Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,551,487 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Hot stuff: what you need and what you don't: your technology setup may be sufficient for your needs.


Ready for some good news? For the past decade or two, your office technology goal probably was to stay reasonably current--or at least avoid obsolescence ob·so·les·cent  
adj.
1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete.

2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed.
. That was a challenge because nearly every year many of your critical applications underwent upgrades and you were forced to buy faster, more powerful computers to run that hot, new software. Not only did your wallet suffer sticker shock Sticker shock is a United States term for the feeling of surprise experienced by consumers upon finding unexpectedly high prices on the price tags (stickers) of products they are considering purchasing. , you had to get up to speed on how to use this new technology.

Although there are plenty of new gadgets out there right now (and some actually are pretty good), you'll be happy to learn you probably have nearly everything needed with little or no upgrading necessary. So you won't have to reeducate re·ed·u·cate also re-ed·u·cate  
tr.v. re·ed·u·cat·ed, re·ed·u·cat·ing, re·ed·u·cates
1. To instruct again, especially in order to change someone's behavior or beliefs.

2.
 yourself on how to use the new stuff, and you can even put your checkbook away.

To determine whether your current equipment really can handle your immediate future needs, read "Time to Upgrade" (JofA, Dec.02, page 30). If you've stayed reasonably up-to-date in recent years, all you'll probably need is some minor equipment tweaking tweaking Vox populi Fine-tuning to produce optimal results , such as adding computer memory (you can't have too much memory), rather than a major overhaul.

And there's more good news: Hardware bargains abound. In addition, since most of the equipment you may be buying will not be urgent, got-to-have-it-now technology, there's no need to pay a lot of money for just-introduced, cutting-edge gear. Price competition is so keen these days that if you wait a while, not only will the new products' kinks be worked out, but prices likely will drop, too.

For example, those recently unveiled 3-GHz speed-demon computers not only are overkill overkill Vox populi An excess of anything , they're overpriced o·ver·price  
tr.v. o·ver·priced, o·ver·pric·ing, o·ver·pric·es
To put too high a price or value on.


overpriced
Adjective

costing more than it is thought to be worth

Adj.
; a far less expensive PC with a 1-GHz Pentium processor is fast enough for most business applications.

Now, on to the hot, new stuff'.

USB USB
 in full Universal Serial Bus

Type of serial bus that allows peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, digitizers, data gloves, etc.) to be easily connected to a computer.
 HOST ADAPTERS

In the old days, if you wanted to add some major components to your computer--such as another hard drive to expand your data-storage capacity, or a read-write optical drive for massive backups or to copy huge chunks of data onto a CD--you had to hire an expert to crack open the computer's case, fiddle with Verb 1. fiddle with - manipulate, as in a nervous or unconscious manner; "He twiddled his thumbs while waiting for the interview"
twiddle

manipulate - hold something in one's hands and move it
 the wires and cables and then reprogram re·pro·gram  
tr.v. re·pro·grammed or re·pro·gramed, re·pro·gram·ming or re·pro·gram·ing, re·pro·grams
To program again.



re
 it to recognize the new hardware.

No more. Meet the USB host adapter. If you've never heard of USB, which stands for Universal Serial Bus See USB.

(hardware, standard) Universal Serial Bus - (USB) An external peripheral interface standard for communication between a computer and external peripherals over an inexpensive cable using biserial transmission.
, listen up, because that little component is about all you'll need to easily upgrade your computer into a more versatile machine--without expert help to open the PC's case and reprogram its setup.

A USB is a special kind of plug, or port, that links a computer with any number of peripherals. A few years ago, manufacturers began installing one or two USB ports in the back of most computers in addition to the conventional serial and parallel ports that connect your printer and other gear. Few people used the adapters even though they transmit data between the computer and a peripheral far faster than conventional links.

One of the barriers to USBs was the computer's own "stupidity"--that is, before the plug could work, a user had to laboriously "teach" the computer where the USB was and what it was supposed to do. But when the Windows operating system operating system (OS)

Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs.
 incorporated software that automatically did the job--called plug and play--USBs began catching on. All you had to do was plug in the USB adapter Refers to some type of network or communications controller that plugs into the computer via the USB port. It may refer to an Ethernet adapter, Bluetooth adapter or serial or parallel port adapter.  and it played without fiddling with the software.

