28 December, 2020

Pointers for Online Selling, e-Commerce

I found some points for online selling, or e-commerce, in my wallet. That was when I had to change to a new wallet that I got as a gift from my daughters this Christmas 2020. So without further ado, here goes:

1. Sell what people really want. Use Analytics to research on this.

2. Don't give people reasons to choose; give them reasons to crave, covet, and to belong. Wow! I find this really heavy. I remember the very advertisement methodology used by big brands like Coke - subliminal. I should learn more from them.

3. Show what people can do with your products. So the point here is that when you sell something that is aligned with your own interests and skills, know-how, then you can answer enquiries and questions from buyers with ease and accuracy. Plus point for you!

4. Price isn't always the driving force.

5. Sell what works for everyone, or most people.

6. Sell what enables people to do more, or better.

7. Gain heart-share first, money-share next.

8. Focus on what makes customers' lives better!

9. Don't copy; be who you are. When you start, I think you do this, but as you go along, you copy and make adjustments. So don't be surprised when somebody copies your listings, styles, etc. Duh!

10. Don't be a cheap imitation. Be yourself and bring meaning to people as you are.

There you have it. Not what would make a newbie an expert right away, but knowing these would be a good starting point for anyone who is thinking of doing online selling. I have been into online selling for 6 years now and I can attest to all these points here.

Hope it helps you, too.

Till then!

28 November, 2020

How to Speed Up Windows, Startup and Shutdown

To speed up Windows, its startup and shutdown time, follow the simple steps below. Especially if you are using HDD, turning off file indexing will be most effective. But even when using SSD, turning file indexing off will have its benefit. There is a better tool than using Cortana, and once you start using it, you'd be scratching your head.


1. Remove File Index Per Drive; use Everything Search for search functions

a. Right-click on Drive, Properties, Uncheck File Index

b. Install Everything Search ( http://www.voidtools.com/ )


2. Shorten Registry Time Values (all settings of String type)

a. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control

i. Set WaitToKillServiceTimeout value to 8000

b. For current User, HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\Desktop

i. Set WaitToKillAppTimeout value to 8000

ii. Set AutoEndTasks value to 1

iii. Set HungAppTimeout value to 7000 (if not present, def is 5000)

c. To set for all Users, set these values in

i. HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\Desktop

ii. Set WaitToKillAppTimeout value to 8000

iii. Set AutoEndTasks value to 1

iv. Set HungAppTimeout value to 7000 (if not present, def is 5000)


These millisecond time values are recommended, but you can choose your own shorter or longer times. It's all up to you.

So there you have it! Without adding anything fancy or buying any expensive device or paying for some software licenses, you can have a faster Windows, faster startup, and faster shutdown. And honestly, Cortana pales in comparison to the capability and speed of (Search) Everything -- which is free. I'm using this even in Windows Server machines where millions of files are deposited and searched on a daily basis. How about that?

Till then!

14 November, 2020

Huawei Mate 30 Pro with Google Play Store - 6 Months Later

14-Nov-2020

I managed to install Google Play in my Huawei Mate 30 Pro back in April 2020. I have nothing to say against the phone itself. Speed, features, SD Card capacity, RAM size, name it and this phone has it. And here's the killer feature that I like very much: the camera!

Focusing speed, brilliance, night time shots, crispiness of the photos, are but a few of the camera features that you will immediately see and feel. Call quality, cell, and Wi-Fi connection, these are its basic features that never fail.

But here's the deal-breaker.

A lot of financial apps, bank apps, and insurance apps, and those that require integration with government services, well, these and more are usually tied up to Google accounts. And while I was able to install the Google Play application back then, enrol my (many, many) accounts including Google Mail, Google Maps, etc., the prevailing prohibition imposed by then-President Trump against Huawei and Huawei products, which includes the unlicensing of Google Play on Huawei Android devices makes Google Play working intermittently on my phone.

Nothing lasts forever -- even a hack on how to install Google Play on Huawei Mate 30 Pro.

