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GNWritings
Written by Laura
Steward Atchison |
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My biggest personal frustration is lost productivity,
time I waste every day that cannot be gotten back that I
did not want to waste on purpose. I am not talking about
vacation days or reading a book or taking a walk or
playing with the dog here. I am talking about work time
when I cannot figure out where the day has gone and I
have nothing to show for it. Nothing off my To Do list,
no planning for the future, no prospecting, no website
redesign, nothing that makes me feel like I did
something useful at the end of the day.
Most days I can pound out the action items I plan for
myself but sometimes I just cannot figure out where the
day goes. I have started keeping a paper day planner for
what I work on. Yes, I said paper, but I do like it for
some things. Whether it is talking to people, responding
to email, reading e-newsletters, lunch, cleaning off my
desk, upgrading software, running virus scans, figuring
out why my computer blue screened (driver issue) or
sending out proposals. Whatever it is I write it down in
a little book I carry with me. I do this every few
months for a couple of weeks at a time.
What I typically find is that emails and phone calls
tend to absorb most of my day that is unplanned time.
Necessary, in most cases, but unplanned time
nonetheless. That does not mean I can skip the stuff I
have planned. In some cases it drops tasks to a lower
priority but if I have properly filtered the things I
have on my lists they are all things that need to get
done. The tough part is that often planned tasks get
dropped for days as I am responding to perceived higher
need.
Notice I used the word perceived here. Just because it
is a new task does not mean it is more urgent, but of
course when you answer that phone and a client or
teammate needs help we often tend to drop all plans to
help out in that moment.
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Quote of the Month |
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You cannot do a kindness too
soon, for you never know how
soon it will be too late.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Just for Laughs |
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Referral Nets Client
Alpern Rosenthal a $1000 Thank You! |
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Alpern
Rosenthal provides a full range of accounting, auditing,
tax, consulting, litigation support, and business valuation
services, to individuals, businesses, trusts and estates.
Alpern Rosenthal has all of the attributes of a local firm,
providing personalized, responsive, insightful and proactive
services while offering national and international resources
and capabilities. |
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Michael Petroski
SeniorTax &
IT Manager |
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Alpern Rosenthal creates the right
solutions for clients, using the very latest in business
information, trends and techniques. With Alpern Rosenthal
you are choosing someone you can trust and rely on. |
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Read More About Our Referral Program |
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How Big is Your Mailbox? |
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We have spent a lot of time recently (which
translates to a lot of extra expense for our customers) troubleshooting,
managing, and working with VERY large mailboxes.From a purely
technical standpoint, once a mailbox gets over a GB in size, it starts
to become a minor challenge in terms of supporting it, speed of access
and search, and management in general. Once a mailbox gets to be over 2
GB in size, we start to run into some very serious limitations that will
manifest in support, management, and disaster recovery scenarios.
Believe us when we
say we are VERY heavy Outlook users, but using a few simple techniques,
it is not much of a challenge at all to keep our own mailboxes under the
1 GB limit we need to keep us ‘light on our feet' with our own
mailboxes.
First: archive!
Outlook has a built in archive feature that will remove things from your
mailbox and put them into a long term storage file. Our technique is to
add to that archive file daily until it gets to be between 1 and 2 GB in
size, then burn that to a DVD (so that it isn't taking up space on the
server).
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10 Ways to Work More
Securely |
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used with permission from
Microsoft At Work
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The security of
your computer and data is crucial for you and the success of
your company. Lost or stolen information can reveal company
secrets, or expose your confidential or personal
information. The more you do to keep your computer secure,
the safer your information will be. Use these 10 tips to
learn ways you can help protect your computer, your data,
and your company's network.
1. Work with
your IT department
Make sure that you install all of the patches and updates
that your IT department recommends. In addition to
installing Windows and Office updates, your IT department
might require you to install additional security software,
such as a firewall or custom software to help you connect
from remote locations. Making these regular installations
will keep your computer and your company's network as secure
as possible.
2. Use
strong passwords
Passwords provide the first line of defense against
unauthorized access to your computer, and a good password is
often underestimated.
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5 Productivity Tips for
Windows |
used with permission from
Microsoft at Work
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Print more easily,
find files faster, and send e-mail right from your desktop.
Print from Windows Explorer
If you need to print a document, let’s say a Microsoft Word
document, there’s no need to launch Microsoft Office Word
first. Browse your hard drive for the file that you want to
print, right-click its icon, and then click Print.
This will automatically send the document to your printer
without launching Microsoft Office Word.
Pin programs to the Start
menu
Want to add your favorite programs to the Start menu? From
the Start menu, click All Programs. Locate a favorite
program, right-click the program’s icon, and then click
Pin to Start menu. That’s it.
You can also pin
an application by dragging and dropping its icon from All
Programs to the Start menu. The program is now “pinned”
to your Start menu. To remove it, right-click the program
icon on the Start menu and then click Unpin from Start
menu.
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7 Things to Know about Virus Writers |
by Monte Embysk
reprinted with permission from the
Microsoft Small Business Center
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I spend a growing percentage
of my time getting rid of unwanted e-mails that contain viruses. If I
open one of them, it potentially could overwrite files and disable my
antivirus software.
What exactly is in the heads
of these virus writers? Anything?
I took my inquiry to Sarah
Gordon, an expert on the psychology of hackers and virus writers. She
did her best to answer an overly broad question. Gordon is a senior
research fellow at Symantec's security response unit, and previously was
a researcher for the antivirus research and development team at IBM's
Thomas J. Watson Research Center.
She meets face-to-face with
hackers and virus writers on occasion, to understand why they do what
they do, and conducts research at international hacker conferences such
as DEF CON. To see Gordon's background and some of her research papers,
visit her Web site at www.badguys.org.
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