times a week. I tend to get all my work done, then fire up my Microsoft-driven laptop to print. I would not have included volume or sound in previous years. However, streaming video and listening to music online has become a bigger part of my life. There are distinct differences between my laptops / computer and the level of volume output. My all-in-one desktop was promoted as an entertainment package and the great sound quality reinforces that. Processors are always going to be important to core performance of any computer. The trend is to offer less and to tell customers that it is enough for what you do. The prices have come down on computers to reflect this trend. However, the only computer I bought that had less than an Intel i3 processor was a huge disappointment. Even surfing on the web was clearly slower than my other machines. If spending less is the priority, then a well-chosen Chromebook would be my choice. Yes, the processors are less powerful but much less computing power is required as no onboard software is loaded into a Chromebook. Reality is that performance in any of these areas is best assessed after the purchase is made and the computer is being used by you. For this reason, careful attention to return policies is important. Customers should not be stuck with a product that does not meet reasonable performance expectations. The option of a local return without a restocking fee still plays a big part in my purchase decisions. In my household I alternate between my Microsoft products and my Chromebook products, depending on the task of the day. I gauge my satisfaction based on the performance I receive relevant to the cost. Doing some legwork pre-purchase has always been worth the time.

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  • The Camera and the Wave

    Is it possible that the wave football fans spontaneously propagate at stadiums across America has an actual genetic basis that has been overlooked? My aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins all have been giving up the wave on cue in every home video I've ever seen. The framing of the shots go like this; people sitting across from each other at a table with lots of food with heads bent down and mouths going at it -- some chewing others talking. Then, that first person senses that they are being watched. That first head tilts toward the camera and then, in coordinated slow motion, everyone tilts, sees the Super 8 camera, sits up a bit straighter, and then, as if on cue, the wave begins. Everyone is waving at the camera in unison. That's it. I remember how boring I thought it was that everyone waved. It surprised me that no one else found it odd that this happened repeatedly. I figured the wave was probably not what my Uncle Matt wanted when he hauled out the camera at all family events. I imagine I was right as Uncle Matt was in advertising and had real equipment. His ads ran on local television and sometimes a lucky family member got to be in one. But he never coached anyone during family time, and so the wave continued. My parents got their own Super 8 camera and I specifically remember one recorded event. Probably because I made myself the star in it. It was the late 1960s and in my neighborhood adults regulary hosted dance parties. It was our night and for the first half hour or so, my younger brother and I could stay up and join the fun. I got a kid's grasshopper, put on a pair of oversized sunglasses I got at the circus (three times as big as my head), and made my way into the crowd. Of course, it was the playback of that night that was the most fun. At five, I spontaneously live dubbed the audio that was missing. Our camera didn't record sound just video. So, I gave myself all the speaking parts to go with the video. If there had been America's Funniest Home Videos then -- I might have been able to help my parents pocket some cash. The social hub of the home expanded from dance parties to movie night. I am pretty sure this was a rarity in the 1970s, someone with a copy of a classic black and white Flash Gordon movie. I still remember a scene where, just as Flash squares off with an enemy, a special effect kind of poofs on the screen brightly. The crudeness of the effect worked because it was surprising! The excitement of the guy who got his hand on this tape also sticks with me, years later. He brought Flash to his peeps, in person, in a basement decked out with wood paneling and shag carpet. Keeping it in perspective, it was family and friends that breathed life into the camera, even if it was a stilted wave at times. The breakups in the family are obvious from the gaps in our recorded history. It's not until I am graduating high school that I see any new recorded memories. These are different. Too many cakes at the party because our family became our families. Both mom and dad showed up with big, impressively decorated cakes. I like cake. Little kids were dominating the scene once again. Remarried and rebirthing. My youngest sibling trying to take over the storyline, running through the adjoined rooms like a helicopter sure to crash. But he had to share the limelight with his big sister. I still delivered the one-liners as if I were trained in improv, able to react to the new era of change now recorded in a digital format. Not long after the birth of my first child, my mother-in-law bought us a digital camcorder. I was fascinated by how I could beam a just-shot video from the camcorder to our television. When the dog walked infront of the beam the image broke up, like it did when antenna television was unreliable and the only option. What beamed to screen in our living room in 2001 was the squeals of a child and the echo of the adults who served as her laugh track. Hadley now had the limelight. For me, it was and still is all about her. The camera shows we were all there -- the star, her supporting cast and fans -- daughter, two moms, grandparents, uncles, aunts and friends. Creating our own wave.