And I had to wait 6 months until I threw in the white towel.

So now I went back to my Huawei Mate 20 X phone. It's heavy, but the weight is a small burden to bear compared to a lot of essential apps not working. That really is a deal-breaker for me.A show stopper. I'm not able to do payments and money transfers, enquiries, check on my tax payments and provident fund contributions, etc., etc. And that is a lot of reasons for me to let go of my Huawei Mate 30 Pro phone.

Nonetheless, now that Job Biden has won the US presidential race if the Google Play prohibition gets lifted, I sure would not think twice of going back to my Huawei Mate 30 Pro phone. I would have all the best of both worlds, being able to install Google Play on Huawei Mate 30 Pro.

Till then!

18 May, 2020

Upgrade to Ubuntu Linux 20.04 from 18.04 or 19.04

15-May-2020

Ubuntu 20.04 is out. "How do I upgrade to Ubuntu 20.04?", was something I asked myself, as it was for years back, when an LTS version is released. And sometimes, on curiosity, non-LTS versions.

And for the past 2 weeks, I've been doing that upgrade.

I have several laptops, and they are running either Ubuntu 18.04 or Ubuntu 19.04. So normally, it is through Software Updater. In some cases, it is through the terminal. This time, as it is a Long Term Support release, I insisted on applying the upgrade through Software Updater.

I have varied experiences on the update, and I'm putting them down in this article, as it might also happen to others. Well, most are not so good, to say prematurely. But no, I did not give up on Ubuntu Linux.

Case 1. Upgrade via Software Updater

So I checked for any available update. In the month of April 2020, normally, the upgrade is already available immediately. But for Ubuntu 20.04, it was not. I had to wait until May 2020, then the upgrade was showing up via Software Updater.

I applied the change, and there are different results.

One laptop was able to complete the upgrade without any problem, but on reboot, Ubuntu 20.04 is corrupted.

Another newer laptop, while in the process of applying the upgrade to Ubuntu 20.04 suddenly went to black screen. Sure, the laptop is still powered on, but I cannot bring up the screen anymore. So I did a forced power off by pressing power key for at least 5 seconds. I tried now to apply the upgrade via Live CD.

I am on dual boot, and at this time, I am still able to boot up Windows, either by forcibly selecting Windows via boot option, or that the laptop automatically boots up to Windows .

Now, for this particular unit, the newer laptop, I had many times of trying to apply the upgrade via Live CD: apply the changes over the existing partitions without formatting, which again, after upgrade, unable to reboot. Well, at least this time, the upgrade process completed. But to no use. I can't boot to Ubuntu.

And, sadly, I am no longer able to boot even to Windows. The Windows partition is still there, but I can't boot to it anymore. I did recovery, bootrec, etc., all that I know that will help, but no point.

So I had to do a full wipe of the disc, clearing out both Windows and Ubuntu partitions.

Then I installed Windows 10 64 bit, checked and applied all updates, and powered off the laptop. I then proceeded to do a new Ubuntu Linux 20.04 installation. It went through. I completed the basic setup. Then powered off. It booted to Windows. So I had to insert the Live CD and run Grub Customizer, and fix up the boot process.

Well and good, I am able to see grub. I booted to Ubuntu, and fixed up the configuration, and after rebooting again to Ubuntu, I powered off, then booted to Windows. I repeated the reboot to U, reboot to W, and after confirming that everything is working and in place, I installed the rest of the software and applications both in Windows and Ubuntu, and I am done for this laptop.

Well, this was the most problematic unit which resulted in me doing a clean wipe of both Windows and Ubuntu, but it is worth the effort, and I gained a whole new experience (again). That could be rhetoric, as this is a new experience. Any Linux player would say that this is a 'normal' thing, not a 'new normal' actually.

Anyway, here is me chronicling my experience on how to upgrade to Ubuntu Linux 20.04, from either Ubuntu 18.04 or Ubuntu 19.04.

Till then!

