Showing posts with label update. Show all posts
Showing posts with label update. Show all posts

The Cognitive Science Behind Complex Content Retention | Dramel Notes

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I go on Twitter to update the world on the kind of coffee I am drinking, and I am hit with a deluge of:

Top 11 XX

You Won’t Believe What Happens When XX

15 Stats that XX

Top that with Trends, Moments, and whatever other item Twitter is shoving down my throat this month and the information stream is overwhelming.

Twitter is a singular platform in the tapestry that makes up my online life. I find the same thick cloud of information on Facebook, I am getting sent articles on Slack from co-workers, and then someone will still sneak in with a recommended link via email.

This generation of internet users sits down at their computers like they’re pulling up to an all-you-can-eat buffet, and the consumption of information is off any chart we ever thought of creating.

Infobesity is a real issue that content creators and marketers face. So what is the value of going “viral” in this environment?

Take it one step further.

How do we create content that people remember in this all-you-can-eat smorgasbord of online information?

Breaking down complex data and concepts in this environment of quick consumption can make this issue even stickier.

Infographics were originally created to give visual explanations for data points, but as the format has grown, so has its use outside of simple data visualizations. As more infographics have come online, the unique nature of these data breakdowns has dampened.

Complex data sets give marketers a strong and compelling story around sometimes less than compelling topics. Our job is to figure out how to break that story down quickly, in a way that can be remembered and inspires the emotions that can cause actions.

Why and How People Digest Complex Content

We know that from a content creator’s perspective, complex data can help create a compelling story, but it is important to understand why readers will take in complex data and utilize it in order to shape an appropriate strategy to get the information out.

Readers are looking to:

  • Acquire facts or procedures
  • Understand reality
  • Make sense of the world

Just as people have many different reasons they want to digest complex data, they have many different ways they learn and retain the data they digest.

There are seven general ways people learn and digest information:

  1. Visual: Using sight
  2. Auditory: Using songs or rhythms
  3. Verbal: Speaking the information out loud
  4. Kinesthetic: Using touch and taste to explore the information
  5. Logical: A more mathematical approach to concepts
  6. Interpersonal: Learning in groups
  7. Intrapersonal: Learning alone

These learning types are called modalities.

Research has shown that because most educational content is stored in terms of meaning, there is not a true value in teaching an individual based on their own, individualized modality. However, modality when it comes to content is incredibly important.

For example, if you want to get someone to remember the bones in the human skeleton, a teacher may use a faux skeleton that the class can see and touch. They wouldn’t only kinesthetic learners go down this path, even though the content and context of the lesson is overall better suited for this modality.

Different Ways to Integrate Modalities

Chunking

Chunking is a way of learning that does what it says; it takes larger concepts and breaks them into smaller digestible concepts. This can be done most effectively through the auditory and visual modalities.

Think about how you learned your phone number. We break it into several groups of smaller numbers in an auditory fashion rather than a long series of 10.

This infographic takes the concept of cooking rice, and breaks down the function through several independent sequences.

Interacting Images

An item is much more likely to be remembered if it can be shown interacting with another item. In this case, we are compiling items together to create a whole memory. In this infographic, the artist uses a simple use case of cows to explain complex government and economic models.

Because we understand what cows are, that they produce milk, and their general use in agriculture, the infographic is able to utilize them to symbolize resource ownership. We utilize information we already have to learn new information.

Dual Coding

Dual coding assumes that there are two cognitive sub-systems. One is specialized for dealing with processing imagery, and the other for dealing with language. A good example of dual coding is the utilization of graphs to represent numeric data. People can relate two different fractions more quickly in graph form.

Basic visualizations of data utilize dual coding concepts, as they allow for content to be quickly digested. Below, see an excerpt from an infographic showing a comparison of Fed Ex and UPS. You can quickly see that while Fed Ex leads in number of jets, UPS has almost five times the ground fleet.

Kinesthetic Learning

This modality is action based. Learners retain information by interacting with the item. Take our skeleton analogy above for example.

Movement and interaction is key. In terms of complex data digestion, interactive content hits on this learning style. Interactive content, designed largely through HTML 5 or Flash, allows content consumers to interact with data and information.