An even bigger push came when the second generation of USB--USB 2.0--was introduced. Not only is it much faster than its predecessor, 1.0, but it is "backward compatible Refers to hardware or software that is compatible with earlier versions of the product. Also called "downward compatible." Contrast with forward compatible.

backward compatible - backward compatibility
"--which means it can adapt to handle components designed for the slower 1.0.

MEMORY STICKS

While we're on the subject of USBs, think memory sticks. They're everywhere--hanging from key rings and from neck lanyards--some people even dangle dangle Nursing A popular term for the first movement a Pt is allowed, either after surgery under general anesthesia, or 'under local', where the recuperee allows his/her feet to dangle over the side of the bed  them from gold necklaces. They come in many colors (including Day-Glo, so you won't lose them) and designs (including zebra stripes and jungle camouflage). The memory stick is one of the hottest tech items to hit the market this year.

So what's a memory stick? It is a storage device (technically called flash mass storage) about the size of your thumb and encased en·case  
tr.v. en·cased, en·cas·ing, en·cas·es
To enclose in or as if in a case.



en·casement n.
 in plastic that connects to a computer. Say you need to copy 1 or even 1,000 electronic files for a client, or you need to back up your whole hard drive or just a few files: Use a memory stick.

One end of the stick contains a special fitting--you guessed it, a USB--that plugs directly into the back of most computers or into one of those adapters mentioned above.

Think of memory sticks as portable hard disks--except they have no moving parts Moving parts are the components of a device that undergo continuous or frequent motion, most commonly rotation. "Parts" only include the mechanical components which does not include fuel, or any other gas or liquid. . The lowest capacity stick can store up to 8 megabytes (Mb) and the largest (so far) can handle 1 gigabyte (Gb). Some even contain a fingertip-operated security switch for password protection. Typical street prices (which are falling fast) range from about $10 for an 8-Mb device, $25 for 32 Mb, $40 for 64 Mb and $60 for 128 Mb. The specialty 1-Gb device sells for less than $400.

People use them in many ways: for personal backups, file synchronization File synchronization (or 'synching') in computing is the process of making sure that two or more locations contain the same up-to-date files. If you add, change, or delete a file from one location, the synchronization process will add, change, or delete the same file at the other  between different locations and file sharing Copying files from one computer to another. See peer-to-peer network, file sharing protocol and file and printer sharing.  with clients and colleagues. Since they are so small, portable, inexpensive, easy to use and very, very fast, they eventually should take over much of the portable memory market, which now includes the bulky 250-Mb Zip Drive cartridges. When compared with stick memory, Zips do not seem so zippy.

PRESENTATION PROJECTORS

If you conduct PowerPoint presentations, you certainly will appreciate the newest projector models: They're light-weight, produce bright, sharply focused images and are significantly less expensive than the models of just a few years ago.

However, if you're wondering whether you should pay a premium for the lighter and brighter projectors that employ the new digital light processing (DLP (Digital Light Processing) A data projection technology from TI that produces clear, readable images on screens in lit rooms. DLP is used in all types of projection devices, from data projectors that weigh only a few pounds to large rear-projection TVs to electronic ) technology rather than the conventional liquid crystal display liquid crystal display (LCD)

Optoelectronic device used in displays for watches, calculators, notebook computers, and other electronic devices. Current passed through specific portions of the liquid crystal solution causes the crystals to align, blocking the passage of light.
 (LCD) ones, the answer is not a clear yes or no.

DLP devices generally are somewhat leaner by about a half-pound and--for the accountant who must lug (1) (Linux Users Group) A formal or informal organization of Linux users who gather together virtually or in person to exchange information and resources. Some groups maintain mailing lists and send out newsletters for their members.  a computer and a projector in addition to a change of clothes through airports--every ounce counts. In addition, DLP projectors are a smidgen brighter; although both models work about equally well in ambient light.

The major difference is price. DLP projectors generally cost about $500 more than the conventional LCDs. However, LCD projectors produce a sharper image. So, if you often display detailed spreadsheet data, LCDs have a slight advantage. But because the differences are so slight, don't base your buying decision on the DLP hype--and there's plenty of it; instead, try out each type and go with your personal preference.

DRIVE-MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE

If you're like most computer users, the mention of disk partitioning produces either a yawn or an anxiety attack--a yawn if you've never heard the high-tech term (and you probably don't want to learn about it now) and anxiety if you're faced with the awesome task of partitioning your hard disk. Partitioning, or dividing a disk into sectors, is done to make way for a second operating system or to rope off a safe place to store backup files apart from your active data.

