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Why We Show Your IP Address

October 13th, 2010 4 comments

If you are like some of our readers, you may have been wondering why we show your IP address in the control bar on the website. Some of our readers feel their privacy is being violated by this. On the contrary, it is intended to assist them in preserving their privacy. Here’s why.

Widespread Monitoring Of Your Computer Usage

Every time you use your computer to access a web site, there are several, likely even dozens, of pieces of software running on computers spread across the Internet that log bits and pieces of information about you. Such information typically includes your IP address as the unifying element to glue it all together. Other bits of information include the web browser your are using, the operating system your computer is running, web sites you visit, comments you post, email addresses you use, and questions you answer in surveys of demographic information that may not seem at first glance to be related to your web browsing at all. They might be software registrations, surveys for “free coupons”, “free email newsletters”, or something else. Your IP address can be used to tie it all together, to track your “Internet identity” and the usage of the Internet associated with it. Such information is being collected about you all the time. Every day, it is bought and sold routinely as a matter of regular business practice by many of the top brand names in the Internet world.

Have you installed any of those popular browser toolbars from Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft? Such software can log similar information about your usage, too. So can Flash, Java, and other apps that are common on many popular websites.

Your Internet Service Provider (Cox, Comcast, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, etc.) probably logs a substantial amount of this type of information and retains it for multiple years. Some countries actually have laws requiring this. Even if they don’t, the ISP and hosting providers for any websites you visit log and save similar information for years, too. Your web browser also retains such information, too, and it will persist for months or years unless you take steps to erase it. Even if the company, organization, or people running the website you are visiting go to great effort to discard that information, virtually nobody else is going to do likewise. Like it or not, you are creating a great big trail that others can use to find and track you, be it for reasonable or very hostile purposes. Your IP address is often the single most important piece of information typically used to glue together the bits and pieces of your Internet trail into a cohesive whole that somebody can portray as representing you, rightly or wrongly.

Why We Show Your IP Address

We show you your IP address for two primary reasons:
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Brother MFC-9840CDW Color Laser All-in-One for $549.99* plus FREE SHIPPING!

July 5th, 2010 1 comment
Brother MFC-9840CDW Color Laser Multi-Function Center with Wireless Networking

If you’ve been shopping for a color laser printer, take a look at the Brother MFC-9840CDW Color Laser Multi-Function Center with Wireless Networking. This model includes duplex color printing, scanning, copying, and faxing plus Ethernet and wireless 802.11b/g and USB interfaces. The scanner works with paper sizes up to legal paper, unlike most low-cost all-in-one devices. Buy.com is currently selling it for $549.99* including free shipping, about $100 to $150 less than typical prices.

We previously reviewed the Brother MFC-9840CDW a year ago. See that review for more information. Customers of Buy.com rated this model with a 4.5 out of 5.0 score for all four categories of value, performance, ease of use, and overall satisfaction.

*Prices are subject to change according to the terms of use of the respective websites.


Buy.com Coupon

Unsecured Wireless Networks Risk Being Framed for Crime

January 18th, 2010 No comments

Do you have an unsecured wireless network or wireless access point in your home or business? If so, you may think all you have at risk is somebody wasting your bandwidth. But there’s a lot more at risk than megabits per second here. If you’re running unsecured wireless networks, you may be setting up your friends, employees, family and yourself for being scapegoated as child pornography or identify theft criminals.
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Finding Savings $$$ on Microsoft Windows 7

November 6th, 2009 No comments

We don’t usually write technology articles here, but with the Windows 7 hoopla many people are rushing out to buy upgrades and are paying more than necessary. This is especially the case for households that have more than one computer and/or have university students.

Family Pack Upgrade for 3 PCs For Under $150

While the list price for the Windows 7 Home Premium upgrade for a single PC is $120, it’s easily possible to get licenses for 3 PCs in the same home for just a little more than that. Costco is selling 3 PC upgrades “for a limited time, until supplies run out” for $135. It’s also available from many other vendors, too, but they are usually a little more expensive, perhaps $150. Staples is selling it for $150, and if you find one of their $30 off $150 coupons, it can be a little less expensive there.

Upgrades for College/University Students for $29.95!

Ed Bott’s article Seven perfectly legal ways to get Windows 7 cheap (or even free) outlines a number of other ways to get big discounts on Windows 7, particularly for college students and IT professionals. One of the best is the $29.95 upgrade offer for a digital download of either Windows 7 Home Premium or Professional for currently enrolled college students. The offer expires on January 3, 2010.