Below is an interactive piece of content we created that is loaded with data on British travelers. The content scrolls to unveil a story that coincides with the data. The content consumer must interact with the content for more data to be consumed.

Bottom-up and Top-down Processing

In bottom-up processing, stimulus influences our perception. So if we are looking at a red sphere on the ground, you allow the cognitive response to define the object.

Top-down, in contrast, uses your background knowledge to influence your perception. Our brains take information surrounding certain data, and use the entire bulk of information, including background knowledge, to fill in the missing information.

A good example top-down processing is this ambiguous image of a saxophone player and a woman.

From a bottom-up perspective, these are just some black blobs. Most people however inform the image from their background and see a face. Looking further, or being told to do so, a person will see a sax player formed in the black blob. Context and information helps to form what you see.

That is top-down processing.

This word cloud is a great example of top-down processing. It uses the Gettysburg Address to build an image of Lincoln.

Here is an image of Radiohead’s Thom Yorke made from data related to the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival.

Using Cognitive Science

Understanding cognitive science can allow you to create content that is more effective by matching the right modalities with the right message and data. However, understanding modalities and learning techniques can also allow us to optimize content we are already creating for it to reach maximum effectiveness.

Make it Concise and Scannable

By making your content concise and scannable, you are not only making the content visually appealing to intrapersonal learners, but you are also battling the infobesity issue. This is the reason really strong white papers should be presented via abstracts with the actual white paper being a downloadable or in some other format. Give consumers the gist and structure with concise data in a way that entices them to read more.

Learn to Tell Stories

By creating a story for readers around your complex data concept, you are utilizing multiple modalities and cognitive concepts.

Do you remember Aesop’s Fable about sour grapes? It taught us how easy it is for us to grow to despise what we cannot have. Fables were a way to utilize storytelling to teach complex moral concepts to children. These stories use a mixture of interacting images and top-down processing to help consumers use existing information to fill in the gaps of their understanding about a topic.

Visual Metaphors and Analogies

Similar to storytelling, adding metaphors and analogies to your content can help clear blind spots in your consumers’ understanding. “The Tale of Two Cows” infographic above did a tremendous job of using this concept to help make complex economic concepts easy to digest.

Make It Personal

People understand concepts better when the concepts relate to them directly. “How does this concept affect me?” is always a question you should look to answer. Taking the neuro-science one step further, you should look to influence the emotional reaction of the consumer.

In Conclusion

Going viral is a great thing, there is no debating that. However, as marketers, we need to think about not only how our content gets shared, but how it is digested. We need to plan around our consumers and think about how our minds work in relation to the information we are trying to get out there.

Complex data and concepts are simply something marketers will need to learn to work with as they develop their content strategies. Not all content can be quick hit, buffet-style content. The key is learning to shape the content so it doesn’t get passed by in the buffet line, and make it good enough that people want to eat as much as they can get their hands on.

More Resources:

  • http://www.fastcompany.com/3045853/work-smart/how-to-talk-about-complex-topics-without-dumbing-them-down
  • http://lifehacker.com/how-to-explain-complex-ideas-like-tech-to-those-who-d-1512002346
  • http://www.opencolleges.edu.au/informed/features/educational-psychology-20-things-educators-need-to-know-about-how-students-learn/

 

This post originally appeared on CopyPress, and is re-published with permission.

Image Credits

Featured Image: Doggygraph/Shutterstock.com
Screenshot by Dave Snyder. Taken December 2015.

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The Best Mac Apps of 2015 (And Our Favorite Updates) | Dramel Notes

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It has been a good year for Mac users. There was the new MacBook, OS X got that smooth El Capitan update, and Apple Music hit iTunes. And while Apple was bringing all that to the table, developers were busy bees too.

Brilliant calendar apps, feature-rich Twitter apps, a whole new Office experience, and a sassy way to find out the weather, were just some of the best OS X apps released or updated this year. Let’s dive in to find the cream of the crop.