If you are a computer novice and you yawned, I advise you to pay attention now because partitioning gives you the option, among other things, of installing an additional operating system such as Linux or even DOS (yes, there still are some useful DOS applications around you may want to use). So if you are faced with the task, you should know software available today can make it a no-hassle job.

PartitionMagic (www.powerquest.com) has been the leader in the field for some time, and now, with its latest edition, 8.0, it has reinforced that position. The new version makes it easier to create safe places on your hard disk for backups even if your main partition becomes corrupted.

Computers upgraded from an earlier version of Windows to XP often run slower than the? did before the upgrade. Without getting technical, suffice it to say that PartitionMagic can solve that problem. In addition, it gives you the bonus of creating more available storage space on the drive.

COLOR LASER PRINTER A laser printer that prints in color using four toner cartridges (CMYK) of cyan, magenta, yellow and black. The colors are applied one at a time to the drum and are then adhered to the paper. See printer.  

The high price of color laser printers no longer is an excuse not to buy one or to limit your purchase to an insufferably in·suf·fer·a·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to endure; intolerable.



in·suffer·a·bly adv.
 slow (but very cheap) inkjet color printer. Minolta (www.minolta-qms.com) has introduced a model--the Minolta-QMS magicolor 2300DL--priced at under $800. But don't be misled by the affordable price; the new product is superior.

The color quality nearly matches true photographs, and the machine prints up to 16 pages per minute (ppm) monochrome and up to 4 ppm in color. It can handle 14-inch-wide paper and its footprint is small enough (14 inches by 19.5 inches) to fit on a desk.

LCD MONITORS

Now that prices for flat-panel LCD (liquid crystal displays) are shrinking, those big, clunky beige CRT (1) (C RunTime) See runtime library.

(2) (Cathode Ray Tube) A vacuum tube used as a display screen in a computer monitor or TV. The viewing end of the tube is coated with phosphors, which emit light when struck by electrons.
 (cathode ray tube See CRT.

(hardware) cathode ray tube - (CRT) An electrical device for displaying images by exciting phosphor dots with a scanned electron beam. CRTs are found in computer VDUs and monitors, televisions and oscilloscopes.
) monitors that take up a huge amount of real estate on your desk are on the way out. Last year, LCD unit sales unit sales

Sales measured in terms of physical units rather than dollars. Unit sales data are often used by financial analysts when evaluating the health of a company.
 inched ahead of CRTs; the turnaround came as flat-panel-monitor prices fell to bargain levels.

A typical 15-inch flat-panel monitor costs about $300 and a 17-inch model (the most popular size) is going for about $450. Prices for the larger screens are maintaining their slight premium prices because larger screen LCDs still are a little tricky to manufacturer. But that, too, will change as companies perfect new technologies.

TABLET PCs

Tablet PCs (also called slate PCs) are one of the big hypes this year. The tablets are notebook computers with something extra; they include a screen that can be swiveled around the base so viewers can see the screen from the left, right or the rear. Also, users can swivel the screen so it sits flat atop the PC like a slate, and people can write on the screen with a special stylus.

Click on an icon, and the tablet PC reads your handwriting and does its best to translate the words and numbers into typescript. The handwriting recognition, while not perfect, can handle neat script fairly well.

Most of the major notebook makers are offering slate models--Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba, Acer and Fujitsu. They carry a price premium over regular laptops of between 10% and 20%, but within a year, if the tablet design catches on, price tags should shrink considerably.

UNIQUE LAPTOP PCs

The perfect laptop is thin, lightweight and its battery lasts a long time. While that may be hard to achieve in one product, here are two laptops that come close:

Toshiba Portege 2000: This PC weighs in at 3 pounds and is 0.3 inches thick. Despite its slim, light body, it has a full-sized keyboard and a 12-inch screen. It runs on a 750-MHz Pentium III, has a 20-Mb hard drive and is priced at about $1,900. For more information see www.toshiba.com.

IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries)  ThinkPad X30: If battery life is your passion, but weight and slimness still count, then the X30 may be just what you're looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
. It weighs 3.7 pounds, is about 1-inch thick and has a six-cell battery that claims 4.5 hours of power. And if you need more battery life, you can clip on an auxiliary battery for another 4.5 hours. It runs on a 1.2-GHz Pentium III and has a 40-Mb hard drive. It starts at $1,800 and has an array of extras including a docking station and snap-in bays into which a variety of peripherals can be plugged. For more information visit www.ibm.com.

