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July 16, 2023 |
In partnership with Komando Community |
Sunday, Sunday, Sunday! Letβs jump in with trivia. Who gets credit for inventing the first usable electric vehicle (EV) and, for extra points, in what year? Thomas Edison in 1893, Nikola Tesla in 1923, Thomas Davenport in 1834 or Karl Benz in 1941. Answerβs at the end, friend! π On Sundays, I share a few longer reads, security smarts and a great video. Ready to dive into more tech know-how? I sure am! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUEπΎ Storage full? This might be whyπ«£ Hide your email addressποΈ This week on my show |
DEAL OF THE DAY
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π§ Want great content on the go?Sound like a tech pro, even if you're not one. Try my award-winning, daily podcast. Search for my last name with "K" wherever you get your podcasts and "Go Komando!" |
MY TRUSTED ADVICEI talk to smart, interesting folks on my national radio show and podcast. Some need a helping hand. Here are a few convos on the show this weekend: Jon Keegan is an Investigative Data Journalist for The Markup. He joined me to talk about personalized ads β and how Facebook, Google and Amazon know precisely what you want.James from Houston, Texas, is a missionary traveling to a Muslim country soon. He wants to ensure he can find surveillance devices in his government-issued housing.Phil Stika is the General Manager at Briarwood Golf Course in Sun City, Arizona. Golf gear is worth a lot and is a big target for thieves. Phil enlisted the help of Apple AirTags to catch these criminals.Plus, John wants a smartphone helper thatβs NOT Siri or Google Assistant, Joan ordered from Temu and wants to clear her data, Cheryl wants ads that reflect where she actually lives, Barry says his ex is a digital stalker and Brian needs a hand making sure his e-bike isnβt a fire hazard. β Radio can be an addiction, depending on the frequency. Find me on your local radio station.Listen now in the Komando Community commercial-free.If you donβt mind waiting for shows to appear, get the podcast Kim Komando Today.π€ Iβd love to chat and help you, too. Leave me a note |
Being a VIP has privilegesHang out with the cool kids and me at the Komando Community. Iβll give you 30 days to try it for free! For starters, whenever you have a tech question, just head over to the Q&A Forum to get expert, easy-to-understand help and product recommendations from me or my team of IT geniuses, John and Jeremy. No more frustrating Google searches or buying junk tech for you! Plus, you get my national radio show as a commercial-free podcast. Thatβs right, no annoying commercials. And you have three full months of archived shows, too. Use this link to get your 30-day free trial, then itβs just a couple bucks a month to support our show. Senior citizens, active-duty military, police or firefighters get 10% off as my thanks. |
DIY SECURITY TIPHide your email addressYour email address is your unique passport to a world of online adventures, spanning everything from social media soirees to subscription-based binges. Here are the tricks to conceal it to dodge a storm of spam, outsmart phishing scams and foil the plans of those pesky identity thieves. If you use GmailGmail has its own way of keeping your email address hidden: Aliases. You can do this quickly by adding a word and a plus sign to your email address when you give it out. For example, if you want to make an alias for booking hotels to stop spam, simply give your Gmail address as β[email protected].β The email will arrive in your inbox, but the hotel wonβt know your address. You can create aliases like this anytime and with any combination of words or letters. If you use AppleWhenever you get the option online to βSign in with Apple,β you can hide your email address to mask the real one. If you have an iCloud+ subscription on an iOS 15 or newer device, you can create random email addresses in email fields in Safari, too. β Keep going! I put the steps to hide your email address on Apple, along with more solutions I donβt have room for here. Find them on my site. |
THE INTERNETβS NOT ALL BADPeople in glass houses β¦I love real estate. Going to check out open houses is an actual hobby for me, Barry and Ian. But Iβll tell you, Iβve never been in a rotating house. This mansion in San Diego is remarkable. πΊ Check out this video that walks you through the place. The ownerβs story of how the place came to be is adorable. Who knew: A 5-horsepower motor to rotate a house is too much! They had to swap it for a 1.5 horsepower. |
WHAT THE TECH?And some of you actually wish you could go back in time. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ...π The answer: Thomas Davenport in 1834. The blacksmith from Vermont built a small locomotive powered by a 1.5-volt electric motor β long before the invention of the internal combustion engine. One for the road: Two electric car owners were seen today fighting over a charging port. The police have said it was a charged environment and they need to amp up patrols around the area. Many witnesses were shocked and said they saw someone socket to the other. (This one cracked me up!) π€ Hey there, got some ideas bouncing around in your head? Reply to this email and let me know if there's anything you're craving more of or maybe something you'd like to see less. Your wishes are my command(o)s! π§ββοΈ See ya tomorrow morning! β Kim |
How'd we do?What did you think of today's issue? π Fantasticπ Just OKπ Waste of time |
π« Was this forwarded to you? Sign up free here. π§ Ready to hear more? Check out my podcast. ποΈ Want to listen to my show? Find your local radio station. π Thinking about upgrading? Try the Komando Community free for 30 days. β Got a question for Kim? Ask away here. π² Looking to advertise in this newsletter? Email us. |
Photo credit(s): Firmbee.com | Unsplash, Apple.com, Β© Kaspars Grinvalds | Dreamstime.com |
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