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8 Hacks to Reduce Your Cell Phone Bill

8 Hacks to Reduce Your Cell Phone BillAre you spending too much on your cell phone bill? The average cell phone bill for a family of four on unlimited data can reach up to $2,670 a year. One of the reasons your cell phone bill is so high is the data plan. All those video chats, streaming services, and data-hungry apps mean you are using a lot of data on your cell phone. Statista says that the average smartphone user will use almost 9GB of data per month in 2021. All this cellular data usage comes with unexpected overages bills, too. No one likes sky-high cell phone bills. Here are some easy-to-follow tips to help you find ways to reduce your data use and reduce your cell phone bill.

the average smartphone userThe first step to reduce your cellphone bill is to know what you really need. Research says that 66% of Americans with unlimited cell phone plans consume less than 10 gigabytes of cell phone data monthly. These cell phone user could reduce their cell phone bill by an average of $268.44 a year without running out of cell phone data.

Wi-Fi helps you reduce your cell phone bill

Consistently connecting to Wi-Fi networks will reduce the amount of cellular data you use, and reduce your cell phone bill. This is important because watching a Netflix movie while using cellular data will eat up anywhere between 1GB to 3GB per hour. Wireless carriers divert cellular traffic to Wi-Fi to save money – so should you. Here are some tricks to reduce your cell phone bill.

Turn on Wi-Fi to reduce your cell phone bill1 – Turn on Wi-Fi – Make sure your Wi-Fi settings are turned on, and you are connected to an available Wi-Fi network.

2 – Turn off Wi-Fi Assist (iOS) and Smart Network Switch (some Android models). These built-in settings try to boost a spotty or slow Wi-Fi connection by using your cellular connection. These settings can use a lot of data.

  • Android devices, go to Settings > Connections > Wi-Fi. Tap the three dots, select Advanced, and tap the slider for “Switch to mobile data.”
  • Apple devices, go to Settings > Cellular or Settings > Mobile Data. Then scroll down and tap the slider for Wi-Fi Assist.

Limit your data usage

3 – Cap your monthly data usage – Android has a built-in feature that allows you to limit your cellular data to a set amount based on your billing cycle. Here’s how to set that up:

  • Go to Settings > Network & internet > Data usage > Data warning & limit (or Data limit & billing cycle) to set the maximum amount of data you want to use for the month.
  • Or, tap “App data usage cycle” to set the first day of your billing cycle.

Apple devices don’t include the same built-in feature to restrict your data usage. To keep an eye on your cellular data use on your Apple iOS device go to:

  • Settings > Cellular or Settings > Mobile Data. (On an iPad, it may be Settings > Cellular Data)
  • You can also reset your data usage for the “Current Period” here every month so you know how much you’re using each billing cycle.

4 – Update apps over Wi-Fi only – If your apps are set to update automatically, they may be draining your data over a cellular network.  You can set your device to update apps over Wi-Fi only to reduce your cellphone bill. Once you do that, the apps will only update and use data when you’re connected to Wi-Fi.

  • Android, go to the Play Store and tap Menu > Settings > Auto-update apps, then select “Auto-update apps over Wi-Fi only.
  • iOS, go to Settings > App Store > scroll to “Cellular Data” and toggle “Automatic Downloads” to the off position.

Disable background app data

5 – Disable app data in the background – Some apps will continue to gather data in the background while you’re not using your phone. This may be a good feature for a news app, but not every app needs this feature. To turn this feature off for your apps

  • Android, go to Settings > Data Usage to see which apps are using the most data. Tap on the app you’d like to restrict and disable background data.
  • iOS, go to Settings > General > Background App Refresh. Here, you can choose whether you want this feature on or off completely, or just WiFi only. You can also toggle this on and off for individual apps.

6 – Disable display ads for your browser. Display ads auto-play videos that stream to your phone, so if you have a browser that helps you disable these ads, you save plenty of data and reduce your cell phone bill.

Turn off your phone

7 – Turn off your phone while asleep. It is likely that throughout the night, data will be used on the phone, especially if applications are running. You could save a lot of data and money over time by trying out this hack.