Buy a New PC With Windows 7, Get Upgrade for 50% Off

Through January 2, 2010, an offer that likely applies to most folks thinking of buying a new PC plus upgrading an old one is this buy a new PC with Windows 7 installed, get Windows 7 (any version) for up to 50% off offer from Microsoft and a variety of retail partners. These include Costco and Amazon.com. The new PC you buy must come with Windows 7 Home Premium, Professional, or Ultimate for this offer to apply. If you buy one and then upgrade your main PC to Windows 7 Ultimate (which has the “remote desktop” feature) on the offer described above, you’d save $80 to $100 versus the typical cost of that upgrade, a nice chunk of the price of a new notebook computer.
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Estimated 3% of US Cell Phones Bugged

June 7th, 2009 No comments

In a story published this week, Newsweek cites that spyware on cell phones is a rapidly growing phenomenon:

(from The Spy In Your Hand)

Max Maiellaro, head of Agata Christie Investigation, a private-investigation firm in Milan, estimates that 3 percent of mobiles in France and Germany are tapped, and about 5 percent or so in Greece, Italy, Romania and Spain. James Atkinson, a spy-phone expert at Granite Island Group, a security consultancy in Gloucester, Massachusetts, puts the number of tapped phones in the U.S. at 3 percent. (These approximations do not take into account government wiretapping.) Even if these numbers are inflated, clearly many otherwise law-abiding citizens are willing to break wiretapping laws.

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Spying on Your Cell Phone

June 2nd, 2009 No comments

Your cell phone can be used by other people as a tool to spy on you and those around you. It can be used to listen to your conversations, listen to the sounds around it even when you are not using it, and to track your location and movements. It is not just fascist governments and law enforcement agencies doing this to their citizens. Criminals and even family members could be using the same spying techniques on you.
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Cricket Wireless Service – A Good Deal?

February 26th, 2009 7 comments
Unlimited Talk and Text Starting at $35/month

Who’s Heard of Cricket?

Cricket isn’t exactly a household name in wireless service providers. Compared to Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile they are small fry. But if you’re like a lot of typical phone users and live in a market they serve, Cricket might be a good choice for wireless phone and data services. Cricket has focused on providing much lower prices to customers who make and receive calls in their home region and to give them buckets of unlimited minutes.

You can get service for as little as $35 per month for unlimited minutes, long distance, text messages, and voicemail in your local area. A more comprehensive plan that adds mobile web access, picture and video maill, international text messaging, navigation, and other features runs $45 per month.

For a long time, Cricket didn’t offer much in the way of smart phones. That’s changed. They now offer Android and Blackberry phones. Android phone plans at $55 per month, Blackberry plans are $60 per month.

Wireless Broadband Data

If you’re a wireless data user using Windows or Mac OS, Cricket’s Unlimited 3G Broadband Internet is an option. The coverage in their home markets is at a price lower than AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile. It’s not always as fast as the Sprint and Verizon betworks as Cricket is using mostly EVDO rev 0 rather than the EVDO rev A that Sprint and Verizon use, but they do offer download speeds up to 1.4 megabits per second. They call their service “unlimited broadband” because if you go over certain usage levels, the service still works at a lower speed without shocking you with massive data usage bills. $40 per month gets you best speeds up to 2.5 gigabytes of data usage, $50 per month up to 5 gigabytes, and $60 per month up to 7.5 gigabytes. That’s much less than the competition with an added safety factor of not risking that that video you watched might cost you several hundred dollars data usage like on other networks, but for somewhat slower service with less coverage.

AT&T’s data plan might be the worst choice as they cap at 5GB of data per month and then charge $0.48 per additional megabyte thereafter. That could make for a very unpleasant billing surprise for a heavy data user. Verizon is similar, but charges $0.25 per megabyte beyond 5GB. Sprint also has a 5GB cap, but at least limits the overage damages to $0.05 per additional megabyte. Cricket doesn’t charge for going beyond the high speed usage limit you selected, but reserves the right to throttle your service beyond that amount.

Unlike the big four wireless carriers, Cricket doesn’t require a 1-year or 2-year contract. Nor does it charge early termination fees. Your risk is the equipment cost, quite a bit different than the other big carriers that often sign you up for 2 year contracts with $200 per line early termination fees.

It used to be that Cricket’s phones didn’t include high-end smartphones, but that’s changed. They offer multiple Android and Blackberry models at competitive prices.

Cricket typically does not subsidize the cost of the equipment, except by rebates requiring a couple of months service.

If you’re a smartphone user interested in wireless web and email and sold on the low price of Cricket’s service but annoyed by the lack of smartphones, consider that your money might be better spent on a Cricket USB 3G modem (often these are FREE) along with a $300 netbook. It’s far more powerful and useful than a smartphone, but not as portable. Even though smartphones are nifty, web browsing and emailing on a 3″ or 4″ screen with 320×240 or 640×480 resolution with either no keyboard or a tiny thumbs-only one is pretty limited even with the EVDO rev A data connections that many smartphones for Sprint and Verizon offer. Further, the USB modem plus netbook option is less expensive than buying many unlocked smartphones that can cost upwards of $500.

