Plus: $25K lost to a scam, a Minecraft record, take better screenshots β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β In partnership with NativePath | Hello to a tech-licious Sunday, friend! Do you remember the sound of a dial-up modem? Ah, the robotic cat screeching, followed by the sound of pebbles in a blender, a high-pitched whine of a fax machine and a UFO holding a conversation. Back then, in the 1990s, how long did it take to download a four-minute song? Was it β¦ A.) 3 minutes, B.) 17 minutes, C.) 36 minutes or D.) 74 minutes? Take a chill pill; the answerβs at the end. π©» Iβve been taking collagen for years. Letβs face it, no oneβs getting younger and strong bones are essential, as are healthy hair and nails. Use this link to get 45% off collagen peptides from NativePath, todayβs newsletter sponsor. β Kim π Today's podcast: Instagram is hiding your political posts β±οΈ Daily Tech Update: Check your LexisNexis report for mistakes π¬ Was this email forwarded? Sign up here for free | TODAY'S TOP STORY A quantum leap Look at these two headlines: βChina's Quantum Computer Scientists Crack Military-Grade Encryptionβ (Newsweek, Oct. 18, 2024) βDebunking Hype: China Hasn't Broken Military Encryption With Quantumβ (Forbes, Oct. 16, 2024) So, whoβs right? To figure that out, letβs talk about quantum computers. Now, before your eyes glaze over and you think, βCome on, Kim, I can barely find the duplicate photos on my phoneβ (hereβs my walkthrough!), youβre going to start hearing a lot more about these futuristic, ultra-powerful machines, and I want you to be in the know. You see, quantum computers were just used to decipher part of the encryption we all rely on for protecting our banking info, private messages and more. I know it sounds scary β and it kinda is β but I donβt want you to panic because of the misinformation some bloggers and sites are spreading online. What the heck is a quantum computer, anyway? Think of your everyday laptop or desktop as a runner who takes one step at a time, even if itβs really, really fast. Itβs all about processing those ones and zeros in a sequence β one calculation, then another. Todayβs computers can juggle lots of tasks at once, but theyβre still doing one thing after another, just at lightning speed. Quantum computers, on the other hand, are like having a whole marathon of runners all sprinting in different directions at the same time. Instead of ones and zeros, they use quantum bits, aka qubits, which can be a one, a zero or both simultaneously (thanks, weird quantum physics). This allows them to process massive amounts of data at once. How about another analogy? In a chess game, a regular computer thinks about each move one at a time. A quantum computer can consider all possible moves and multiple games at once. Itβs like someone playing 10 chess matches simultaneously and still winning every single one. Why arenβt we all using these yet? Quantum computers are huge, complex machines that operate in labs at super-cold temperatures. Even in these ideal settings, keeping those qubits stable is tricky. So, for now, only researchers have access to this kind of tech β not everyday cybercriminals. βShould I be worried?β The latest quantum hack in China broke the encryption of a 50-digit number. The stuff that keeps our bank accounts and private chats secure uses much, much tougher encryption β like 2,048 digits. The military often uses an advanced encryption standard called AES 256. Itβs virtually impenetrable, meaning a supercomputer would be sweating trying to break in. So, donβt believe the clickbait headlines you see from China. Hey, look at you! Now, when you hear or read anything about quantum computers, pat yourself on the back. Youβre techβahead! |
DEALS OF THE DAY ICYMI: Top sellers of 2024, so far This is a list of my newsletter readers' most-loved products. If you didn't pick 'em up, what are you waiting for? MiracleWipes (13% off, $12.97) get your electronics squeaky clean without streaks or fuzzies. USB data blockers (under $10 for a 4-pack!) let you safely charge your devices while traveling or in public. The Pink Stuff is a miracle cleaning paste you can use on just about anything. Wall charger, surge protector and extender with five outlets and four USB ports. Uniball pens (33% off a 4-pack) that wonβt let anyone erase what you wrote on a check, helping to prevent check fraud. |
WEB WATERCOOLER π¨ AI voice scams spreading: An elderly father was duped out of $25,000 after scammers called him using an AI-generated voice of his son. The caller, his βson,β claimed heβd hit a pregnant woman while driving and needed bail money ASAP. The father withdrew the cash, an Uber picked it up, and the con artists disappeared. Reminder: Scammers thrive on fear and urgency, so always verify phone numbers and set up a family safe word for emergencies. Not the sharpest hacker for sure: Back in January, the SEC's X account was hacked to post fake news about bitcoin, causing its value to spike. Now, a manβs been arrested, and court docs show some pretty incriminating searches. One gem? βWhat are some signs the FBI is after you?β Youβd think a hacker would know how to hide their search history. Country roads, take me home: Electrosensitivity is a condition where folks think they feel sick from the electromagnetic waves emitted by modern tech. Enter Green Bank, West Virginia, a small town legally protected from radio signals, meaning no cell towers or WiβFi. People are flocking there to ease their symptoms, forming a judgment-free community (paywall link). And no, theyβre definitely not fans of Chuck from βBetter Call Saul.β Cute β¦ for now: Meet Proteus, a little bot zipping around Amazonβs Nashville facility. It can load packages up to 880 pounds into trucks. When its battery runs low, Proteus recharges in 8 minutes and then gets back to work. Amazon says they arenβt replacing humans (yet), but these little helpers already have fulfillment costs down 25%. π Phony landlords: Scammers are flooding Facebook Marketplace with fake rental listings. They use real addresses and legit-looking pics at prices that seem like a steal, and theyβll even let you check it out in person. Major red flag: Theyβll demand an application fee upfront via PayPal, Venmo or Zelle. Heβs a real blockhead: In Minecraft, most gamers stick to building houses, but a college kid took it to the next level by building a massive 32-bit computer in-game. Heβs just halfway done, at 1,107,419 blocks, but heβs already racking up millions of views. Share this with your favorite Minecraft fan. π Nothing but blue skies: X recently changed its policies to where if you block someone, they can still see your profile and posts. Competitor BlueSky, meanwhile, added 500,000 new members in just one day. Iβm going to start posting on BlueSky and see what happens. Too many people on X are mean. π Taller people sleep longer in bed: Women are turning to ChatGPT to catch guys lying about their height on dating apps. Upload four pics, and a bot can size someone up based on their surroundings and proportions. In a test of 10 people, ChatGPT came within an inch of assessing their real measurements. Short kings, I've got you: Height-increasing insoles to the rescue. |
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TECH LIFE UPGRADES A screenshot that scrolls: This is great when you need a record of something that goes off the screen of your phone, like a web article or document. On Android, press the power + volume-down buttons together, then, on the screen, tap Capture more (Pixel) or the down arrows (Galaxy). On an iPhone, hold down on the power + volume-up buttons, tap the thumbnail that pops up, then tap Full Page. If I could turn back time: Look up your first-ever post on Facebook. Open your profile on the web, click the Filters button above your own posts and then Go to. You can browse back to the month and year you signed up. Delete these posts if they're too cringey, OK? π₯Ά Pass me a cold one: Relay hacks and keyless jamming are ways someone can take over your carβs key fob. Paid solution: Buy a signal-blocking case, like this shielded RFID-blocking pouch. Free solution: Put your key fob in the refrigerator or freezer; the multiple layers of metal block the signal. Take a cue from Carmen Sandiego: Amazon, Nike, Zara and tons of other big retailers have different country-specific versions of their sites. Prices can vary significantly based on where youβre shopping from, and you can still get your items shipped to your house. Btw, you may need a VPN to access a different countryβs website without it redirecting to the USA. π Bookmarks are so 2010: Want all your last-viewed tabs to reopen when you start your browser? In Chrome, click the three vertical dots at the top right, then tap Settings. Click On startup > Continue where you left off. Steps for Safari, Firefox and Edge here. |
MY TRUSTED ADVICE ποΈ Every weekend on my award-winning national radio show heard on over 420 stations, I talk with interesting folks like you. Catch these convos on a station near you, or find my weekend show as a podcast in your favorite podcast player. Nathan Blecharczyk is the cofounder of Airbnb. He shares how he and his buddiesβ idea of renting out rooms for extra cash turned into one of the biggest apps in the world. Barry in Durham, North Carolina, says his ex is controlling his smart thermostat after his divorce. It gets hot and cool all on its own. Yikes. Lori in Green Bay says her business is constantly bombarded with calls from βGoogle.β They call day and night, and she thinks itβs driving customers away. Plus, Ruben wonders if his scanner app is legit, Danielle needs a phone cam upgrade, Lee-Marie cuts out unused subscriptions, Michael gets the facts on WhatsApp and so much more. π Letβs talk about anything digital in your life, whether itβs family matters or your business. Make an appointment to speak with me right here. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... The answer: C.) 36 minutes. It could easily take 30 minutes to download a 4MB song. For my math nerds, a 56k dial-up modem transfers about 56 kilobytes per second (Kbps) for downloads, but that generally dropped closer to 7 Kbps after network overhead β roughly 9 to 10 minutes per megabyte. Today, it takes less than one second to download a tune. π΅ I always thought museums should play one particular song when you entered the building: βU Canβt Touch This.β Oh, it reminds me of the time M.C. Hammer bought me a drink at a bar. Nope, he didnβt touch this. Do me a favor and click the link to check out todayβs sponsor, which helps me bring this free newsletter to you. Get 45% off NativePathβs Collagen Peptides. I hope you have a wonderful day and Iβll be back tomorrow with the best tech newsletter in the USA! β Kim |
Komando Referral Program Refer one person That's all you need to get my latest eBook, "50 Smart Ways to Use AI," a $9.95 value β yours for FREE! 1οΈβ£ Copy your link: https://referrer.komando.com/8818309c/3 2οΈβ£ Share your link on social media, through email, in a text β your call! 3οΈβ£ Kick back and relax! When someone uses your link to sign up for my newsletter, I'll send my new eBook to your email address. CLICK TO SHARE β Or copy and paste this link to others: https://referrer.komando.com/8818309c/3 In "50 Smart Ways to Use AI," Kim shares helpful prompts for today's most common AI chatbots. Whether you're tackling spreadsheets, planning rainy-day activities or developing a wellness plan, let AI handle the heavy lifting for you! | |
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