CARROT Weather ($11.99)

I ran an unscientific poll among regular Mac users and 6 out of 9 people picked CARROT Weather as their app of the year. If you haven’t yet installed it, that’s reason enough. It’s a snarky, personality-driven weather app that is a great example of how technology can be useful as well as entertaining. You’ll get detailed weather updates, notification center widgets, keyboard shortcuts, and even a synced iOS app.

Justin summed up everything you’ll love about it in one line: “CARROT is her usual psychopathic self, keeping you informed about both the weather and your own insignificance.”

Helium for Mac OS X (Free)

Sometimes, small apps solve a problem you didn’t even know you had, and then you can’t imagine using your computer without it. Helium is one of those nifty little tools. It’s a browser window that floats on top of other windows, and it’s ideal for watching videos while doing other things on your screen. It has a low footprint and hardly takes any memory. It’s super-simple to use, and can even be set to be translucent.

Microsoft Office 2016 ($9.99/month or $149.99 one-off)

We got a whole new version of Microsoft Office this year, and although there were some installation problems initially, Office 2016 is now pretty stable. There’s lots of new stuff in Office 2016 for Mac, like integration with OneDrive, a complete design overhaul (it looks gorgeous now), and small additions like the Design tab in Word or the Presenter window in Powerpoint for reading notes privately while you do your presentation. Danny covered everything that’s new in Office 2016 so check it out if you need a powerful office app.

Malwarebytes Anti-Malware (Free)

Look, Mac is safer than Windows, but it’s not 100% safe. You can still get malware or a virus on OS X. How do you find out? Malwarebytes for Mac, released this year, is a free tool to scan your hardware for malicious elements and remove them easily. This is a new version of the popular Adware Medic tool, which Malwarebytes bought, along with its creator Thomas Reed who runs one of the best Mac security blogs around. You’re safe with this one.

CleanMyDrive 2 (Free)

Your Mac creates a lot of garbage files in its daily operation. You don’t see them, but they’re there. The one you’re probably most familiar with is a DS_Store file. It’s difficult and tedious to get rid of these. The original CleanMyDrive cleaned up so you don’t have to, and the new version does that and more. Sitting in the Mac Menubar, it shows you the junk on all your drives (even USB-connected ones) and offers to clean it, lets you eject everything with one click, and has easy drag-and-drop to transfer files from one drive to another. Very handy if you need to copy stuff to your flash drive!

Dictater (Free)

Apple’s built-in text-to-speech function is pretty great, but weirdly, OS X doesn’t have any interface for you to actually control it. Dictater is the solution Apple should have built into Mac OS X. It’s a simple app that lets you choose any text and have your Mac read it out. You can pause, rewind, and fast-forward by sentences or paragraphs; replay sentences; and use it as a teleprompter too. Setup Dictater correctly and it’ll be one of your favorite tools.

Reeder 3 ($9.99)

It was a sad day when Reeder died and we needed alternative RSS readers. Well, Reeder is back and it’s better than ever. It sports a gorgeous new UI that complements El Capitan’s flat look, and is stuffed with features. Reeder supports most RSS feed services; third-party sharing for Pocket, Instapaper, Buffer, and others; a new private browsing mode; and gesture support for the trackpad. Yeah, it’s not cheap, but it’s the best.

Bartender 2 ($15)

Bartender is one of the most popular tools to tidy up your Menubar. Bartender 2 is a visual makeover that goes great with El Capitan, and lets you create a second, custom menubar that is hidden most of the time. There are a few neat additions in version two, such as keyboard shortcuts to access the hidden menu, and a new search bar to locate what you want quickly.

Barsoom ($7)

If that’s too expensive, consider Barsoom. Justin compared Bartender and a bunch of other tools while figuring out apps to clean up your Menubar, and really liked Barsoom. Much like Bartender, it lets you hide apps in your menubar, add icons that OS X doesn’t show by default, and can even get rid of the text menus on the top-left for a while. All for half the price of Bartender.

Fantastical 2 ($49.99)

Yeah, Fantastical is a great calendar app, but should you pay $50 for it? Well, Harry thinks so, and with good reason. Fantastical integrates with all your calendar services like Google Calendar, iCloud and so on, changing with the tap of a key. It works on iOS too, for cross-platform ease and supports Continuity. It uses natural language commands, looks gorgeous, has a helpful “Today” view, and it’s pretty much the last calendar app you’ll ever need.

Any.Do (Free)

Well it’s about time! After being one of the best to-do list apps on Android, iPhone, Chrome, and all other platforms, Any.Do finally got a native Mac OS X app this year. There are two aspects that make Any.Do a must-have for Mac users. It integrates with the notification center so you never miss an important update, and it has a menubar icon to quickly add tasks.

The best to-do list should get out of the way 90% of the time, and work smartly when you want to add a task or it needs to remind you of one. That’s what Any.Do is all about.

Move to Apple Music ($4.99)

Apple’s biggest non-hardware announcement this year was Apple Music, a new streaming music platform. If you’ve switched to Apple Music but were already using Spotfiy or Rdio, then you probably want to bring your old playlists with you. The simplest way to do it is a small dedicated app called Move to Apple Music. The app costs five bucks, but you can try it for free first to check if it’s working for you. It’s dead simple, it gets the job done, and you’ll soon be sharing and discovering playlists on Apple Music.

Unclutter ($5.99)

This is one of those tools I wish came with Mac OS X. Unclutter is an organizational tool for OS X, which sits in your menubar. When you take your cursor to the menubar, it slides down to reveal three panels: clipboard, drop zone, and notepad. Use them like you would normally use a clipboard, drop zone, or a notepad. Unclutter just makes it convenient. It supports Dropbox for backups and I only wish it was free.

Tweetbot 2 for Mac ($9.99)

Tweetbot was yet again our pick for the best Twitter app for iOS, and that extends to the Mac version following the new version released this year. If you’re a Twitter power user, this is the app you need, especially given how woefully out-of-date the Twitter for Mac app is. Tweetbot gives you multiple columns and windows, allows you to mute users, hashtags, or keywords, supports third-party apps, includes a powerful search feature, and looks gorgeous doing it all.

Tether (Free)

Tether is one of the easiest ways of protecting your Mac from snooping colleagues and family. It uses your iOS device and pairs it with your Mac using Bluetooth. Set your Mac to automatically lock when it’s far from your iOS device; when you’re back, it’ll unlock automatically. Simple, efficient and free. There are other options to unlock your Mac with fingerprint or Bluetooth too, if Tether doesn’t float your boat.

TripMode ($7.99)

Mobile data is costly. So when you need to tether your phone to your Mac or use mobile data through a hotspot, you don’t want to waste it on background apps and such. You could go and stop every app separately, or just grab TripMode. It’ll show you a list of all the apps that are using the Internet, and let you switch them on and off with a toggle.

It costs a pretty penny for what it does, but its simplicity would be worth it if you often use mobile data with your Mac. There’s a free trial also at the link below, if you want to try it out first.

What’s Your Mac App of the Year?

I don’t tend to use weather apps, so I’m going to pick Helium as the most impressive app of 2015 on Mac. What about you?

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Never Lose Your Windows 10 Laptop Again With This One Feature | Dramel Notes

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As part of the recent November Update to Windows 10, a new feature became available that lets you track your laptop wherever it goes. The next time you leave your laptop somewhere — or if someone steals it — you now have a way to get it back.

But before you can use it, you have to first enable it on your system.

Launch the Settings app by searching for it in the Start Menu, and once launched, navigate to the Update & Security section. There you’ll find a subsection called Find My Device. (If you don’t see it, make sure you’re on Windows 10 version 1511.)

There are two things you have to do:

  1. Sign in with a Microsoft Account.
  2. Turn on location settings.

With those two prerequisites fulfilled, you should be able to enable the Find My Device setting by clicking on Change. While enabled, this feature periodically reports your device location to Microsoft.

Finally, visit the My Microsoft Devices page to see the locations of all devices that have the Find My Device feature on.

Will you use this feature? Or is your privacy more important than the convenience? Let us know in the comments below!

Image Credit: Laptop Map by Georgejmclittle

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How Windows 10’s “Builds” Are Different From Service Packs | Dramel Notes

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If you’re a long-time Windows user, you’re probably familiar with service packs. But Microsoft seems done with service packs. Windows 10’s first big update — the “November update” — is a “build” rather than a service pack. Windows 10’s future big updates will be builds, too.

Microsoft actually gave up on service packs years ago. The last service pack released for a consumer version of Windows was Windows 7 Service Pack 1 back in 2011. Windows 8 never received service packs — instead, Microsoft release. (Who comes up with these names?)

How Service Packs Worked

Previously, Windows “service packs” were basically big Windows patches delivered via Windows Update, or downloadable separately. You installed these in the same way you installed typical patches from Windows Update.

Service Packs performed two roles. One, they bundled together all the security and stability patches that had been released for Windows previously, giving you a single big update you could install rather than installing hundreds of individual Windows updates. They also sometimes contained new features or tweaks. For example, Windows XP Service Pack 2 dramatically improved Windows XP’s security and added a “Security Center.”

Microsoft tended to release new service packs regularly. For example, it released three service packs for Windows XP, two for Windows Vista, and one for Windows 7. But then the service packs stopped, and none were released for Windows 8 or 8.1.

Windows Updates Still Work Like They Used To

Typical Windows updates still work like they previously did. When Windows Update automatically downloads and installs updates on your system, it’s generally downloading small patches. You can view a list of these patches and even uninstall individual ones from the Control Panel.

The average, day-to-day updates work similarly. But, rather than regularly releasing new service packs, Microsoft is releasing new “builds” of Windows 10.

Builds Are Like Entirely New Versions of Windows

Conceptually, it’s easiest to think of these “builds” as entirely new versions of Windows. Going from Windows 10’s initial release to the “November Update” version of Windows 10 is similar to going from Windows 8 to Windows 8.1.

When a build is released, Windows 10 automatically downloads and installs it. Windows will then reboot and “upgrade” your existing version  of Windows to the new build.

Rather than saying you now have a “service Pack” installed, Microsoft changes the build number of the operating system. So, to see which build of Windows 10 you have installed, you can press the Windows key, type “winver” into the Start menu or Start screen, and press Enter.

The initial version of Windows 10 was “Build 10240”. The November update marks the introduction of a new version number scheme — it’s “Version 1511” because it was released in the 11th month of 2015. The November Update is also “Build 10586”.

You can’t “uninstall” a build from the Control Panel like you could a service pack, or like you can a more typical Windows Update. Instead, after Windows upgrades itself to a new build, you can go to the Settings > Update & security > Recovery screen and have Windows “go back” to a previous build. This option is only available for 30 days, after which Windows 10 will remove the old files and you won’t be able to downgrade.

This is the exact same process for uninstalling Windows 10 and reverting to Windows 7 or 8.1. In fact, going through the Disk Cleanup wizard after upgrading to a new build and you’ll see gigabytes of files are used by “Previous Windows installation(s)”. These are the files that allow you to downgrade, and are deleted after 30 days. It works exactly like upgrading to a new version of Windows because that’s what it is. After that, you can’t uninstall the build without completely reinstalling the original version of Windows 10.

This also ensures system restore works properly. When you “reset” your PC to its factory default state using Windows 10’s integrated reset feature, it’ll give you a fresh version of your current build of Windows 10 rather than downgrading you to the original version of Windows 10 your computer came with.

Microsoft doesn’t actually provide a downloadable file that allows you to install the new build on multiple PCs. However, Microsoft is providing downloads of the Windows 10 installation media with the new builds — currently, the November update — preinstalled. Previously, it was a bit more work for the average Windows user to manually “slipstream” a service pack into Windows installation media.


While only one new “build” of Windows 10 has been released to everyone, Microsoft regularly distributes new builds to “Windows insiders” so they can test the new software. Microsoft is attempting to keep every Windows 10 installation up-to-date, and they’re doing it with this new update system. While Windows 10 will be getting many more big updates, they’ll be in the form of builds, not classic service packs.

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How to Track Your Windows 10 PC or Tablet If You Ever Lose It | Dramel Notes

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Windows 10’s first big update in November 2015 added a device-tracking feature. You can now enable GPS tracking and remotely locate a lost Windows 10 tablet or laptop just like you’d track a smartphone, tablet, or MacBook.

Previously, this required third-party software like Prey. Now, it’s integrated for everyone to use with a Microsoft account. It is off by default, so you will have to enable it before you lose your device.

Limitations

Before you enable this feature, be aware that it has some limitations. This is only a device-tracking solution, and it won’t allow you to remotely wipe or lock your PC. You also won’t be able to play an alarm or snap a photo of the person using your device with the webcam. It will only show you your device’s location– that’s it! Microsoft may add more features to this in the future, but it hasn’t yet.

This also won’t work quite as well as a lost-smartphone-tracking solution. You can have your computer automatically check in and report its location, but it needs to be powered on and connected to the Internet to do so. A smartphone with a cellular data connection is always-on, always-connected, and can be more easily tracked.

It’s also possible for a thief to wipe your device, restoring it to factory settings. This will stop you from tracking that device. Windows 10 doesn’t offer the factory-reset-protection iPhones, iPads, and even modern Android devices do.

Enable “Find My Device” in Windows 10

To enable the device-tracking, open the Start menu or Start screen and select Settings.

If you’ve already lost your PC or tablet, there’s usually no way to enable this remotely. If you’ve previously installed a remote-desktop solution like Chrome Remote Desktop, TeamViewer, or another remote-access program, you could try to remotely access your PC and enable the device-tracking feature.

Navigate to Update & security > Find My Device in the Settings app to find this feature.

You’ll need to be using a Microsoft account to enable this. You’ll log into that Microsoft account from a web browser to track the device if you ever lose it.

You’ll see a message saying “Find my device is off” if you haven’t enabled it yet. Click the “Change” button to enable this feature.

Activate the the “Save my device’s location periodically” option when prompted and your Windows 10 PC will regularly and automatically send its location to Microsoft. This will allow you to locate your PC even if it isn’t powered-up and online when you go to track it, as you can view the last known location.

Choose a Name for Your PC

The PC appears in the list of registered devices with the name set on the PC itself. To rename the PC and give it a more usable name, open the Settings app on the PC and navigate to System > About. Click the “Rename PC” button and give your PC a more meaningful name.

Track Your Lost Device

When you want to track your lost device, open a web browser and go to account.microsoft.com/devices.

Sign in with the same Microsoft account you used on that Windows 10 PC you want to track.

You’ll see a list of devices registered to your Microsoft account. Scroll through the list and look for the device you want to track. You’ll see “Last seen at [time] in [City]” to the right of the device.

Click the “Find my device” link and you’ll be able to track the device on a map. If the device is powered on and connected to the Internet via Wi-FI, a wired Ethernet cable, or a cellular data connection, its location will update regularly.


Microsoft is bringing Windows 10 for phones and Windows 10 for PCs closer together. The desktop version of Windows 10 is now getting features that were previously only on Windows phone. The “Find My Device” feature is just one example of this. If you have a Windows 10 phone, you can enable “Find My Device” in almost exactly the same way and track a lost Windows phone from the same Microsoft website.

Image Credit: Earth’s City Lights from NASA

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How to Install Apps to an SD Card (or Another Drive) on Windows 10 | Dramel Notes

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Windows 10’s big November update added the ability to install apps from the Store onto an SD card, a USB drive, or another type of external or internal drive. This will be extremely useful on tablets and other devices with a small amount of storage. Just plug in an SD card and you can install apps to it.

This was possible in the initial version of Windows 8 with a geeky trick, but the feature was removed in Windows 8.1. Now, it’s back in Windows 10. You can also have Windows 10 save offline maps and other files to another drive, too.

Insert an SD Card

First, you’ll need to get an SD card that fits your device. Depending on your device, you may need a larger SD card or a smaller Micro SD card. (Micro SD cards are often sold with adapters that allow them to function as larger SD cards, too.)

If the SD card sticks out of the side of your laptop or tablet when you insert it, you may want to consider a “low-profile” Micro SD card. These are a bit shorter than standard SD cards, and they will sit flush with the edge of tablets and laptops where a standard-size SD card sticks out. This makes it more convenient to leave the SD card inserted for the permanent storage boost.

When buying an SD card, remember that it’s not all about price, either. Storage classes matter. You wouldn’t want to use the slowest class of SD card for an app, as that will just slow down the app unnecessarily.

Install New Apps to the SD Card (or Another Drive)

After you’ve inserted an SD card, USB drive, or another storage device, open the Settings app from your Start menu or Start screen.

Navigate to System > Storage in the Settings app. If you have an SD card inserted, you should see it in the list of drives at the top of the screen.

Scroll down and click or tap the “New apps will save to” option under Save locations. Select your SD card or another drive here and click “Apply”.

Other options on this screen allow you to select the drive where new documents, music, pictures, and videos are stored, too.

Now, go to the Windows Store and install an app like you normally would. Windows will install that app to the SD card, saving space on your internal drive and making it possible to install apps that just wouldn’t fit on the small internal storage included with many less-expensive Windows 10 tablets and laptops.

How to Move Installed Apps to the New Drive

Enable this setting and apps you install in the future will be stored on your SD card. However, apps you already have installed won’t be moved to the SD card.

While it may be possible to move apps to the SD card in a hacky, unsupported way, this method wouldn’t be reliable in the future. Instead, you should do what Microsoft recommends. Simply uninstall the app and it will be removed from your internal storage. Reinstall the app afterwards and Windows 10 will download it to your SD card and store it there.

To uninstall an app, locate it in your Start menu or Start screen and right-click it or long-press it. Select “Uninstall”.

Afterwards, go back to the Windows Store, search for that app, and install it normally. Your Windows 10 system will re-download it and place it on the SD card.

What if You Unplug the Drive?

Remove the SD card, USB drive, or another external drive with apps on it and the apps won’t function. You can click or tap the tile to launch the app, but nothing will happen. Reconnect the storage to the computer and everything will work normally again.

How to Undo This Change

If you want to stop using the external storage location in the future, return to the System > Storage screen in the Settings app and select “This PC” for “New apps installed to”. New apps will then install to your internal storage, as normal. However, apps you’ve installed to the SD card or another external drive won’t be migrated, so you’ll have to use the uninstall-and-reinstall trick if you want to move them.


Traditional desktop programs can be installed the SD card or another drive in the usual way, of course. When installing an application like you normally would, select the SD card, USB drive, or other drive as its installation location in the installation wizard.

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6 New WhatsApp Features You Should Know About | Dramel Notes

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When you’re using an app day in and day out, it’s easy to miss out on new features that get added. You get a notification for an update, you update, and you continue using it as you always did. But what did you get in all those updates? With WhatsApp, quite a bit.

The best social network or instant messenger app is the one which all of your friends and family use. WhatsApp has an incredible user base now, and after becoming one of the fastest growing social networks, it’s now adding features to make it a solid, robust app.

Whether you know it or not, recent updates have brought some cool new features, from starring messages to backing up your chat logs to Google Drive. Most of these changes are reflected in the new WhatsApp for Android, but they should be available on iPhone soon enough. If you use WhatsApp, you need to know this.

‘Star’ Messages to Find Them Later

When someone sends an important message on WhatsApp, you can’t save it. Finding it later can be a pain, despite the robust search engine in WhatsApp. One of our workarounds was to use hashtags to mark important messages. But now, there’s a cool new tool.

WhatsApp now lets you ‘star’ messages. Long-press any message, choose the Star in the top menu bar, and move on. It’s exactly like a bookmark or a favorite.

Later, when you want to look up any bookmarked message, go to Menu > Starred Messages and you’ll see them all, listed chronologically.

The starred messages can also be searched, so you can find all the important stuff you marked by some person. You can also ‘unstar’ a message later, so that the Starred Messages can be cleaned up easily.

Back Up Chats to Google Drive

If you accidentally delete your WhatsApp chat history, you can restore it in a few steps. But what if you lost your phone, or got a new one, or had to reset your existing storage? While WhatsApp backs up chat history regularly, there’s now an easier (and better) way: Google Drive.

The new version of WhatsApp for Android lets you automatically backup your chat logs to Google Drive. Go to Menu > Settings > Chats and Calls > Chat Backup > Google Drive Settings and set it up. I’d recommend backing up daily (you can choose weekly, monthly, or manual), over Wi-Fi only (thus saving data costs), and including videos.

Remember, you can get 1 TB of Google Drive storage for free, so as far as WhatsApp backups go, you should be fine even if you upload all of the videos and photos.

Easier Way to Clear Chats

If you’re already backing up those chats, there’s no reason for you to keep really old messages, is there? It’s time to clear things up, and WhatsApp has made it simpler than ever.

Go to Menu > Settings > Chats and Calls > Chat History > Clear All Chats and you’ll see three options: all messages, messages older than 30 days, or messages older than 6 months. Choose what you want and WhatsApp will do the rest.

You can do this same action with specific chats too, whether with individuals or groups. In any chat, tap Menu > More > Clear Chat and you’ll see the same three options. Simple, eh?

Mark Messages as Read or Unread

You can now hide your WhatsApp status or when you were last seen, which is great. But for your own personal usage, sometimes, you might want to mark a message as unread.

Think about it in email. The ability to right-click and mark as unread is a great way to remind yourself that you haven’t fully registered an email, that you need to reply to it, or that it’s important in some way.

You can now do that in WhatsApp too. Choose a chat with any contact or group, long-press on it, and tap “Mark as Unread”—yup, as simple as that. You can do the opposite too—long-press a chat you haven’t read and you’ll see an option to “Mark as Read”, so it seems like you’ve read the message without ever opening the chat.

Do note that this doesn’t mean change the message’s status for your recipient. The recipient still sees that you have read the message. It only reflects as unread in your own phone.

Mark as read/unread has also made its way to WhatsApp Web on your desktop.

Use Custom Notifications for People and Groups

Some contacts and chat groups are more important than others, right? Well, then set a different type of notification alert for them. WhatsApp has rolled out custom notifications.

One of the cornerstones of blocking mobile distractions is to allow the right people through and cut off everyone else, and that’s what this feature does. Open any chat, tap the title bar, and you’ll find an option for Custom Notifications.

In it, you can set the notification tone, vibration effect, popup notification, and the color of the LED light for new messages. For Whatsapp voice calls, you’ll only get custom ringtones and vibrations.

Link Previews

This is a neat new feature that doesn’t really make you do anything special, but just adds to the overall experience.

When a link is pasted into a WhatsApp chat, you will now see a link preview with an image from the article, the headline, and the base URL—much like what you see on Facebook or Twitter.

If you’re the one sharing a link, you have the option to not include that preview, too.

What WhatsApp Feature Do You Want?

WhatsApp has come a long way from being a simple instant messaging app, but they can always do better. So if you could request the WhatsApp developers to add a new feature, what would it be?

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WordPress.com Gets Desktop App, Goes Open Source in Biggest Update Ever by @mattsouthern | Dramel Notes

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WordPress.com has been rewritten from scratch in what is said to be the platform’s biggest update ever.

Not to be confused with the self-installed version of WordPress, WordPress.com is the fully hosted version of the content management system.

What’s changed under the hood will likely be interesting only to developers — what it equates to for the average blogger is a refined experience on the web, and an all new desktop application.

Here are some of the new technical changes which make this possible:

  • WordPress.com now interacts with the WordPress core like other third-party application out there. A REST API is used to fetch posts, publish new ones, upload photos and more.
  • In lieu of PHP and MySQL, the new WordPress.com was built with JavaScript and API calls. This means the server will distribute a functional WordPress client that runs mostly within the browser.
  • It has been built as a Singe Page Application, which results in a minimum of loading screens and a fully responsive experience on any device.
  • WordPress.com open source and on GitHub. So long as you comply with the GNU General Public License version 2, you can do with it as you wish.

As mentioned, a new desktop app for Mac is available, which uses the new technology implemented on the web to create an experience which is more or less identical. Apps for Window and Linux are being bored on as well.

WordPress.com being completely rewritten is potentially a sign that the company is trying to keep up with modern web publishing platforms like Medium.

While the web version of WordPress still lacks some of the more advanced customization possible in the self-installed version — it is a clean, fast, and powerful upgrade that will keep WordPress.com in the game against rising competition.

Image Credit: GongTo / Shutterstock.com

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