8 – Compress your updates. There are applications that can make your data usage around 5 times more efficient by compressing it. Take a look at the apps.

The downside, however, is that the company will be aware of the data you’re accessing. It all depends on if that is a price you’re willing to pay.

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If these hacks fail to reduce your cell phone bill, you have the option to change to a plan with a data limit in order to reduce your cell phone bill.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Smart Backpacks

Smart BackpacksI first wrote about Google’s Project Jacquard which weaves conductive threads to create touch-responsive clothing in 2015. Since then COVID has changed the world. As a result of the pandemic, Gartner found that 88% of businesses mandated or encouraged all their employees to work from home as COVID-19 spread and 97% of the firms canceled all work-related travel.

Despite the growth in WFH, Google’s Project Jacquard has announced its latest innovation: two new smart backpacks developed with luggage maker Samsonite. Unlike the previous Jacquard backpack co-created with Yves Saint Lauren with a stupid $995 price tag, The Samsonite version has prices low enough for normal people to actually consider buying one.

The new Google Jacquard “Konnect-i Slim” smart backpack begins at $199.99. The slightly larger “Konnect-i Standard” will run you $219.99. Both available are through Samsonite’s webshop. Both are also water-repellent, and they have the same materials and feature list.

Besides smart backpacks, Google has partnered with Levi to make the Trucker jacket with Jacquard and Adidas to create the GMR insoles that use Jacquard.

Connect the smart backpacks

Jacquard controlsTo connect the smartbackpack to your iOS or Android phone, you’ll have to stuff a thumb-sized dongle into the backpack’s strap. According to Engadget, the module syncs with your phone via Bluetooth. The functionality seems pretty limited. Through the Jacquard app, you can define what brushing up and down or double-tapping the strap does. You can skip or pause your music, ask Assistant a question or drop pins to remember places you’ve been, or take a selfie. An LED on the strap will light up to alert you to notifications.

Jacquard relies on a small Micro-USB-charged Bluetooth puck which contains most of the electronic components. Google reduced the physical footprint from a large USB drive to something roughly the size of an SD card. It’s charged using magnetic pins, and data transfer is possible with a microUSB connector. The removable Jacquard Tag lasts up to two weeks on a charge and is separately rechargeable. The Jacquard Tag module still needs to be removed before washing.

The Samsonite Jacquard backpacks require an internet connection, a compatible Android or iOS phone, the Jacquard app, and a Google account for access to Jacquard features. For Android, you need a supported phone running Android 6.0.1 or newer. For iOS, you need an iPhone 6 or newer running iOS 11 or newer.  Data usage fees may apply. 

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Ambient computingAs a product still don’t get it – as wearable tech – it seems to me that the $200 iWatch can do more than the backpacks. But as another way to invade our lives and steal our data – it makes sense.

Google told CNet it could add gestures on top of voice into Google Assistant – “… as a new direction for Google’s AI … Bringing these nonverbal cues into the conversation with technology is a key opportunity …” 

Combining AI with Google’s security and privacy problems makes me uneasy. In this uber-google world, will they give us the best result or the one that is paid for? 

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

What You Need to Know About Blue Light on Your Screens

What You Need to Know About Blue Light on Your Screens CNN reports that Americans spent up to seven hours and 22 minutes on screens each day in 2019— not including screens used for school work.  That was before the pandemic, which pushed people’s social lives onto Zoom video chats.  There are risks in all that screen time.  One common concern is the blue light that emanates from digital devices.

PrismAll visible light falls on a color spectrum based on the wavelength frequency and energy levels each color produces.  Blue light is a short wavelength, high-energy, visible (HEV) light.  Darker colors, like blue, are the closest to more dangerous UV wavelengths and strength.  Lighter colors, like red, are on the opposite end of the spectrum, with longer wavelengths and lower energy levels.

Light spectrum

Blue light can be harmful.

Blue light can be harmful, like too much salt in our diet.  Our bodies are naturally adept at absorbing and dealing with blue light exposure, but too much can be harmful.

We are surrounded by blue light in our natural environment our whole life.  We tend to only worry about blue light coming from display screens.  It also comes from:

  • Naturally, from the sun,
  • Fluorescent lights, and
  • LED light bulbs.

LED RGB pixelsMost computer monitors, cell phone screens, and flat-screen TVs are additional sources of blue light.  HP explains this is because white light LEDs combine with blue LEDs to create a solid-state light that uses significantly less energy and power than alternative light sources, making it ideal for electronic devices.  It These digital devices cause excess blue light exposure, and there are concerns.

Our skin doesn’t have much of a problem dealing with blue light, but our eyes don’t have the same level of adaptation.  Because the wavelength of blue light is short and powerful, it can penetrate past the cornea to reach the retina, which is the most light-sensitive part of your eye.

Digital eye strain

Parts of the eyeOne of the most common side effects of blue light exposure is digital eye strain, also known as computer vision syndromeIt is caused by staring at a computer screen for too long and may lead to dry, sore, red eyes and blurred vision.  HP warns that with prolonged exposure, blue light can harm your eyes and lead to macular degeneration.

You can take some easy steps to avoid permanent damage to your eyesight.  Here are several suggestions to control your blue light exposure.  Our bodies are naturally conditioned and programmed to fall asleep when it gets dark and wake up when exposed to light.  Harvard Medical School found that it is essential to limit your screen time because blue light suppresses melatonin for about twice as long as green light and shifts circadian rhythms by twice as much.

The same Harvard study found that green light may be as hard on your eyes as blue light.  The researchers warn that the two lights are similar in strength, and there are few remedies for green light exposure.  Limiting screen time—even if you use a blue light filter is important. 

Get your eyes checkedIt’s not just blue light that can affect your vision.  As we age, the lens inside our eye can lose flexibility, resulting in the inability to change focus from far to near.  Regular comprehensive eye exams are important to maintaining eye health, no matter how much time you spend in front of screens.

If you already have prescription glasses, move to multi-focal lenses and have your optometrist add a blue light filter.  If not, “cheaters” from the drugstore may be enough—for a while. 

Blinking

Blinking is our body’s natural defense.  It lubricates and cleans our eyes.  Typically, we blink 10 to 20 times per minute.  However, studies have shown that our blink rate drops when we concentrate.  We only blink 3 to 8 times per minute when reading, watching TV, or looking at a computer screen.  Dry eyes are irritated eyes. 

Take time to rest your eyes every 20 minutes.  Look away from the computer and focus on something distant—like out a window.

  1. the average person blinks 10 to 20 times per minuteClose your eyes gently,
  2. Squeeze and hold them shut for a moment,
  3. Open and relax them.

Remember to blink more often in between, and when you are thinking, instead of squinting at the screen, turn away and blink a few times. 

A blue light filter can be a physical barrier or an application that blocks out blue light.  Physical blue light filters block short, high-frequency waves and allow long, low-frequency ones.  HP says physical blue light screen filters are the easiest and best way to reduce your blue light exposure.  Some are just a clear piece of plastic material that covers your monitor. 

Blue light filtering glasses

blue light filtering glassesWearing blue light-filtering glasses for 3 to 4 hours before bedtime is the easiest way to keep your melatonin levels in check and your retinas protected.  An inexpensive over-the-counter pair online can cost $10.00 and up to $80.00.  The original Blue Blockers cost $19.95 back in the day.

Many prescription and over-the-counter cheaters have blue light filters in the lenses.  However, if you regularly wear prescription glasses, investing in a physical blue light filter may be a waste of money.

Windows 10

You can also reduce your blue light exposure by adding an app to many of your digital devices.  Microsoft (MSFT) Windows 10 has a built-in Night Light feature to control blue light.  To use Windows 10’s app:

  1. Microsoft logoClick the Start button,
  2. Go to Settings,
  3. System,
  4. Display,
  5. Toggle the Night light switch to turn the feature on.
  6. Click the link for Night light settings where you can:
    • Set a schedule that controls the lighting on your computer screen,
    • Setting the screen temperature allows you to adjust the levels of blue light reduction.  Warmer colors filter out more blue light—experiment with settings to see what works best for you.

