Windows 7 Multiple Monitor Setup
Power users the world over will know what I mean – you sit in front of your laptop and get frustrated at all the stuff you have to fit into one screen – so, many of us at home or work use multiple-monitor setups, spreading the work over 2 or more screens.
2 screens is easy, any modern computer worth it’s salt will have a second output – you simply plug in a second screen, a little instruction to Windows 7 to spread stuff across the screens and off you go.
But what if you want more than two? You can fit another video card of course and that’s GREAT for the likes of games such as Crysis 2 where you want one screen for the main action and one on either side to keep an eye out for your enemies.. but for regular use there are some disadvantages to this approach.
The first is speed – all that extra pixel-processing power doesn’t come for free and you’re going to need a fairly hefty system to handle the extra load – also having more screens means you generally run more programs and need more memory etc. Finally, you or someone else has to go in there and fit the second card. What if your main card is a top-of-the-line gaming video card… you’re going to need to spend the same again so as to keep up performance.
So, a great simple solution for technical bods, not so much for others.
So what are the alternatives? Well, another way to get lots of screens is to share one keyboard and mouse over two or more PCs. There are hardware switches for this but that soon gets tired when you can’t exchange clipboard between the machines…
Another way and the method I’ve adopted has been to use software to link machines on a network and share the same keyboard and mouse. A freebie called Synergy has done this for years and I wrote about it some 2 years ago. A COPY operation on one machine would let you transport text from one machine to another, but sadly that was about it, no graphics, no files etc – also Synergy, a cross-platform open-source package was great but it frankly crashed with more regularity than one would like – and no-one was doing anything about it. I was told that there’s an update for Synergy and was about to go looking when I thought I’d Google “better than Synergy” and sure enough in some obscure chat group I say a message that said something like “Input Director only works with Windows but is more stable and lets you copy files” – quick as a flash I was over to their website and downloaded the files… well, it generally worked but file copy didn’t – and I got a message griping about my Windows 64 keyboard. In desperation I tried their latest beta and…. BINGO.
Input Director (I’ve used the latest BETA 1.3 on three computers up to now without issue) is free for personal use (you can make a donation by Paypal if you’re so inclined) and sits in my case on my main computer set to MASTER. On my laptop and second PC, the package is also installed, set to Slave. To get from one PC to the other, I simply move the mouse off the edge of one screen and to the next. It appears as if by magic on the slave machine (the term is misleading – the other computer or computers work like normal but your master mouse and keyboard can simply take over as you slide the mouse over to them) – you can determine if your slaves work to the left, right or above or below your main computer and like the master they may or may not have multiple screens.
Where it gets magical is the clipboard. On any of the machines I may grab some text or a partial screenshot – or even copy a file – drag the mouse over to another machine and hey presto – PASTE works. To all intents and purposes you’ve simply added screens to your main PC – but in reality you also have the added power of the extra computers!
For copying partial screens I don’t use the Windows 7 clipboard utility, I’ve always used the (for me superior) free screengrabber MWSnap from Mirec Wojtowicz. I have that installed on all three machines – and it works by hitting CTRL-SHIFT-A (by default) and selecting the screen area you want to copy. I can even direct that to work on one slave – and PASTE the resulting screen-grab to the other slave… it really does work just like magic. It says it works on any 32-bit system but in practice works just as well on 64-bit systems, the only gripe I have it it won’t screen-grab from a second screen (on the same PC). This package works well with the new Input Director and is recommended.
But now I have something new! PicPick works in a similar way to MWSnap, is free for personal use (something like £15 otherwise) AND it works on multiple monitors – so if your main PC has 2 monitors you can grab screen bits from either. Believe me if you do this a lot it’s a pain keep moving windows over to the first screen to copy something. If you install PickPick on multiple machines, you can freely grab materials from any screen and paste into an application in any other screen – absolutely amazing. Just make sure you DON’T tick the first box or you’ll have BING added to your browser! The program even has a decent image editor which will let you annotate images, blur, resize etc. VERY handy.
N
ow, this THIRD item is entirely optional and actually a bit off the point but it works so well I thought I’d put it in here – I often have the need to type the same things over an over or repeat a sequence of keyboard or mouse actions. Microsoft WORD used to let you do some of this but since the latest version it’s far from easy to use. A great and again free-to-use option is PhraseExpress. This allows you to easily paste in any combination of keystrokes into any of your applications or indeed control Windows itself from the right-tray on your desktop. This is is a seriously good piece of software and works a treat.
Between the various tools I’ve described above, you can put together your PC and laptop or older PCs to great effect and enhance productivity while having a bit of fun. None of the above need a brain surgeon to install and up to now appear to work utterly reliably. If installing these programs burns your computer to the ground, I take no responsibility.
Someday when I’m rich and famous, instead of a hodge-podge of monitors of different sizes (which work perfectly well but don’t look like they’re on a NASA set), I’m having a set of 22”. For now I can dream..
Hollyberry Cottage – Holidays in Northumberland
I have to say, I’m quite pleased with this site.. between the HDR photography and the overall look of it, I think this is one of our better efforts of late. Hollyberry Cottage is based in Bellingham in Northumberland and offers unbelievably good value holiday rental…
But why repeat myself, it’s all on the Hollyberry Cottage website.. enjoy.
The Apple iPAD in Business
I invite you to look at this recent article in Personal Computer World, a magazine I used to respect back in the old days but which now seems to have gone very lightweight…
http://www.pcw.co.uk/v3/analysis/2264659/apple-ipad-business-device
Take a look at the article above in which they discuss the iPad as a business tool… and then come back here. I’d have commented on the site but there is no area for comments amazingly… how can anyone get things so wrong?
" does not play well with much existing enterprise IT infrastructure, although it can link to an Exchange mail server via a VPN."
Rubbish – I can access Exchange in the normal way just as with any PC or smartphone – I have full access to email, contacts, calendar and tasks with no VPN whatsoever. You do need a separate app to get NOTES but as that’s only a couple of quid…you can also get an app to Sync ONENOTE.
"This requires each iPad user to download and install applications themselves, rather than being provisioned and configured by the IT department, as is standard practice with other platforms such as Windows PCs or even many smartphones."
Anyone who can’t install apps on the iPad or iPhone doesn’t deserve to own one – it’s a one-finger button-press and password entry – THAT’s IT. Upgrades are similarly trivial – you press one button to get all upgrades automatically with no user input.
" Moreover, the only way to purchase applications from the App Store is via an iTunes account, whereas most organisations prefer to negotiate a volume licence agreement directly with the software publisher."
For heaven’s sake – the apps cost 59p for the most useful which is "Goodreader" – hardly any apps cost more than a few pounds. It’s not worth the effort.
" Perhaps more serious from a business perspective is that it is difficult to get files in and out of the iPad other than via email or by synchronising with iTunes on a PC or Mac."
Absolute rubbish. Goodreader and other apps allow you to input files fia FTP, straight from the PC, via an internal webserver, via BOX.NET, Google Docs and other means. It is simple to import WORD, PDF, EXCEL and other documents.
" This means that users can pull down documents from enterprise collaboration portals such as Microsoft’s SharePoint, which is rapidly becoming almost ubiquitous in large organisations, provided they have installed a tool such as Apple’s iWork suite for the iPad that supports these files."
You most certainly do not need iWORK suite to access Sharepoint – you can do it with the web browser or with Goodreader.
" The iPad does not provide any way for users to access files on the device other than through the application they are associated with."
Rubbish – Goodreader and others allow cross-application transfer of files.
" We purchased and downloaded Pages, and were pleasantly surprised by how usable it was as a basic word processor, although using the touch-screen instead of a mouse to highlight and select text did not work the way we expected and took some getting used to."
Having never used a MAC before it took me all of 30 seconds to figure out how to use PAGES.
" Another potential concern for enterprises is the Safari browser. Although this offers a good browsing experience on the web in general, it may not be compatible with some web-based enterprise applications. For example, we were unable to access V3.co.uk’s web content management system using Safari."
AT LAST, a valid point. Given the popularity of iPhone and now iPAD surely the answer to that is to talk to V3
iPAD is available in the UK
You’ll be aware of the UK launch of the Apple iPAD TODAY, no doubt if you saw the news last night you’ll have heard that the unit is available from today and that they’ve sold a million in the states.
Poor old Beeb, that’s ancient news and a quick look on the web will add at least 50% to that figure! Also they won’t have enough units to keep up with demand so expect delays! If you’re planning a trip to the Apple store I’d ring first! There are 6 models broken into two sets, the first set of 16gig, 32 gig and 64 gig have WIFI and motion sensing only, the second similar set add 3g and GPS into the mix – and of course the cost rises accordingly. Prices will start at £429 (including VAT) for the perfectly capable 16Gig WIFI model.
Meanwhile the iTunes store is up and running, I have had the American version of the iPad since it’s launch over there and everything’s working a treat. If you want to keep up with the latest apps I suggest you take a look at AppShopper, a nicely laid out website that’s easy to use. It has both iPhone and iPad apps and you can select both or just iPad apps.
Apple’s PAGES Word Processor is now available (as of a few days ago) and you’ll be needing that if you want to do any word-processing on the unit.
If you’re thinking of taking the plunge, remember, this isn’t a laptop, it won’t run Microsoft software! It runs only what you can get in the iTunes App store – but as they have countless thousands of Apps in there, some free, some a few pounds, you should find just about anything you need.
Some pros and cons for those of you looking at this miraculous unit for the first time:
The iPad+ Apps CAN:
- View pictures, videos and play tunes
- Read Word, Excel, PDF and many more document formats.
- Read and write Emails.
- Play games (but only the countless games in the App Store).
- Talk to Bluetooth headsets and keyboards out-of-the-box.
- View YouTube video
- View the BBC iPlayer (new and VERY good quality !!)
- Handle TV (tvcatchup) and radio (tunein radio)
- Run Skype
- Provide weather reports (the weather channel)
- Search maps (google maps)
- Control your Sky+ box (Sky+)
- Share 3g/WIFI with many phones (Joikuspot on phone)
- Record audio
- Handle social networks (many Apps)
- Run for up to 10 hours without mains power
- Emulate iPod
The iPad CAN’T:
- Let you access all it’s memory like a disk. Memory is split up into application spaces and of course the place you store your videos, pictures and music. I’ve found no way to “see” this as a single disk drive.
- Run Microsoft software. It is not a laptop.
- Handle USB disks and cameras directly.
- Run FLASH video (though YouTube and iPhone are supported – see CAN).
- Run WiFi super-reliably (sure it runs WIFI but it breaks occasionally – soon to be fixed)
- Share WIFI with your iPhone (deliberate and stupid move)
- Take pictures or video (no camera)
I hope this information helps you make a decision. Am I happy I bought an iPad? Most definitely YES. Would I pay the extra for the 3G version? No. Am I happy with 32Gig? Can’t even start to fill it up so the base model will do for many people. Music and video lovers with massive collections may opt for the larger models.
Peter Scargill
To order these units online I BELIEVE you go here http://store.apple.com/uk
p.s. If you want to know more about using the iPad, for example with a 3G dongle – see my other articles….
Comparing Android and the iPhone/iPad operating system
Using the iPad with a separate 3G source like an iPhone, MS Smartphone or dongle SIM
3G for iPAD
So you’re an Apple enthusiast, you probably already have an iPhone – and now you’re considering the iPAD – but which version? Do you go for the WIFI only or get the 3G version and land yourself with ANOTHER contract?
Well, there may be another way. As it happens I have a Vodafone 3G dongle allowing (fair use) unlimited access to 3G signals to supply broadband to the laptop.
That won’t work, I hear you say, it’s a USB dongle and the iPAD won’t handle a USB dongle! True, but, as I found out this morning, the SIM in the Vodafone dongle works in a phone – at least, for data anyway. I just happen to have a Nokia e65, but any old phone with WIFI will do… head on over to Joiku where they have software for most phones to turn the phone into a WIFI access point. You run the software, it makes the call – and supplies a WIFI signal for your laptop. Which means of course – your iPAD. I’ve yet to try using this to provide a signal for the iPHONE so that I can use SKYPE (which refuses to work on 3G or even 3G with a VPN) – but that’s because I went out to do my testing with a flat phone battery and just managed to knock off a couple of emails to prove that it all works.
More on the SKYPE episode later but if you can lay your hands on a suitable phone, the only downside to using this as against the dongle – is that you end up with something else to keep charged… but rather than adding another contract that surely has to be a worthwhile compromise?
Peter Scargill
How will you get WIFI for your iPAD?
With the launch of the iPAD just around the corner in the UK, you might think that there are plenty of WIFI access points to use it with, bearing in mind that the basic unit will NOT allow tethering to your iPhone…..
Well, that’s a worry because the government is doing it’s best to screw up WIFI access in the UK
On the other hand there are signs of common sense when it comes to the IMPLEMENTATION of the Digital Economy Bill (DEB) – but only very thin on the ground at the moment..
Of interest, what of those who buy one of those 3G access points, I refer to the likes of the Solwise 3GWIFIMRW wall server unit. You plug in your 3G dongle and it serves up IP addresses you can use yourself or share with others for a small meeting. Technically that makes you an ISP!!! When the iPAD takes off you can be sure that gadgets like this and the even simpler ones offered by others will take off – or will they – it all depends on how the press plays the DEB.
Virus – or Viral?
I recently received an email addressed to myself and half of the western world. It began “URGENT!!! PLEASE CIRCULATE to your friends…..” before going on to describe an attachment which would “burn the whole hard disk C of your computer”.
It’s not the first time of course and it won’t be the last time – I’m sure many of you have had these. Nine times out of 10 they turn out to be rubbish and this was no exception. http://www.hoax-slayer.com/black-in-white-house-virus-hoax.shtml
That in itself is not a problem – that’s why we have DELETE keys. Where the PROBLEM lies is this… in sending to countless people in the TO: field, you ensure that each of those people now has the email address of all the others. MORE’S THE POINT, any of those people might have a trojan on their computers, harvesting email addresses – after all, you have no control over the anti-virus or lack of it on their computers! If any ONE of them has such a problem – you’re now on a LIST somewhere.
The solution is simple… in the case of those sending out such messages – having been THEMSELVES the recipient of said message – CHECK before you send the message out – go to GOOGLE and key in the main phrase, perhaps it’s a hoax. If, after all that you still want to enlighten your friends, send a copy to YOURSELF and BLIND-CC everyone else – i.e. BCC field. All email programs have this. That way, the recipients DO NOT get a copy of everyone else’s email – and you don’t risk being very unpopular as the person who’s action put them on a mailing list!
Simples!
The Digital Economy Bill
The bill is an attempt by the government to crack down on internet copyright infringement, not a bad idea in itself, but as usual with this government, it is the implementation that’s totally messed up. By attempting to place the burden on the provider, the bill, which went through the house of Lords this week and looks set to fly unless someone DOES something, is likely to affect, Internet Cafe, Hotels, service providers, trains and the PUBLIC.
Anyone offering WIFI access – how about the COUNTLESS FON USERS !!???!!
The bill could also affect any small business that allows for home working… the list goes on and on and on… apart from anything else, why on EARTH should any hotel, faced with the possibility of having to police the use of their WIFI – which is WAY beyond the technical or managerial skills of your average hotel, why should they BOTHER to continue to offer free WIFI.
We’re still living in the DARK ages in the UK and this bill is about to make it a LOT WORSE. What about the free WIFI on TRAINS??!!??
If ever there was an example of the government trying to turn us all into willing participants in a POLICE STATE you are now looking at it!!!
You may find these links useful…
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/apr/08/internet-piracy-bill
http://www.fsb.org.uk/policy/assets/0310%20digital%20economy%20bill%20briefing.pdf
http://www.openrightsgroup.org/
http://computingblogs.typepad.com/peter_scargill/
and to gripe to your MP
A Trip to 10 Downing Street
It all began with a cordial invite from the Prime Minister to a select group to attend a reception at 10 Downing Street to “Celebrate the Success of Small Business”. Everyone had a personal invite and we individually had to RSVP directly to number 10.
Arriving at the scene by taxi last night I wasn’t really sure what to expect but I can confirm that they’ve converted Downing Street into something like a prison camp, a sad reflection of our times – you simply can’t get into the street AT ALL without the full metal detector bit. To be fair the police were very friendly with it all and this didn’t really detract from the experience..
After passing security we walked up to number 10 which in itself is quite an experience and from there on it got a lot easier and civilised. We were welcomed inside and asked to leave coats and mobile phones at reception. The place is a lot bigger than I imagined and there is a large entrance-way with lots of racks for coats etc. Everything is well-lit. Having been relieved of our weapons of mass destruction it was each man for himself. Past reception is a large staircase and all the way up are images of past prime ministers – very impressive. I took my time to enjoy the moment. Once upstairs we were greeted not with champagne but simply a choice of red of white wine and very nice too! We were free to wander about the place, I don’t think anyone got to to see the cabinet room which is apparently in the basement (good idea thinking about it) but the place is pretty impressive non-the-less. The inside of 10 Downing Street is suitably impressive.
As colleagues arrived the wine flowed very nicely. Various well known faces appeared including “Sir” Alan Michael Sugar. Next up was Lord Mandleson who proceeded to apologise for Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s absence as he was off on important business and who then gave us a very polished speech about the importance of small business.
As the speech rolled out, those present for the most part stood politely in their lounge suits and merely listened… but looking at their faces one could see that most of us will be happier when there is a change of government, none of which detracts from the excellent experience of actually BEING THERE and of course that was the whole point. I’m sure Lord Mandleson didn’t really believe business representatives would let him off lightly!
Within half an hour or less the speech was over and everyone was pretty much free to network or simply drink more and enjoy the view. I was having a nice chat with one of my fellow FSB directors when a microphone appeared out of no-where.. For the life of me I can’t remember which newspaper or radio station it was but the reporter went through a whole list of questions about how we felt about government, banking, you name it, clearly he was onto a goldmine with the two of us as we were taking turns at the microphone for well over 15 minutes – a MOST enjoyable way to round off the evening.
Several glasses of wine and umpteen nibbles later, though not under any pressure to exit the premises, a small group of us decided it was time to take our leave and wandered back down the excellent stairway and out of the door to be greeted by the official photographer – results you see at the top.
iPhone – or i….THING? – by Peter Scargill
Having had the iPhone 3GS for some weeks now, it is well past my normal “novelty-wearing-off time” in which the greatest NEW thing normally becomes somehow… normal – and yet I still feel that somehow life has changed irrevocably in a small but worthwhile way.
The problem is in the title “iPhone”. In reality these devices have been so much more than phones for some time. I’ve been using Microsoft smartphones for some years and recently there have been times when I’ve left the laptop back at the office and relied on the mobile for email. This works only so well because of the limited keyboards but it sure beats carrying a huge laptop around. The MS phones are also ok for the odd game of backgammon on the train and the addition of WIFI makes them handy for receiving RSS news – ie BBC news etc. But that’s about it. They soon become out of date and Orange don’t exactly fall over themselves to encourage updates.
Exit MS phones, enter the iPhone. Their real innovation is the APP store on the phone, not that horrible iTunes program on the PC. Not only can you idle the hours away looking for new APPS but you’re informed automatically of any updates to existing APPS which then come in pretty much without any attention (preferably on WIFI but I’ve updated a few over 3G without problems). So what is actually happening here is that your “phone” is evolving on an almost daily basis without being connected to any PC.. and that’s part of what keeps up the interest.
Every couple of days I see something new, some new idea that might never have occurred to me – or some gripe I have with an existing app simply goes away due to constant improvement. Who would have thought you could use a phone to monitor sleep patterns or to identify stars or point to restaurants using the camera or remote control your media centre or measure distance or go shopping… the list is never-ending and continually growing.
I have over 120 APPS on my 16G iPhone and the biggest of the lot is TOMTOM which covers all of Europe – yet looking at the graph below as you can see, I’ve used only a small part of available memory, under 3GB out of 16GB on APPS.
I can see where it might be worth getting the 32GB version if you really want to carry around a bunch of videos and thousands of tunes as well. Personally I’m happy with access to thousands of radio stations and my entire music collection back home as long as I have a 3G connection…. yes, a decent 3G connection is perfectly adequate for streaming music to the device.
And that’s really what this is… it’s an “iDevice”, no longer a simple phone but a portable entertainment system. Does this make it any less valid as a business tool? Hell no, email handling is superb, I have multiple email accounts in there along with the ability to read business documents (WORD and PDF as examples) with ease – within the limitations of the screen size of course. The copy and paste ideas implemented by Apple are superb and until you’ve seen them in action along with the associated magnifying glass, it’s hard to describe other than to say they are completely intuitive and need no training to use unless you’re very, very slow.
Let me say that the phone itself is NOT perfect… the battery life is ATTROCIOUS, fortunately there’s a way around that and so my phone is permanently carried around in a MILI sleeve which fits snuggly over the phone and includes a battery, taking the combination to well over 24 hours operation and removing the need to use the ridiculously complicated Apple connector in favour of a bog-standard mini-USB socket. Thankfully the iPhone power supply is one of those mains plugs with a USB connector on the bottom so it’s just a case of ditching the Apple lead (curiously white even though I bought a black iPhone) and replacing it with a usb lead.
From serious business using multiple email accounts including MS Exchange (which the iPhone handles flawlessly including email, contacts, notes and the all-important calendar) through novelty business applications to full-on gaming this is in my mind currently the best option for a mobile device – loving every minute of it.
Anyone for GOLF?