WIA FUNDING WILL BE CUT—WILL YOU HELP US?

***WIA FUNDING will be cut-we need your help!!***
The skinny on the funding-Underemployed and Unemployed constituents that are receiving TANF, Food stamps, Unemployed benefits, are eligible to go to school and receive the funding. It pays for their training. Please click the links and ask to NOT CUT the funding. You need to submit to both links!
WIA info link.
Thank you,
On-Site Computer Training Staff

Dreaming of Your Own Mobile ‘Hotspot’…Well…IT’S HERE! COMCAST BEWARE!!!!!!

Is MiFi the future of wireless internet — or a fad?

By Mark Milian, CNN
November 18, 2010 — Updated 1716 GMT (0116 HKT) San Francisco, California (CNN) — Two prevailing theories for how we will access the internet in the future hinge on the success of small plastic gadgets called MiFis.
The devices, many of them smaller than a smartphone, are similar to the wireless routers in many homes except they don’t need to be plugged into anything.
They connect to a cellular carrier’s data network. Once the battery is charged, a MiFi can be taken anywhere, and it provides a Wi-Fi signal to computers or iPods in a nearby vicinity.
In one of those future scenarios, each family would have their own one of these gadgets.
This can be more economical than subscribing to separate data plans for each cell phone and tablet you buy. Some families have found this especially effective for staying connected on road trips or in hotels that don’t offer free Wi-Fi.
AT&T introduced its first MiFi device on Wednesday. Sprint Nextel, which already has the 4G-enabled Overdrive, started selling a thinner gadget called the ZTE Peel last week. Verizon Wireless offers the popular MiFi 2200 Intelligent Mobile Hotspot and another equipped for international travel.
These products generally cost $50 to $150 (some require a two-year contract) and $35 to $60 per month for the service, depending on the carrier and amount of data you use. Virgin Mobile also has an unlimited plan for $40 with no contract.
T-Mobile USA, the only of the major wireless carriers not to offer a MiFi device, is considering releasing one next year when it expands and updates its network, Neville Ray, the company’s chief technology officer, told CNN recently. Current third-generation technology hasn’t been fast enough to serve this growing breed of products, he said.
But telecoms are rapidly improving the speeds of their networks with fourth-generation technology. So MiFi could eventually replace wired broadband subscriptions in the same way that Americans are canceling home phone lines in favor of cell phones. (That depends on whether the U.S. government solves an industry threat relating to wireless spectrum availability.)
Telecoms have been hot and cold about which connectivity methods to promote. Should they focus on MiFi as a gadget to connect everything, or on having a 3G chip in each device? Or maybe even on high-end smartphones that have the MiFi functionality built in (an additional fee is required)?
Not long after Apple’s iPad debuted in April, Sprint shrewdly began promoting the Overdrive with a case designed to fit the tablet and the MiFi. After selling out of initial stock, the telecom didn’t renew the program.
“It achieved its purpose at the time, which was to raise awareness that you can put these two devices together,” said Teresa Kellett, Sprint’s director of 4G.
When Verizon announced that it would begin carrying the iPad, it bundled the Wi-Fi version of the tablet with a MiFi, rather than selling an iPad with a 3G chip built in, like AT&T does.
Jon von Tetzchner, the co-founder of the Opera browser, endorses the MiFi concept. Not only is it cheaper, but it can be more efficient having one gizmo talk to cell towers and satellites and then distribute that signal to Wi-Fi-enabled appliances in the house, he said.
“In the next 10 years, every device will have an internet connection,” Tetzchner said recently.
On the other side of the debate, MiFis are believed by many to be a passing fad. Once every device can have a cellular chip in it, why would we need an extra gadget to carry around?
Telecoms are pushing this concept of “machine-to-machine,” which means adding cell chips to refrigerators, stoves and other appliances that you wouldn’t normally expect to connect to the Web. Some say this is the future of internet connectivity.
Dan Deeney, co-founder of technology investment firm New Venture Partners, doesn’t see a long-term future for the MiFi.
“I think there will be a role for them going forward, but I don’t think it’ll go mainstream,” said Deeney, who works closely with Verizon. “Right now it’s a matter of costs. Wi-Fi chips are cheap.”
Once the price of cell chips comes down, he says connected machines will become more ubiquitous. In that scenario, each gadget will manage its own connection and won’t need to rely on the limited battery life of one MiFi device.
Whichever the outcome, technologists agree that we’ll be seeing internet functionality embedded in a lot more products than we have now.

For more information go to: http://edition.cnn.com/2010/TECH/mobile/11/18/mifi.wireless.hotspots/

Dropped your phone in the toilet…No Problem!

How to quickly repair your Mobile Phone dropped in water?
Many of you get your mobile phone wet by one way or another. You worry as you mistakenly drop your mobile phone in water. It can also get wet if you are out in a heavy rain. However, there is no need to panic. It is possible to save your wet mobile phone by quickly repairing it. In order to save your mobile phone from water damage, you can consider these easy and simple solutions:

Act rapidly :

The first thing you have to do in order to save your wet mobile phone is to act rapidly. Quickly remove all the detachable parts as well as covers possible such as the back cover, battery, the SIM card, memory card etc. Next, take a piece of cloth or a tissue paper to wipe the excess water you are able to notice within the mobile phone. Make sure that you dry it completely. If you don’ t do this, the water inside the mobile phone will begin to evaporate and gather in places which will be difficult to reach.
This will save your wet mobile phone and it will start working if it was under water for just a little while.

Using a hairdryer :

Take a hairdryer and begin drying the mobile phone while giving more consideration to the place where the battery is located. The battery housing usually consists of tiny holes to let in air (so giving more space for water) inside the mobile phone.

Make sure that you are not holding the hairdryer very near to the mobile phone. Keeping it too close to the mobile phone may harm the electrical mechanism of the mobile phone. Keep on drying the mobile phone from a safe distance for about twenty to thirty minutes.
If solution number 1 and solution number 2 don’t work, try solution number 3.

Drying for a long time:

Take off the covers as well as battery from the mobile phone. Put the phone in a dry as well as warm place to let the water inside the phone evaporate gradually from the little holes in the mobile phone.

Do schools have the right to spy on students with school issued laptops?

A Philadelphia-area school district will pay $610,000 to two students to settle lawsuits claiming that it used school-issued laptops embedded with cameras to spy on students, even at home, The Philadelphia Inquirer reports.

The Lower Merion School District will pay $185,000 to two students, most of it going to Blake Robbins, a high-school junior. The district will also pay $425,000 in legal fees.

The school issued the laptops to 2,300 high school students without informing them that computers could be remotely tracked and that technicians could switch on embedded web cams.

The Robbins family claimed that the district had secretly taken hundreds of images of Blake, including one of him sleeping.

(Posted by Doug Stanglin for USA Today Ondeadline)