Apple

If you are an Apple (AAPL) Mac user, Apple’s built-in blue light filter app Night Shift requires macOS Sierra 10.12.4 and specific systems.  If you can, follow these steps to enable Night Shift:

  1. Apple logoChoose the Apple menu,
  2. System Preferences,
  3. then click Displays,
  4. Click the Night Shift tab.

On your Apple iPhone or iPad, go to

  1. Settings,
  2. Display & Brightness,
  3. Tap the Night Shift setting. 

As with all things Google (GOOG) Android, the availability of a built-in blue light filter depends on your specific device and version of Android.  To see if this feature is on your Android device, go to:

  1. Goggle Android logoSettings,
  2. Display,
  3. Look for an option for a Night Light or Blue Light filter. 

If your Android does not have a blue light filter, consider using Grayscale mode, an accessibility setting for most smartphones.

F.lux is a popular third-party blue light filter application with apps for Windows, Apple, Linux, and Phillips Hue lighting system apps. 

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Please be aware that all these blue light blocker apps require you to turn on Location Services to get the automatic schedule.

Blue light-blocking apps can diminish the quality of your viewing experience.  HP says that compared to blue light filter applications and physical blue light blockers, physical devices diminish picture quality and color far less than apps.

Try one of these solutions to save yourself the discomfort and strain caused by blue light.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005.  You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter.  Email the Bach Seat here.

COVID On Your Cell Phone

COVID On Your Cell PhoneAmid the chaos of the COVID-19 lock-down one of your only allies in the social distancing campaign is your cell phone. Right? After all, everybody is attached to their mobile phone. In fact, research has shown that millennials check their phones 150 times a day (PDF). Why do we check our cell phones so much?

Researchers from the University of Illinois found in a recent study that 37% of women and 30% of men walking down the street have a smartphone in their hand. The UofI researchers Laura Schaposnik and James Unwin paper The Phone Walkers: A study of human dependence on inactive mobile devices propose four plausible reasons that pedestrians practice this behavior.

Appeasement – The first proposal is that we need immediate access to our phones now because so much of our social lives exist on the phone. In particular, research suggests that people in romantic relationships expect to be texted back within five minutes. We keep our phones out to appease partners.

anxiety if separated from mobile phonesAnxiety – The researcher’s next hypothesis was that we might be psychologically dependent on these phones to the point that we have anxiety if we’re separated from them. The researchers write. “… the simple manipulation of the object could lead to a corresponding decrease in tension or anxiety ….”

Safety – Personal safety is another distinct possibility. Research has found that technology gives young people confidence when facing the potential dangers of crime in a public place. The UofI team says we “..may hold their phones both for personal reassurance against perceived threats and as a visible warning sign to potential assailants.

peacock effectThe peacock effect – We might want to impress a possible partner with our fancy phones. The researchers compared the phenomenon to “displays of affluence by wearing designer fashion clothes or jewelry … to enhance or affirm a person’s social standing and to attract a suitable mate.

We are addicted to our cell phones so what? I have covered the germiness of mobiles on the Bach Seat before. But in the wake of recent events, I checked on current thinking and found that COVID-19 is probably on your mobile. German researchers reported (PDF) in the Journal of Hospital Infection that Coronaviruses can live on inanimate surfaces like metal, glass, or plastic, and remain infectious “from 2 hours up to 9 days.

Coronaviruses can live on surfaces like metal, glass, or plastic, and remain infectious "from 2 hours up to 9 days."Lead researcher Günter Kampf, M.D., an associated professor at the University of Greifswald, reported that a good strategy for surface disinfection is with a solution that contains 0.1% sodium hypochlorite or 62 to 71% ethanol. Either of these “significantly reduces coronavirus infectivity on surfaces within 1 min exposure time.