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  • Growing Up Geek

    Technology and geekdom kind of rolled up on me initially. I was in a college journalism program and year one, we were hacking away at typewriters. I even remember my professor hitting me on the knuckles with a ruler and how mortified I was. The next year, the personal computers were in and the typewriters out. There was no discussion of what had just happened. I am not even sure the journalism program realized what a watershed moment had occurred. My eyes opened up to these changes being world-altering once I read The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman. His first chapter is titled, "While I was Sleeping". After I read the first 50 pages, I was very much awake to the fact that technology had become much more than an efficient way to get things done. I was mesmerized. Impressed. Wanted to be along for the ride. Forever. The first major high I got off of being around technology was during my orientation at Circuit City to be a holiday sales clerk. Remember Circuit City? As they walked us through the warehouse, I was openly gaping at all the latest tech stuff because it was all IN ONE PLACE. My face started to hurt. I had the biggest smile EVER on my adult face. Really ever even going forward. I wanted to own the stuff I was learning thru e-classes and on the sales floor. Selling something is kind of like owning it. You gotta own those specs in a way that makes the customer want to own it. I took great pleasure in seeing my name listed in the top three sales slots when I worked. Working retail technology sales made me part teenager again. Ironically, at the time I was going back to school to become a high school teacher. One night, after closing, they had a video gaming marathon. I met Guitar Hero that night. Wii bowling. And more importantly, that intangible something that comes from being around a whole building full of geekdoms. Bought my first quad core computer that year. Next to nobody actually owned quad cores yet. A young guy said I didn't need one. Jealous. And so it has been since -- knowing how to set up the most complex audio visual receiver and getting it to do what it is supposed to do. Trouble shooting for others doing the same. Simplifying and getting the latest sound bar. Hosting within hours of my first HD television being set up. Networking as part crazy making. Impressed when Windows 8 simplified the whole thing. Letting my teenager surpass me without even trying. Getting her an Apple Computer. Feeling really dumb when I cannot use it. Raised on Microsoft in every workplace. Getting handed a most amazing class to teach. Culture and Mass Media. Permission to stay on top of what is happening. To connect the evolution in social media to the attitudes and interests of teenagers. Referencing things in class, like calling time and temperature and getting all blank stares. Thinking about why we used to need to call time and termperature and why we don't need to do that anymore. GPS and cell phones have us all synced in real time. But we are more late than ever. Go figure.

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  • The Pseudonym or Screen Name

    Screen names, user names, and the truck driver's CB handle. Really, these all are fictitious names one uses instead of their own. The Pseudonym. Sort of like a nick name, I guess. So, what are my pseudonyms and how do they reflect my breaking into the digital age in its many forms? Wii Fan and Zebrapotential are my two common screen names. Both reflect what was going on in my life and the fact that I tapped into the digital realm to ride out those life waves. Major life changes resulted in my becoming a gamer after age 40. Wii Fan. Ditto for leaving my corporate job and putting myself out there as a life coach and consultant online. Zebrapotential. Both screen names have withstood the test of time but Zebrapotential is much more of a conversation starter. How often do you have call center staff actually break away from their script and enter into genuine human conversation? Happens to me often. They want to know about Zebrapotential in my email. And, how to correctly spell potential for the required documentation of my email address. A personable exchange on these phone calls is a good thing. These are calls I dread and that are to address what is not working in the way of purchases or services. If you are curious about my handle, then post up about that and I will follow-up with a reply. Otherwise, let your imagination run with it!

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