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November 14, 2023 |
In partnership with Oracle NetSuite |
Three cheers to a tech-rific Tuesday, friends! Letβs start with our trivia. Which unusual location is on Google Maps? Is it a β¦ A.) Hidden city in the Atlantic Ocean, B.) Village with life-size dolls in Japan or C.) QR code-shaped forest in Oregon? Youβll find the answer, along with a video of the place, at the end of this newsletter. π Do your part to help keep this newsletter free and click the links to check out our sponsor. Use QuickBooks? You def need to check out NetSuite. Itβs more than accounting software. You see all aspects of your business, from costs to ways to make more money. I had so much fun putting together todayβs newsletter. The top story is a total gem that will save you cash. Letβs do this! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUEπ Are fancy cables worth it?πΈ OpenAI vs. Googleπ No-brainer security step |
TODAY'S TOP STORYHow much is worth it for charging cables?You leave your phone charging, then wake up late because β whoops β itβs dead and the alarm didnβt go off. That cord gave out on you. Thatβs the best-case scenario. Worst case: Your phone charger starts a fire while youβre sleeping. Donβt you dare roll your eyes at me and think, βKim, youβre so dramatic.β It happens β like the girl who went to bed with her iPhone next to her and woke up to flames. She was badly burned after the charger caught fire and ignited her blanket. The culprit? Cheap knock-off phone accessories. We all want a deal, but never at the expense of safety. When it comes to cables, where do you draw the line? Bad chargers make me testyThe fine folks at Consumer Reports dug deep to find the answers. They bought seven charging cables with prices ranging from $4.88 to $29 and conducted some pretty dang rigorous testing. The Rapid Response team (bet the members brag about that at parties) used a specially adapted motorized rig to simulate real-world conditions. They tested each cord by bending one end at a 90-degree angle repeatedly until it failed to power a device and by continuously twisting a cable while it powered a device. I bet youβre like me and wondered, βAre those Amazon chargers and cables any good? Theyβre so cheap!β Well, keep reading, friend. The revealing resultsThe good news: Every cable they tried withstood the twisting test. The bending test is where things got interesting. The Apple Lightning cable ($29) survived over 11,500 bends. (Thatβs when they stopped testing.)The Amazon Basics USBβC cable ($8.54) held up just as long.The Bytech USBβC cable and Walmartβs Onn Lightning cable didnβt fare as well. The Bytech cable (under $5) failed before reaching 710 bends. The Walmart cable (around $5) stopped working before 796 bends.The burning questionWhatβs the takeaway? Amazon Basics cables are a great product at a great price. If you have a knock-off charger or cable, hereβs a link to buy a new Amazon Basics one. This is money well-spent, friends. π₯ I passed along this report because I care about you. Use the share icons below so this way you can protect your family and friends, too. |
DEAL OF THE DAY
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WEB WATERCOOLERThis scares me for real: Dr. Ben Goertzel, an AI researcher, says βthe singularityβ β where AI surpasses human control β could hit by 2031. It all hinges on AGI, or artificial general intelligence. Iβll tell you this: "Terminator" is bound to become a reality. π€ OpenAI vs. Google: OpenAI needs the brightest minds, and with a $86 billion valuation, they can afford to pay 'em. Theyβve poached nearly 100 ex-Googlers and are offering salaries up to $450,000. Remember when Big Tech was the hottest place to work? Now itβs AI. Refund wave: Payment apps are a prime target for crooks. In 2021 alone, Zelle users lost $440 million to fraud. Now, over 2,000 banks are ponying up refunds. No, a judge didnβt force them to, but Iβm willing to bet they see it as a move to hold off tighter regulations. Walmart now has sensory-friendly shopping hours: This includes static TVs, no music and dimmed lights. Hit up your local Walmart between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. to shop in peace. My sister runs a school for kids with autism and raved about this move. Cancer breakthrough: University of California, Davis, scientists discovered a potential cancer cell "kill switch" on CD95 receptors. Translation: The drug could improve cancer treatments, especially in tumors. Theyβre currently awaiting trials, but itβs incredible to see all the innovation coming in the fight against cancer. Disconnect to reconnect: FTLO Travel is selling $2,000 phone-free adventures for millennials. They make you leave your phone in your hotel room. Ahem, you can get a much cheaper trip elsewhere. Just keep your phone in your pocket. Dead βBingβ-er: AI wasnβt enough to save Bing. The latest StatCounter data shows 88.1% of Americans use Google, up from 86.75% last year. Bing slipped from 7.4% a year ago to 6.89% today. ποΈ We built this city on rock and Rome: Step into the past with an online aerial tour of 320 A.D. This flyover explores 61 iconic spots, from the Colosseum to the Baths of Caracalla. Encompassing 7,000 buildings over 5.2 square miles, itβs a mesmerizing journey β no toga necessary. |