Charles Gerba, Ph.D., professor of microbiology and immunology at The University of Arizona, told Mens Health

…What we found … in office buildings is that you touch a surface with a virus on it and then you place it on your cell phone.” (A door handle, for example.) … You then go home or to another location and you touch your phone again a touch a table moving it to another location—great way to spread viruses around an office.

great way to spread viruses around an officeDr. Kampf warns,Check with the manufacturer. First, it should be effective against coronavirus … Second, not all disinfectants are compatible with the material of the smartphone surface.

Professor Gerba recommends an alcohol wipe or a microfiber cloth. “I would do it every time I have been out in public,” he says.

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To safely clean your mobile:

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Son of Facebook Phone

Son of Facebook PhoneThe tech world never learns from its mistakes. Rumors are that data-leaker Facebook is combining two bad ideas, software from Windows NT with FB hardware. The Verge reports that Facebook is developing its own operating system. Facebook’s effort is being led by Mark Lucovsky, who co-authored the Windows NT operating system.

Could the FB OS be the greatest thing since?The reports say the FB OS could be used on Facebook’s hardware products. Oculus, Portal, and forthcoming augmented reality glasses, code-named “Orion,” currently run on a modified version of Google’s Android. FB wants to reduce or remove entirely the control GOOG has over its hardware.

Ficus Kirkpatrick, who heads Facebook’s AR and VR group hedges his bets, he told The Verge “it’s possible” that future FB hardware won’t rely on Google’s software. Facebook’s head of hardware, Andrew Bosworth is more definitive, “… we’re gonna do it ourselves.

Facebook phone crashed and burned almost immediately.The Verge points out that Facebook’s last attempt at producing its own OS did not go so well. The Facebook phone, or, more precisely, the Facebook phone mobile operating system, crashed and burned almost immediately. Unveiled in 2013, Mark Zuckerberg promised the $99 device would “turn your Android phone into a great social device.

It didn’t exactly work out that way. Instead, shortly after the Facebook phone went on sale, the price dropped to 99 cents. The operating system was called out as mediocre, and early adopters complained that it was counter-intuitive and hard to — of all things — place a phone call. By 2014, the New York Times reported that Facebook had disbanded the mobile OS engineering team.

The FB mobile OS attempt resulted in a forked version of Android that ran on an HTC produced phone back in 2013. Flooding a phone with Facebook’s social feed was wildly unpopular even back before Facebook’s brand was tarnished with numerous privacy scandals. Facebook will have an uphill battle on its hands if it wants people to give its software another shot.

For those with short memories FB has leaked nearly 1 billion personal data records that we know about since 2018:

The idea of another FB OS gets even scarier when you add the legacy of Windows NT on top of FB’s lack of respect for its user privacy. The for uninitiated, Windows NT was released in 1993. It was Microsoft’s first foray into a network operating system (NOS). WinNT had a number of issues that made the Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) a household phrase.

Blue Screen of DeathA blue screen occurs when Windows encounters a “STOP Error.” This critical failure causes Windows to crash and stop working. The only thing Windows can do at that point is to restart the PC. This can lead to data loss, as programs don’t have a chance to save their open data. FB has put Mark Lucovsky, who co-authored the Windows NT operating system in charge of writing the FB OS. Some of the more notable problems with WinNT included,

  • Allowing the default user to run at admin/root privilege without a password.
  • Noted cryptographer Bruce Schneier, noted that part of Windows NT 4.0 is so broken it can’t be fixed with patches. Schneier said, “Last time they released a fix, it broke so many other parts of Windows NT.”
  • WinNT did not support USB.
  • NTVDM (also known as Windows on Windows, or WOW) that blocked access to the hardware so that legacy applications would run as though on a DOS computer, except without access to protected areas of memory. This resulted in a substantial number of applications simply did not work.

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People back then perhaps thought better of letting Facebook on their phones. Toward the end of the decade, it seems we’ve come full circle

The rumor mill also says Facebook is working on a brain control interface for its devices, which could allow users to control them with their thoughts. But of course, that also means that FB could have access to the user’s brain – and sell their thoughts and then your brain will throw a BSOD, and will you have to reboot your brain to recover.- I’m just saying……

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.