MOBILE DEVICES

For those who like to be plugged in, online and with most of their data at their fingertips "Fingertips" is a 1963 number-one hit single recorded live by "Little" Stevie Wonder for Motown's Tamla label. Wonder's first hit single, "Fingertips" was the first live, non-studio recording to reach number-one on the Billboard Pop Singles chart in the United States.  24/7, check out the new PDAs on steroids: Handspring's Treo family and the T-Mobile Pocket PC Phone.

Handspring: The Treo 180 PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM).  includes a Palm operating system, a cell phone, an e-mail client, an instant messaging system, a speakerphone, three-way calling and a Web browser The program that serves as your front end to the Web on the Internet. In order to view a site, you type its address (URL) into the browser's Location field; for example, www.computerlanguage.com, and the home page of that site is downloaded to you. . It also has a "thumbable" keyboard for typing messages and inputting data, but you've got to have flexible, slender thumbs. It lists for about $250. For an extra $50, the Treo 270 comes with a color display.

T-Mobile Pocket PC Phone Edition A Pocket PC with telephone capability. It is the combination of Microsoft's Pocket PC and Smartphone platforms. See Pocket PC and Windows Mobile. : Unlike the Treo, T-Mobile's pocket PC phone runs on Microsoft's new operating system that integrates with Microsoft Outlook. So if someone in your Outlook database calls, that person's information flashes on the screen. T-Mobile's PC phone costs about $550.

WOW

And now for something we've all been waiting for--but never knew it. How often do you mutter under your breath when you have to plug one of those bulky black AC power transformer-adapters (for printers and portable gear) into a power strip only to discover the adapter is so big it covers a second socket as well? A small California company, Carpenter Group (www.powerstripsaver.com), has introduced a product called the PowerStrip Saver that solves the problem with handy adapter cables which plug into any powerstrip socket (see photo below). The product comes in two configurations: a single-plug adapter and a two-plug adapter.

Don't be awed by all this hot, new technology. Try to resist the hype. In all likelihood, your current technology will effectively do the job. Instead, keep your focus on making your current technology work more efficiently. It will save you lots of money and time.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

* PUT YOUR CHECKBOOK AWAY. Although there are loads of hot, new technology gadgets on the market, you probably have nearly everything you really need with little or no upgrading necessary--that is, if you've been keeping technologically up-to-date.

* SINCE MOST OF THE EQUIPMENT you may be buying will not be urgent, got-to-have-it-now technology, there's no need to buy just-introduced, cutting-edge gear for a lot of money. Price competition is so keen these days that if you wait a while, not only will the kinks in the new products be worked out, but prices likely will drop, too.

* HERE ARE SOME NEW PRODUCTS TO CONSIDER:

* USB host adapter: a device that lets you easily add new peripherals to your computer.

* Memory stick: a portable thumb-sized device that can store huge amounts of data,

* Color laser printer: Minolta has introduced one priced at under $800.

* Tablet PCs: One of the big hypes this year--they are notebook computers with a screen that can be swiveled around the base so viewers can see the screen from the left, right or the rear. Also, you can write on the screen with a special stylus.

STANLEY ZAROWIN is a senior editor on the J0fA. Mr. Zarowin is an employee of the AICPA AICPA

See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
, and his views, as expressed in this article, do not necessarily reflect the views of the Institute. Official positions are determined through certain specific committee procedures, due process and deliberation.
COPYRIGHT 2003 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:accountants
Author:Zarowin, Stanley
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Apr 1, 2003
Words:2473
Previous Article:Mind your e-mail manners.
Next Article:CFOs for hire: the rewards and pitfalls of being an itinerant executive.
Topics:



Related Articles
CPA 2000: what's ahead for accounting software.
Corporations turning more in-house functions over to Big Six accountants.(Special Report: Law & Accounting)
In Desperate Times: More Savvy and Cooperation at the SEC.(Securities and Exchange Commission investigations)
Don't settle for a high-priced bookkeeper: What you should expect from your accountant. (Practice Management).(Brief Article)
Sell Yourself: Mid-career CPAs tackle job search challenges.(Cover Story)
Hot Snakes.
Broad coverage is best, IREM says.
PEREZ, DREIFORT COME CORRECT FOR DODGERS STARTER SURVIVES; SETUP MAN RECOVERS DODGERS 8, CUBS 1.(Sports)
READY TO FLASH HIS NIGHT MOVES.(Sports)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles