INSTANT NETWORK

You
can create a simple home or office network easily with D-Link's new
DGS-2208 box.
This is what's called a digital switch box, and that's what the "DGS"
letters stand for. It's the size of a paperback book. On the back of the
box there are eight Ethernet ports. You plug an Ethernet cable from your
router into one of them, and your computers and other devices into the
others.
That's pretty much it because this D-Link switch is "self-managed": It
automatically recognizes everything connected to it, and there are no
configuration routines to figure out. Everything connected is now
linked. The
package comes with a copy of Network Magic, which allows all users to
share files and peripherals.
Aside from computers, the most common devices hooked into a network are
printers and scanners. But no matter what is plugged into the digital
switch box, they are all connected, with one proviso: The computers and
peripherals must be network-enabled. This means they must have chips
that allow them to be connected to a network, but this has been common
for the past few years, and most computer equipment is network-enabled.
We want to point out that this creates a wired network, not wireless. We
much prefer wired networks because they are secure from eavesdroppers,
and they are less subject to interference. The DGS-2208 digital switch
box operates at gigabit speeds. This is extremely fast, but please note
that the data transfer rate you get is dependent on the weakest link in
the chain, meaning if you have a slow router or slow service provider,
your transfer rate is limited by that unit. The DGS-2208 sells for
around $50 from discount retailers. It has been getting four- and
five-star ratings from users. More info is available at dlink.com.
It's pronounced "whee," and that's also the feeling of the many people
who have made it the most popular video game machine of the year. (Six
million have been sold this year, 15 million in the past four years.)
The Wii has inertial
sensors
that recognize the users' body movements as they play a game. You dance
and shift as you play, matching movements on the screen, which has made
it into not just a game machine but a piece of exercise equipment. (Joy
has become pretty adept at boxing.)
Nintendo, maker of the Wii machine, is working to expand uses even
further. Currently, you can download several full games to the Wii
through its wireless connection. Playing the company's Pokemon Snap
allows users to take pictures of their best plays and post them to the
Wii message board. This will probably be extended to other games and
follows the increasingly popular practice of game players capturing
their best efforts and posting the videos to
YouTube.com.
You can also get news and weather reports on your Wii game machine.
That's how we learned about crocodiles disappearing from northern India.
(Heady stuff.)
We tried out Tony Hawk's new skateboarding game on the Wii, which has
lots of movement and many falls. (You don't have to actually fall down
when the game character does.) The Wii costs around $380 from
discounters.
FREE SUPPORT ON VALENTINE'S DAY
CyberDefender (CyberDefender.com)
is a tech service that works to solve problems on computers and help
people set up new ones. Its support services normally cost $100 and up,
but on Valentine's Day (Feb. 14) it's giving out free support. If the
problem is particularly tough, the service can use remote control
software to take over your computer and examine the problems in detail.
You have to give permission for this, of course, but you can watch
what's being done on your screen. (We've had this done several times and
never had any security problem with it.)
VFLYER
Here's an update to a service we covered last year. Instead of
plastering "for sale" fliers on car windshields, you can send digital
notices to major Web services like craigslist, eBay, Google Base and
others.
Called vFlyer, this service is free and produces beautiful sale fliers.
It provides an online template, and you just fill in the details and
drop in a photo, if you have one. The result is as professional-looking
as if an ad agency had done it. (We
tried it out with a "for sale" notice for a friend who was selling a
car, and the result was as classy as a magazine ad.)
When you have finished your ad, you check off destinations where you
want it sent. If you're selling a house, the service can now upload your
flier to the real estate Web sites Zillow and Hotpads as well as OLX and
Geebo. The code used to generate these fliers, by the way, can be copied
from the vflyer.com site and
embedded in any Web site.
BOOKS
"Digital Astrophotography, A Guide to Capturing the Cosmos" by Stefan
Seip; $30 from Rocky Nook Press,
RockyNook.com.
Almost everyone likes pictures of the stars and the planets. You need a
telescope, of course, but once you have that, using a digital camera has
big advantages.
A digital image can be manipulated in many ways, and there are lots of
programs
that can do it. Sharpness can be enhanced, false color images can be
generated easily, and things not readily seen in a normal image can be
brought out by filtering routines that separate parts of an image that
may be only a single pixel apart in brightness. The book has plenty of
pictures showing what can be done.
NOTE: Readers can search several years of columns here at
oncomp.com or seven years worth of columns at
oncomp2.com