DEVICE ADVICEAutomate a no-brainer security stepYou forget to lock your computer when you get up. Welcome to the club. Be smart and tell your Windows or Mac to do it for you! You can set your computer to auto-lock if youβve been inactive for a certain amount of time. On Windows: Open Settings and go to Personalization, then Lock Screen.Click Screen saver settings and select any option (except "None") from the Screen saver dropdown menu.Set a time for Windows to wait before locking. Check the box for On resume, display logon screen. Hit OK.On a Mac: Click the Apple menu > System Preferences > Desktop & Screen Save > Screen Saver. Use the slider to choose a time.Click Show All to go back to the main System Preferences window.Click Security, then Require password to wake this computer from sleep or screen saver.π€― You can also set up your PC to lock based on where your phone is. Think about it: If your phone's nearby, so are you β and so your computer stays open. You walk away, it locks. |
TECH LIFE UPGRADESπ€ My show on your time, straight to your iPhone: If you canβt catch me on your local radio station, download The Kim Komando Show via Apple Podcasts. Itβs only a few bucks a month β and no commercials. Sweet! Streaky pages? Youβre getting that βLow inkβ warning. Before you swap the cartridge, shake it up. Really! Remove the cartridge and shake it. This trick helps you use those last drops of ink. π Post a job for free: Weβre hiring and Iβm telling you, LinkedIn* is the best at delivering quality hires. Hereβs a special link where you can post your job opening for free. Youβre welcome. Only you can prevent garbage fires: Batteries, especially lithium-ion and nickel-cadmium types, should be taken to a hazardous waste collection center β not tossed in the trash. Search online for your city or townβs name plus the term βelectronics disposal.β Or use this handy site. Google, remind me: Coming soon to Google Photos, you can create a calendar reminder right from a pic. Say you snap a photo of something at home that needs to be replaced. Make a cal invite for the weekend so you remember to hit the hardware store. |
Stop fighting with Quicken and spreadsheetsWant to get the visibility and control you need to make the right business decisions instantly? Come see why over 36,000 businesses have already upgraded to NetSuite by Oracle, the No. 1 cloud financial system that streamlines accounting, financial management, inventory, HR and more. NetSuite offers customized solutions for all of your KPIs in ONE efficient system. Itβs ONE source of truth to manage risk, get reliable forecasts and improve margins. Itβs everything you need, all in ONE place. Thatβs why over 36,000 businesses have already upgraded to NetSuite. |
BY THE NUMBERS$50,000 Amount Tesla will sue you for if you buy a Cybertruck and try to sell it in the first year. A new section in its order terms says if the buyer has a good reason to sell, Tesla may buy it back at the original price, minus 25 cents per mile driven and repair costs. 100% Homebuyers who took to the internet at some point in the home-search process. And wow, 52% say they found the home they ultimately purchased online. In 2010, that was true for only 37% of folks. No wonder the government is looking so closely at realtorsβ fees and commissions. $210,000,000 Money those under 20 were scammed out of last year β a jump from $8.2 million in 2017. The big target on Gen Zβs back? Online shopping, especially through social media. Turns out phishing emails, fake accounts and bogus ads work on people of all ages. |
WHAT THE TECH?They mustnβt like organ music. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ...The answer: B.) Village with life-size dolls in Japan. Located in Nagoro, these more than 350 dolls represent villagers who once lived there but have either moved or passed away. Hereβs a video about it. πͺ Itβs kinda weird to me, but not like Russian dolls. Theyβre so full of themselves! (Baβdumβtss!) β Thatβs all folks! Donβt forget to help support this free newsletter and check out NetSuite for your business, large or small. See you tomorrow with the best free newsletter in the USA! β Kim |
Komando Referral ProgramShare this newsletter β Earn prizes!Step 1: Copy your unique referral link:https://www.komando.com/friends/?referralCode=0rvmdp6&refSource=copy Step 2: Share your link!Post it on social media, send it in a text or paste it into an email to a pal. If they sign up using that link, you get the credit! |
How'd we do?What did you think of today's issue? π Fantasticπ Just OKπ Waste of time |
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Photo credit(s): Β© Daniele Mezzadri | Dreamstime.com |
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