27 April, 2020

Install Google Apps, Google Play Store in Huawei Mate 30 Pro, P40

How to install Google Apps, Play Store in Huawei Mate 30 Pro, P40?


The specs of a Huawei phone is almost always super compared to other brands that can be got at the same price, or within the price range, Huawei offers a phone whose specs are superior to the others, but at a lower cost. Especially the camera.

And with the Trump administration putting a ban on Huawei devices the license to use Google services, which was around May 2019, so that any new device coming out of the factory is deprived of Google Apps, you are down to a Google-less phone, smart watch, etc. Can you live with that?

Well, there are ways to get apps, but they will not be coming from the Play Store. There is of course, the HMS, Huawei Mobile Services, along with their AppGallery, which is having more and more new apps every day. There is also F-Droid, AppToide, ApkPure, and if there is any more, do let me know.

The caveat? Always make sure that the apk files you are downloading are legits. Why, even in Google Play Store, there are lousy, shady apps. Which brings into contrast Play Store and App Store. But that's another story. Wherever your source, just make sure your app is legit.

About 10 days ago, my time to renew my phone plan is up, and I was vascillating between 3 models: the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, the Oppo Reno 10X Zoom 12GB Special Edition, and the Huawei Mate 30 Pro. Of course, as mentioned before, Huawei is always the top when it comes to the specs, but I have to say, Galaxy Note 10+ is the best screen resolution. What made me zero in on these models is or course, the cash out, which is at the least, $0, or at most, $18. Yep, the mobile plan I was in gave me that opportunity to get a new phone without spending anything, or a minimum amount, if any.

By the time I am able to decide, Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ has run out of stock. I guess everybody avoided the Huawei phones, Mate 30 and P40 series, which are up for grabs. So it was a choice between the Oppo Reno 10X Zoom and the Huawei Mate 30 Pro units.

I picked Huawei Mate 30 Pro. Perhaps as part of my curious nature.

Part of the prevailing knowledge on how to get your old phone's apps installed into your new Huawei phone is by using Phone Close, which is installed by default in all Huawei phones, but which can also be downloaded from the Google Play Store, or from the Huawei AppGallery. All yo have to do is run Phone Close, identify the old and new phones, and go. Everything is transferred!

But not really.

That what I did. I run phone clone between my Huawei Mate 20X and Huawei Mate 10 Pro, and everything was migrated without any problem at all. I gave away my Mate 20X phone to my youngest daughter so she has a large screen phone (compared to the Mate 10 Pro display size). And when Phone Clone did its work, transferring from Huawei Mate 10 Pro to Huawei Mate 30 Pro, not everything was transferred. Of course, that is expected. financial apps, and the likes, are disqualified by default. Then there is the Google apps set, including GMS (Google Mobile Services), GMF (Google Mobile Framework), GAM (Google Account Manager), Google Play Services, Google Play Store, etc., etc., etc.

Actually, even if all apps gets transferred to the new Huawei phone, they will not run -- because they will be looking for Google Mobile Services, or Google Play Store. And as mentioned earlier, a lot of these apps already have their counterpart version available from Huawei AppGallery, or ApkPure. Just uninstall the useless and non-working app version and install the Huawei compatible version, and you're all set.

I spent a week living life and adjusting to the use of a Google-less Android phone that is a very good hardware. I guess all Huawei phone users can say the same. I missed a lot of things. Like so many ads from almost all apps, primarily! 

Wonders! And I am always wondering, if Huawei lost something, what is the financial implication to Google, and all the many, many other hundreds of companies that P. Trump directed to cut business deals with Huawei? I'm sure they simply followed the presidential decree. Did they have a choice at all?

So I am not getting a ton of ads, and I was forced to remember my passwords! Hah! Good way to exercise the brain! I have to log in via the borwser and need to type in my passwords, and I have to say I did enjoy that.

I thought I was just okay with this set up. But I wasn't.

My Whatsapp chats can't be backed up to my Google Drive. And while Huawei have a copy of my contacts and all, there's a ton of missing features that Google made it wasy for Android device users to get on with. But really, Huawei's camera features are awesome!

So after about a week, I searched the web on how to install Google Apps, Google Play Store in my Huawei Mate 30 Pro phone. I got a ton of results, all saying that it is possible, but a caveat: Google does not license the device to use their services.

I'm on my own.

And just like doing roots on my Samsung and Acer phones, I proceeded with caution: read very well, and watch the videos many times (which I really didn't do). I skipped talks here and there, but repeated the videos a number of times.

Then I did it!

I reset my phone, followed the instructions, and did I get Google Mobile Services and Google Play Services and Play Store installed? Yes, I did. Error notifications? Yes, expected. I get them. a ton. Many more than the ads themselves. But I can live with that. At least the services I need to get me going I now have in my new Huawei Mate 30 Pro. And the steps also apply to the Huawei P40 phones.

Curious?

Here are the 3 videos that I watched and followed. Of course, the risk is all yours, it's your call. I don't recommend you doing it, but if you find that you can't live your life without Google, there's a way around it.


Again, should you decide to go this way, it is your call, your choice. May the force be with you. May you get to install Google Apps, Google Mobile Services, Google Mobile Framework, Google Play Store in your new Huawei Mate 30 and Huawei P40 phones, and all your other apps as well.

Till then!

13 April, 2020

DISM in Action: Windows Update Error Code 0x80096004

I got Windows Update Error Code 0x80096004 when I run update. That was KB4541335.

It happened about a week ago or so. I usually would manually check for updates, Windows updates, laptop updates, driver updates, etc. At times, I would get hardware updates, at times, software updates, like MonoSnap, or visual Studio Community Edition 2019, or Visual Studio Code. Sometimes it would be an update for Notepad++, which comes very infrequently. And sometimes, it is for the laptop components, coming either from HP Assistant, Acer Live Updater, the Lenovo System Update, and sometimes from IDSA, Intel Driver and Support Assistant.

I have used many laptop brands, and it is the keyboard performance of the Dell laptop that I like best. As for the layout, I like HP islandwide keyboard the most. Nothing compares. And its performance is satisfactory. The layout is okay, unlike other brands where the [CTRL] and [Fn] keys are interchanged. What are they thinking? And my dislike of the Acer F 15 power button put together with the numeric keypad keys, just next to the [End] key, well, for a software developer like me who uses that key a lot, I think that is just counter-productive. There is so much space on the keyboard surface that can be of use. Well, that's my own opinion, anyway.

Now, about the Windows Update KB4541335. I saw it when I checked for updates, so I run it. It failed.

I restarted the laptop, and attempted again the update, which again failed a second time.

I again restarted the laptop, and for the third time, run the Windows Update KB4541335. It failed again. For what reason, I do not know.

So I restarted the laptop, and knowing a thing or two about corrupted system files, and for this specific case, failed Windows Updates due to windows update corrupted files, I decided to right away perform DISM checks.

I run all 3:
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /ScanHealth
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth

Some system file corruption was found, and it was corrected in no time. And searching in the web for Windows Update Error Code 0x80096004 pointed to one solution, which is manually installing the update. And it can be downloaded from the Microsoft Update Catalog where you just type the KB number.

Having run DISM checks and with the system file corruption fixed, with the KB4541335 update file downloaded for my Windows version, I proceeded with the update, and voila! Update applied.

So here is me saying again that much of the Windows problems, including updates, can be fixed using DISM, SFC and Chkdsk utilities.

Hope this short article helps you, as it did me.

Till then!

20 March, 2020

DISM online health check

DISM. Chkdsk. SFC. In my work of maintaining computers, I would sometimes come across computers, mostly laptops, that seem to have their Windows not behaving right, or that their Windows Update utility don’t get things right.

I would usually try many times, check a few more things here and there, and one of the checks I do, or the utilities I run, aside from chkdsk and sfc is DISM.

I will dive right in.

DISM has 3 options, which I run in sequence:
1. CheckHealth
2. ScanHealth
3. RestoreHealth

Cmd Window

By the way, the DISM commands are run via the cmd window, or the command prompt, that small text-based normally black background window that is invoked by pressing the Windows key, then typing cmd right away, and it shows in the search bar, which you open with a combination of CTRL + SHIFT + ENTER keys so it opens in elevated mode, having Administrator privilege.

The other way is by clicking on Start, looking for Command Prompt, doing a right-click on your mouse, then selecting Run as administrator. If you don’t see it, then you search for it, then do the right-click thingy, then choose Run as administrator. That is why I save myself the trouble by going the first method of pressing the Windows key, typing cmd, then doing a CTRL-SHIFT-ENTER.

Let’s proceed with DISM commands now.

CheckHealth

The command is DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth. Type it at the command prompt then press Enter.

You will be notified if there is any data corruption that the utility finds. You then proceed to the next steps.

ScanHealth

At the command prompt, you type DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /ScanHealth and press Enter. The check runs for a short while in most cases, showing the image version and the progress of the check being done. Once done, you will be notified of corruptions, if any, that the utility finds.

RestoreHealth

Finally, you do a DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth, and this is what will attempt to fix any errors that CheckHealth and ScanHealth may have found.

Type DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth at the command prompt, press Enter, and you will see the image version and the counter indicating the progress of the operation, and when it finishes, the fixes done, if any.

It doesn’t get much harder than that, supposedly.

DISM. Chkdsk. SFC. These are simple but helpful Windows utilities that I use every now and then, and they help a lot. Hope you find them useful, too!

Till then.


For more info, you can look here:
How to use DISM command tool to repair Windows 10 image

16 March, 2020

Ultimate Power Plan in Windows 10


Windows 10 Ultimate Power Plan.

I came across a few articles in the web about this new feature when Windows Update 1909 was released. I became curious, as I continue to explore new ways to speed up laptop and desktop performance, even after a massive upgrade to SSD was carried out in the company where I work in.

And it was easy.

Just open up a command prompt with Administrative privilege, or what others would call an elevated user privilege, and type in below, and hit enter.

powercfg -duplicatescheme e9a42b02-d5df-448d-aa00-03f14749eb61

If you have Control Panel opened up at Power Options, you need to close it first.

When you open up Power Options after this, you would see Ultimate Performance as a new option in the list of power plans. So if Power Options was open when this command is executed, close it, then open it again. That's when you will see it.

Right after the plan was selected, my laptop's screen brightness was set to maximum. I have to quickly turn it down.

Adjust and tweak to your liking, and you are set to experience the Ultimate Performance power plan.

Till then!

13 March, 2020

How To Get The Value of Textarea Using jQuery, Javascript, Set Maxlength, Width, Height

Textarea Get Value using jQuery or Javascript, Set Char Limit, Set Width and Height


Last week I needed to use a textarea instead of a textbox, or an input control. Very simple indeed to change the html control type, then the problem of capturing the value arose.

Thankfully, there are many forums or articles in the web that addresses exactly this question.

As an aside, we include the setting of width and height, and the maximum number of chars typed in.

Say for example, you have this basic definition:

"<"textarea id="usercomment" name="usercomment" rows="15" cols="100" wrap="soft" maxlength="200" style="overflow: hidden; resize: none; font-family: 'Segoe UI'">""<"/textarea">"

N.B.: Make sure you use id tag, and not just name tag. If you forget the id tag, and you don't get the value, check your definition again. There must be the id tag. And do take note that the double-quote chars  enclosing the opening and closing tags "<" and ">" should not be there at all.

This will create a textarea in your page that is 15px x 100px, and it will accept only until up to 200 chars. Continue typing and it will stop accepting input. If you test the limit by copying and pasting a char set more than 200, only up until the 200th char is shown. Want to test it, go ahead by all means!

Now, to get the value, I basically use jQuery. Here's how it is done:

var userinput = $("#usercomment").val();

If you want to trim the input, this is how it's done:

var userinput = $.trim($("#usercomment").val());

Sometimes you will see examples like this; they also work:

var userinput = $.trim($("textarea#usercomment").val());

Or sometimes, when the rows are created dynamically, as when the rows are created from a dB result set:

var userinput = $('#usercomment').val(); 
/* single quote instead of double quote */

Sometimes you will see some examples or answers in forums, as below:

var userinput = $("#usercomment").value();
/* this will be undefined */

var userinput = $("#usercomment").text();
/* this will give you a '' (empty) value */

Sometimes, the width and height is defined in the css style section this way:

textarea {  width: 200px;  height: 15px;}

This will be most useful when you have many textarea controls in your page.

Now, to get the value using plain vanilla javascript, it is done this way:

var userinput = document.getElementById("usercomment").value;

So there you have it! Now you know:

Textarea Get Value using jQuery or Javascript, Set Char Limit, Set Width and Height

Hopefully this short explanation is of use to you today.


Till then!

09 March, 2020

Why contactless payment is safer than swiping credit cards when you're travelling

Thanks to “contactless” payment systems, there’s a revolutionary change going on in how credit cards are used. And the technology is a huge improvement for overseas travellers. But what is contactless technology and why is it good for travel? Read on.

KEEP THAT WALLET HIDDEN, OR BETTER YET, IN YOUR ROOM SAFE

Instead of swiping your credit card or inserting its chip to complete the payment process, contactless technology lets you make a purchase by placing or hovering your card or phone near a payment terminal, aka the credit card machine.

Some recently issued credit cards also have the same contactless ability found in your mobile phone's digital wallet.

While some recently issued credit cards have this ability built in, the real improvement, particularly while travelling, is using contactless payments on your mobile phone. A digital wallet like Apple Pay, Google Pay or Samsung Pay securely stores your credit card details, and to purchase something, you merely unlock your phone and tap it to the pay terminal. Often getting your phone close is enough: In most cases, you don’t even need to open an app.

Most Apple and Android phones from the last few years have the ability to make contactless payments. Smartwatches and many new fitness trackers can also be used. Your credit cards will function exactly as they would normally; the digital wallet is merely card storage and a facilitator of payments. (And using a digital wallet is free.)

IN THE STORE

Ask the seller if they take contactless or look on the terminal for the contactless symbol, which appears like a sideways Wi-Fi logo, sometimes with a hand holding a card next to it. Once you start looking for this logo, you’ll see it just about everywhere.

Visa estimates that 50 per cent of its in-person credit card sales outside the US are now contactless, while Mastercard says 25 per cent worldwide. Both companies say those numbers are increasing each year.

The technology is not reliant on a specific brand of phone or type of mobile wallet app. For example, if it has the contactless logo and the Apple Pay logo, your Android phone with Google Pay should work fine.

Conveniently, many airline and other tickets can be stored in the digital wallet, too. Some metro systems, like London’s Underground, also accept payment this way.

WHY BOTHER?

Not only is contactless easier, it’s actually safer. Your credit cards are encrypted and hidden behind your phone’s lock screen. This makes it nearly impossible for a nefarious shopkeeper to copy your credit card number. Your name and three-digit security code are not transmitted, nor even seen, so even in the unlikely event they get your number, they can’t make online purchases.

If you get a new credit card with the contactless ability built in, this is still more secure than the magnetic swipe. Visa says more than 100 million of these cards have already been issued in the United States and estimates there will be 300 million by the end of 2020.

If you don’t have cellular data when you travel, contactless should still work – the technology only requires the connection between your phone and the payment terminal. You just won’t get purchase notifications in the app until you log into Wi-Fi. If your phone gets stolen, logging into your account from a secure place will let you deactivate any cards in your digital wallet.

Visa, Mastercard and most big compatible banks like Chase, Bank of America and Citibank offer more details about contactless payments. Check your bank or card issuer to be sure, then give it a try at a local store before your next trip. You might end up using contactless when you’re not traveling, too.

THE KEY WORD: 'SHOULD'

You should be able to use your phone or card anywhere you see the contactless payment logo. Annoyingly, even if you’re in a country with widespread contactless adoption and are standing over a payment terminal with the logo … it still might not work. During four months of travel last year across Asia and Europe, this happened to me a few times. But thankfully, getting out and inserting or swiping the card, then signing the receipt, did the trick. This felt surprisingly archaic after months of the seeming magic of contactless. Depending on the country and the amount of your purchase, you might still need to do this, but not usually.

By Geoffrey Morrison © The New York Times


Taken from this article:
https://cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com/travel/why-contactless-payment-is-safer-than-swiping-credit-cards-12418914

05 March, 2020

Panicking about your kids and their phones? New research says you don’t have to

Panicking about your kids and their phones? New research says you don’t have to

It has become common wisdom that too much time spent on smartphones and social media is responsible for a recent spike in anxiety, depression and other mental health problems, especially among teenagers.

But a growing number of academic researchers have produced studies that suggest the common wisdom is wrong.

The latest research, published Friday (Jan 17) by two psychology professors, combs through about 40 studies that have examined the link between social media use and both depression and anxiety among adolescents. That link, according to the professors, is small and inconsistent.

“There doesn’t seem to be an evidence base that would explain the level of panic and consternation around these issues,” said Candice L Odgers, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and the lead author of the paper, which was published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.

DO PHONES POSE A SIGNIFICANT RISK TO MENTAL HEALTH?

The debate over the harm we – and especially our children – are doing to ourselves by staring into phones is generally predicated on the assumption that the machines we carry in our pockets pose a significant risk to our mental health.

Worries about smartphones have led the US Congress to pass legislation to examine the impact of heavy smartphone use and pushed investors to pressure big tech companies to change the way they approach young customers.

The World Health Organization said last year that infants under a year old should not be exposed to electronic screens and that children between the ages of two and four should not have more than an hour of “sedentary screen time” each day.

Even in Silicon Valley, technology executives have made a point of keeping the devices and the software they develop away from their own children.

But some researchers question whether those fears are justified. They are not arguing that intensive use of phones does not matter. Children who are on their phones too much can miss out on other valuable activities, like exercise. And research has shown that excessive phone use can exacerbate the problems of certain vulnerable groups, like children with mental health issues.

They are, however, challenging the widespread belief that screens are responsible for broad societal problems like the rising rates of anxiety and sleep deprivation among teenagers. In most cases, they say, the phone is just a mirror that reveals the problems a child would have even without the phone.

The researchers worry that the focus on keeping children away from screens is making it hard to have more productive conversations about topics like how to make phones more useful for low-income people, who tend to use them more, or how to protect the privacy of teenagers who share their lives online.

“Many of the people who are terrifying kids about screens, they have hit a vein of attention from society and they are going to ride that. But that is super bad for society,” said Andrew Przybylski, director of research at the Oxford Internet Institute, who has published several studies on the topic.

'A LOT OF HYPE AND A LOT OF FEAR'

The new article by Odgers and Michaeline R Jensen, of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, comes just a few weeks after the publication of an analysis by Amy Orben, a researcher at the University of Cambridge, and shortly before the planned publication of similar work from Jeff Hancock, the founder of the Stanford Social Media Lab. Both reached similar conclusions.

“The current dominant discourse around phones and well-being is a lot of hype and a lot of fear,” Hancock said. “But if you compare the effects of your phone to eating properly or sleeping or smoking, it’s not even close.”

Hancock’s analysis of about 226 studies on the well-being of phone users concluded that “when you look at all these different kinds of well-being, the net effect size is essentially zero.”

The debate about screen time and mental health goes back to the early days of the iPhone.