One downside of the USB modem / netbook combo is the clunky USB modem . QUALCOMM’s Gobi “universal 3G” chipset that puts the wireless connection inside has been making inroads into laptops and mobile computing devices. Newer Gobi versions add improvements to GPS and supported RF bands, too. Perhaps at some point Cricket will offer the means to activate those devices on its network.

Perhaps you already have a smartphone from Sprint or Verizon and want to give it a try on Cricket? If you’re truly set on getting a smartphone from another carrier to work on Cricket, there are resources that can help you if you are technically proficient and willing to spend some time working at it. For instance, to get the HTC Touch (sold by both Sprint and Verizon for their networks) working on Cricket, take a look at the Cricket PDA forum for help.

Company Monthly Rate Monthly Data Cap $/MByte beyond cap Speed Technology Wi-Fi Hotspots
AT&T $60.00 5GB $0.48 fast HSPA Included
Cricket $40.00 -$60.00 2.5GB to 7.5GB free – may limit rate moderate CDMA
EVDO rev 0 / A
None
Sprint $59.99 5GB $0.05 fast CDMA

EVDO rev A

None
T-Mobile $49.99 unlimited free slow EDGE Included
Verizon $59.99 5GB $0.25 fast CDMA

EVDO rev A

None

With AT&T in particular, the per-megabyte additional data costs can be terrifyingly huge. Click here for a story about a family getting a $20,000+ cell phone bill from AT&T, and here for one about the guy who ran up a $27,788.93 bill watching a Chicago Bears game via his Slingbox and AT&T phone.

Cricket’s coverage is not as strong as Sprint, Verizon, and AT&T. They have rolled out voice and text service in all 50 US states now, but 3G broadband data is mostly limited to big cities and their suburbs. But if it’s available in your area, it may be a strong choice and save you hundreds of dollars per year versus the competition.

No more fees.  The price you pick, is the price you pay.

Cricket Communications Local Coverage Areas

At the time of this writing, Cricket offers flat-rate unlimited wireless phone and broadband services in these metro areas covering much of the United States. Cricket refers to them as “local coverage areas” to differentiate between the flat-rate unlimited service customers get while in those areas versus roaming charges that apply when completely off of Cricket’s network. Roaming charges can usually be avoided while getting voice and text messaging service nearly anywhere in the US if you pay for a $5 per month plan add-on. Local coverage areas also typically offer 3G wireless broadband services, too.

The following coverage information is from mid-2009, giving you some idea of areas with established service. Cricket has rolled out service in more areas now and their coverage maps change quickly, so it’s best to check with them directly for the most current information.


Cricket US coverage map


  1. Alabama: Fort Mitchell, Phoenix City, Smiths Station
  2. Alaska: no home regions
  3. Arizona: Phoenix, Tucson
  4. Arkansas: Little Rock, Hot Springs, Pine Bluff, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Jonesboro
  5. California: Fresno, Visalia, Modesto, Merced, San Diego
  6. Colorado: Colorado Springs, Denver, Pueblo
  7. Connecticutt: no home regions
  8. Delaware: no home regions
  9. District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.): voice, text, and 3G service
  10. Florida: most of state covered by “Premium Extended Coverage” plan
  11. Georgia: Columbus, Macon, Savannah
  12. Hawaii: no home regions
  13. Idaho: Boise
  14. Illinois: Chicago and its suburbs, Rockford
  15. Indiana: Gary, New Albany, South Bend, Indianapolis
  16. Iowa: Council Bluffs
  17. Kansas: Kansas City, Wichita
  18. Kentucky: Lexington, Louisville
  19. Louisiana: some of state covered by “Premium Extended Coverage” plan
  20. Maine: no home regions
  21. Maryland: no home regions
  22. Massachusetts: no home regions
  23. Michigan: Ann Arbor, Detroit, and some other areas covered by “Premium Extended Coverage” plan
  24. Minnesota: no home regions
  25. Mississippi: Olive Branch, Southaven, Tunica
  26. Missouri: Kansas City, St. Louis
  27. Montana: no home regions
  28. Nebraska: Lincoln, Omaha
  29. Nevada: Las Vegas, Reno, Sparks, Carson City
  30. New Hampshire: no home regions
  31. New Jersey: no home regions
  32. New Mexico: Albuquerque, Las Cruces, Santa Fe
  33. New York: Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse
  34. North Carolina: Burlington, Chapel Hill, Charlotte, Greensboro, High Point, Winston-Salem, Raleigh-Durham
  35. North Dakota: no home regions
  36. Ohio: Akron, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton, Springfield, Toledo
  37. Oklahoma: Tulsa, Oklahoma City
  38. Oregon: Eugene, Salem, Portland
  39. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia (coming soon), Pittsburgh
  40. Rhode Island: no home regions
  41. South Carolina: Beaufort, Charleston, Rock Hill
  42. South Dakota: no home regions
  43. Tennessee: Chattanooga, Knoxville, Memphis, Nashville, Clarksville
  44. Texas: Austin, Bryan, College Station, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, El Paso, Houston, Killeen, McAllen, San Antonio, Seguin, Temple
  45. Utah: Salt Lake City, Provo, Ogden
  46. Vermont: no home regions
  47. Virginia: some of state covered by “Premium Extended Coverage” plan
  48. Washington: Spokane, Vancouver
  49. West Virginia: New Cumberland, Wellsburg
  50. Wisconsin: Kenosha, Milwaukee, Madison
  51. Wyoming: no home regions

The main areas missing from the flat-rate coverage are sparsely populated areas such as North and South Dakota, Montana, and similar locations. It’s tough to make money in regions with few people, so Cricket has focused on bigger markets and uses roaming contracts with other service providers to help cover less lucrative areas.

Some big markets had too much competition as the RF spectrum licenses for those cities were expensive and heavily bid upon, so Cricket has not yet rolled out 3G broadband service in some big cities. Cricket isn’t a good choice for data usage in those areas, but the voice and text services will still work.

For $5 more per month, many areas are covered under “Premium Extended Coverage” and move from roaming minutes to the flat-rate unlimited coverage.

Ultimately, Cricket doesn’t make much sense unless you live and work in either a local or premium extended coverage area. In fact they won’t sell you service unless you provide an address in one of their coverage zones. But as Cricket has continued to roll out more service areas, most people in the US and even some in Canada are now in coverage areas.

Cricket doesn’t have contract terms and early termination fees. The downside is that they don’t do much to subsidize the cost of their phones.

Coverage outside of the home region (or “local coverage area” as Cricket calls it) in other Cricket markets can be added for $5 per month. So even if you are a business traveler, if your travels take you mostly to markets served by Cricket and you live on the telephone, it could still be a very good choice. For instance, if you live and work mostly in Chicago but often take trips to Milwaukee, Madison, Rockford, and South Bend, Cricket can cover all of those areas inexpensively even if you talk a couple of hours per day (over 3000 minutes per month) on your cell phone.

Bottom Line Wireless Broadband and Phones

For those lucky enough to live and work in the right area, Cricket offers solid phone service, decent data service, and great prices.  That might be the perfect mix for many typical cell phone users.

You can reach Cricket Communications by clicking here or by calling:

1-800-922-5159.

Cricket’s History

Cricket Communications is a subsidiary of Leap Wireless, another name that you might not have heard. Leap got started as a subsidiary of QUALCOMM, the San Diego-based telecommunications technology giant whose CDMA technology is dominant across the United States, South Korea, and certain other markets. QUALCOMM provides the technology underpinnings for virtually all of Sprint and Verizon phone systems. Through its other operations such as MediaFLO, it provides technology, services, and systems for AT&T, too. Various flavors of CDMA technology have become common throughout the wireless communications world. Today, QUALCOMM has some of its intellectual property and products in most wireless phone systems in the world.

When QUALCOMM first got started with its CDMA phone business, the entrenched big telephone companies didn’t pay a lot of attention to the benefits of CDMA such as high network capacity, clear signal, and low power operation. Sprint was QUALCOMM’s first really huge wireless phone system. The company realized that it might succeed further if it launched its own wireless phone services in niches not covered by its big customers. Thus Leap Wireless was born. Leap was spun off as a separate company in 1998 after QUALCOMM realized some of its customers were not pleased about it operating its own phone network as a competitor.

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Brother MFC-9840CDW Color Laser Printer, Scanner, Copier, and Fax

January 21st, 2009 No comments

Especially notable features:

  • duplex printing
  • duplex scanning
  • built-in 802.11b/g wireless and wired 10/100Mbps Ethernet interfaces

Summary

As color laser printers have dropped in price, they have become very common in small businesses and even homes. We’re particularly enamored by the all-in-one variety which combines the laser printer with a scanner and copier and fax features in one space-saving unit. That’s FOUR different machines rolled into ONE!

(July 2010 update: While stocks last – Brother MFC-9840CDW Color Laser Multi-Function Center with Wireless Networking – $549.99 plus free shipping from Buy.com)

One of the most feature-rich and price-competitive manufacturers of such color laser all-in-ones is Brother. Here at angiemedia, we’ve been using our Brother MFC-9840CDW for over a year. We’ve been very pleased with the print speed, quality, and flexibility of the device. We primarily use it for scanning and color printing, using monochrome laser printers for our more common black and white print jobs as they generally have cheaper toner cartridges for a lower operational cost.

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