Newsletter Archives

  • Continuing trends in computing — and your choices

    BEN’S WORKSHOP

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Let Windows 11 and other major trends be your guide to greater productivity, reliability, and security.

    Computer hardware and software continue their relentless advances — mostly progress, sometimes a hiccup. Paying attention to the various changes in our world of computing can save you time and money — and, after all, time is money. These trends may influence your near-term buying decisions, as our annual two-month Black Friday buying spree morphs into the January White Sale of unsold gear.

    These trends are the distillation of my experience based upon hundreds of computers making a stop in Ben’s Workshop along their way — whether from a factory or an auction house, as a trade-in, or simply for repair — and then into the hands of people using them or off to my convenient e-cycler.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.51.0, 2023-12-18).

  • BitLocker, Windows 11 security, and you

    BEN’S WORKSHOP

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    BitLocker, a major part of a more secure Windows 11, is treated differently by the Windows Out-of-Box Experience (OOBE) setup than by an install and setup using the standard Windows 11 installation image downloaded directly from the Microsoft website.

    This is a significant difference, so let’s explore these two ways to install Windows 11, adding useful background and facts plus analysis of what Microsoft keeps close to the vest. (OOBE is an abbreviation coined by Microsoft.)

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.31.0, 2023-07-31).

  • TrueNAS and Windows together

    HARDWARE DIY

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    TrueNAS is installed, so let’s put it to work in the world of Windows.

    My first article about TrueNAS left everyone on the edges of their seats, excitedly wanting to see how TrueNAS becomes part of a small network to be used as a local repository for our personal information.

    Edge of your seat? Okay, probably not. But it was the best place to split a project article in two. I left you hanging at the TrueNAS Dashboard, the starting point for any and all actions needed to make TrueNAS useful.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.28.0, 2023-07-10).

  • Setting up your own cloud

    HARDWARE DIY

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    I began a pilot project to see what a NAS (Network Attached Storage) computer could do to improve data backup and management here.

    We have the usual collection of flash memory sticks and USB drives — and maybe, just maybe, we are not proactive with saving important information. It makes no sense to pay an annual rental for a Windows server license. There are several Linux distributions built for the specific purpose of hosting a NAS. Each of them, once installed, provides administration through the browser of a computer connected to one’s local area network.

    Sounds easy, doesn’t it?

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.26.0, 2023-06-26).

  • Diagnostics and testing? Get it all done in a flash.

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Bootable USB flash drives are wonderful for doing many different software tasks when working on computers, but year by year they pile up.

    I needed to rid myself of my dependency on the many bootable flash drives I have collected in the last few years, by putting the most frequently used software on a single flash drive.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.23.0, 2023-06-05).

  • Large or small? Old or new? Borrowed and blue?

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Decade-long trends in computer hardware make for more expansive and perplexing choices.

    So you need to buy another computer, or two, or more? What do you buy — large or small, mainstream brand, traditional or custom, new or used?

    Running a cradle-to-grave computer business including the repair and resale of gently used computers, I originally expected to portray the various tradeoffs between buying new and buying used computers. Then I realized that the trends that have swept over the computer industry in the past decade can, and do, have great influence over what to buy. Trends first, new vs. used later.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.14.0, 2023-04-03).

  • Tooling around with laptops and other useful gear

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    ISSUE 20.11 • 2023-03-13

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Portable computers have evolved from the Compaq luggable suitcase to laptops now weighing three pounds or even less, needing special handling and tiny tools.

    Today’s notebook, subnotebook, and tablet computers demand an array of small tools, sometimes unique to a brand and model. My small kit for the road can handle the screws found outside and inside many laptops, but I needed more and better help.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.11.0, 2023-03-13).
    This story also appears in our public Newsletter.

  • Tooling around with computers

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    ISSUE 20.10 • 2023-03-06

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Whether you maintain your own computer, run your family IT department, or manage lots of computers, having the right tools makes the work so much easier.

    No matter which task you need to do, tools are essential — whether a spoon to stir your morning coffee or a hammer to pound a nail. So it is with computers, which need to be taken apart, put back together, cleaned, and sometimes connected to other devices to get the job done.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.10.0, 2023-03-06).
    This story also appears in our public Newsletter.

  • Would you ever run an MS-DOS program in 64-bit Windows?

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Let’s see if we can find good reasons to continue to use a 30-year-old MS-DOS program.

    Recently, a client asked me whether it was possible to run an MS-DOS program important for his business on a modern Windows 10 laptop, rather than his 15-year-old laptop with Windows XP. I asked him for his reasoning and quickly rejected out of hand the possibility of installing a 32-bit version of Windows 10 to run his DOS program, an extremely limited use for a laptop. And with a look to the future, there is no 32-bit Windows 11, either.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.06.0, 2023-02-06).

  • Let your PC start the new year right!

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    ISSUE 20.01 • 2023-01-02

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Taking a little time now to check and proactively service your Windows PC thoroughly can pay off big time in the coming year.

    Whether you’re planning to move to Windows 11 or stick with Windows 10, this easy-to-follow annual checkup is the preventive medicine that can help ensure that your PC begins 2023 in the best shape possible.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (20.01.0, 2023-01-02).

  • Defibrillate your “dead” laptop

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    I confess: I do not have a defibrillator to use on a laptop.

    Beginning with Windows 7, a laptop in sleep mode can become unresponsive and completely inoperative. In the repair business, we call this “dead.” Ultimately, it’s about managing your laptop’s battery.

    On the average, a seemingly dead laptop lands in my hands every couple of months. That is not often enough to be classified as a major problem by Microsoft, but it is still very real.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (19.51.0, 2022-12-19).

  • Does an old personal computer become useless?

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    ISSUE 19.46 • 2022-11-14

    HARDWARE

    Ben Myers

    By Ben Myers

    Come take a ride in my souped-up DeLorean for an adventure in the days before Windows.

    You see an old computer and ask, “Why hasn’t it been scrapped?” But don’t look at just the PC — look at what it does within some total system. That’s what this story is about.

    The ride takes many twists and turns on the path to where we are today. Progress over the last 20-plus years is hard to believe.

    Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (19.46.0, 2022-11-14).
    This story also appears in our public Newsletter.