The debate about screen time and mental health goes back to the early days of the iPhone. In 2011, the American Academy of Pediatrics published a widely cited paper that warned doctors about “Facebook depression.”

But by 2016, as more research came out, the academy revised that statement, deleting any mention of Facebook depression and emphasising the conflicting evidence and the potential positive benefits of using social media.

Megan Moreno, one of the lead authors of the revised statement, said the original statement had been a problem “because it created panic without a strong basis of evidence.”

Moreno, a professor of paediatrics at the University of Wisconsin, said that in her own medical practice, she tends to be struck by the number of children with mental health problems who are helped by social media because of the resources and connections it provides.

Concern about the connection between smartphones and mental health has also been fed by high-profile works like a 2017 article in The Atlantic – and a related book – by psychologist Jean Twenge, who argued that a recent rise in suicide and depression among teenagers was linked to the arrival of smartphones.

CORRELATION, NOT CAUSATION

In her article, “Have Smartphones Ruined a Generation?,” Twenge attributed the sudden rise in reports of anxiety, depression and suicide from teens after 2012 to the spread of smartphones and social media.

Twenge’s critics argue that her work found a correlation between the appearance of smartphones and a real rise in reports of mental health issues, but that it did not establish that phones were the cause.

It could, researchers argue, just as easily be that the rise in depression led teenagers to excessive phone use at a time when there were many other potential explanations for depression and anxiety. What’s more, anxiety and suicide rates appear not to have risen in large parts of Europe, where phones have also become more prevalent.

“Why else might American kids be anxious other than telephones?” Hancock said. “How about climate change? How about income inequality? How about more student debt? There are so many big giant structural issues that have a huge impact on us but are invisible and that we aren’t looking at.”

Twenge remains committed to her position, and she points to several more recent studies by other academics who have found a specific link between social media use and poor mental health. One paper found that when a group of college students gave up social media for three weeks, their sense of loneliness and depression declined.

Odgers, Hancock and Przybylski said they had not taken any funding from the tech industry, and all have been outspoken critics of the industry on issues other than mental health, such as privacy and the companies’ lack of transparency.

Odgers added that she was not surprised that people had a hard time accepting her findings. Her own mother questioned her research after one of her grandsons stopped talking to her during the long drives she used to enjoy. But children tuning out their elders when they become teenagers is hardly a new trend, she said.

She also reminded her mother that their conversation was taking place during a video chat with Odgers’ son – the kind of intergenerational connection that was impossible before smartphones.

Odgers acknowledged that she was reluctant to give her two children more time on their iPads. But she recently tried playing the video game Fortnite with her son and found it an unexpectedly positive experience.

“It’s hard work because it’s not the environment we were raised in,” she said. “It can be a little scary at times. I have those moments, too.”

By Nathaniel Popper © 2020 The New York Times



Taken from this article:
https://cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com/wellness/new-research-phone-usage-mental-health-12308294

21 January, 2020

Outlook 2016 not receiving mails

Outlook 2016 not receiving mails. I hit this problem when I had to copy over my pst file to a new laptop. And I have been doing this for over a dozen times since Outlook 2007, 2010, 2013 and now, 2016.

There's a lot of users who also experience this problem, and there have been various suggestions, fixes, etc., and while many have it fixed and done and working again, still a lot encounter it, or never get to fix it.

Well, I did mine, and it is working fine again.


First attempted fix:
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/msoffice/forum/all/i-am-not-receiving-emails-in-my-outlook-2016/df4ba6ea-e554-40f3-8094-77c287e3f616


What worked for me:
https://www.lifewire.com/fix-outlook-not-receiving-email-4177911


I won't copy over the fix outlined in page as per link above, which worked for me, so I don't go plagiarizing somebody else's work. Besides, the list is so long, and perhaps I tried more than one before getting Outlook 2016 not receiving mails fixed for me. Or maybe the first one already did it. I can't remember. But surely I marked the pages and which one worked for me.

Hope you fix yours, too. Happy e-mailing again.

Till then!


21-Jan-2020