Abiquiu News
  • Home
    • News 06/06/2025
    • News 05/30/2025
    • News 05/23/2025
    • News 05/16/2025
    • News 05/09/2025
    • News 05/02/2025
    • News 04/25/2025
    • News 04/18/2025
    • News 04/11/2025
    • News 04/04/2025
    • Criteria for Submissions
  • News and Features
  • Dining
  • Lodging
  • Arts
  • Bloom Blog
  • Activities / Classes
    • Birding
  • Tech Tips
  • Classifieds
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate by Owner
  • Support
  • Home
    • News 06/06/2025
    • News 05/30/2025
    • News 05/23/2025
    • News 05/16/2025
    • News 05/09/2025
    • News 05/02/2025
    • News 04/25/2025
    • News 04/18/2025
    • News 04/11/2025
    • News 04/04/2025
    • Criteria for Submissions
  • News and Features
  • Dining
  • Lodging
  • Arts
  • Bloom Blog
  • Activities / Classes
    • Birding
  • Tech Tips
  • Classifieds
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate by Owner
  • Support

​Remote into your Mac or PC, and more

3/18/2022

 
I use to need to remote into my PC for work, though now that isn’t really an issue for me. There are other reasons to remote into your computer when away, and I liked using Chrome Remote Desktop. It’s easy to set up and it works great. You can learn about that HERE.  

​It’s handy for access to your computer when you are travelling, or whatever, but it also has an option to share your screen in case you want to allow someone access for work, or if you need or want to give help with someone else.
 
In Windows I prefer Quick Assist to help someone with their computer. We both run Quick Assist, native to Windows, and the person I want to help requests assistance and I give them a number to enter. That number is generated on my computer when I request to assist someone.
 
For a Mac, there are several options for accessing your Mac remotely, and from various devices. A link to a good article explaining that is HERE.  You can still use Chrome Remote Desktop on the Mac, but if you prefer something else, or something more native to the Mac world, then this article will offer some options. Additionally, there are some tips on file sharing which may be of interest.

Scam alert: Why you should never ‘Unsubscribe’ from SPAM emails

3/10/2022

 
Picture
I get an enormous amount of spam emails everyday and spam phone calls.  Here's a great article from Rick Rouse of Rick's Daily Tips

Like most everyone else, you probably receive SPAM and phishing emails all the time.
And despite the existence of the Can Spam act, this scourge of the Internet seems to actually be getting worse instead of better.

If you ever happen to accidentally open one of these obnoxious messages you might be tempted to click the “Unsubscribe” link located near the bottom of the message to have your email address removed from their mailing list.

Whatever you do, don’t click that link! Read on to find out why…

Why you should avoid clicking “Unsubscribe” in SPAM messages 

Clicking “Unsubscribe” in a fraudulent email will not result in your email address being removed from the scammer’s email list. What it WILL do is one, or both of the following:

1 – Verify for the scammer that your email address is in fact a valid and active address (which will have the unwanted side effect of making your email address even more valuable to the scammer in the future).

2 – Take you to a malicious website that will download malware onto your computer and/or trick you into falling for a scam offer of some sort.

I know how irritating it is to check your email and find dozens of SPAM messages filling up your inbox, but clicking “Unsubscribe” won’t help you avoid it in the future. All it will do is end up attracting even more malicious junk in the future, and possibly worse.

How to properly handle your junk emails
The best way to handle SPAM and other forms of unwanted email is to simply mark them as “SPAM” or “Junk” (depending on which word your email provider uses) and then delete them without even opening them.

Of course there will be times when you open one of these emails by accident, regardless of how careful you are to avoid them. When that happens, simply mark the message as SPAM or Junk and then delete it.

Whatever you do, DO NOT click on the “Unsubscribe” link (or ANY link in the email for that matter).

What to do if you accidentally click a link in a SPAM message
If you accidentally click ANY link in a SPAM message you should first deal with the email as explained above, then thoroughly scan your computer for malware by following the steps listed in this post.

And finally, one HUGE, and very important caveat…Everything I said above only applies to SPAM emails, primarily emails you never signed up for or joined an email list to receive.

If you actually did sign up for a mailing list please don’t mark it as SPAM or Junk if you decide you don’t want to receive it any more. Use the Unsubscribe link in one of the emails instead. That’s what it’s there for.

We all sign up for things we believe we’ll like, only to find out that it really isn’t our cup of tea. It’s fine to Unsubscribe from those types of things, and that’s what the folks that send out legitimate emails want us to do.

The folks who run legitimate newsletters and other mailings that you legitimately signed up for are actually eager for you to unsubscribe if you ever change your mind about receiving their emails.

Why? Because unsubscribing does two very important things:

1 – It prevents them from continuing to send emails to people who aren’t interested in receiving them (and therefore never open them).

Unopened emails lower a newsletter’s “Open Rate”, which negatively affects the ISP’s quality scores for that newsletter’s email address.

2 – Marking an email that you signed up for as SPAM or Junk effectively does the same thing as number 1 – it negatively affects the newsletter’s ability to make it into the inboxes of the people who really want to receive it.

Here’s a general rule to follow:
If you receive a marketing email that you never signed up to receive you should mark it as SPAM or JUNK, because that’s truly what it is.

You shouldn’t click the Unsubscribe link if you never subscribed to that list in the first place.
However, if you receive emails that you actually signed up for (i.e. subscribed to) but later decide you want to have your email address removed from their list, use the Unsubscribe link instead of marking it as SPAM.

That will ensure that you never receive another email from that sender without negatively affecting the deliverability of their newsletter to the other people who signed up for their emails and want to continue receiving them.

Note:  Should you decide you want to unsubscribe from the Abiquiu News, let us know or click on unsubscribe on the email you were sent.


Kindle Books for free

3/4/2022

 
There are several sites offering free books that are out of copyright. Before Kindles were a thing, I used to read free books from a site on my computer. Kindles are a great way to read a book. I love them. I have a paperwhite. It’s lightweight, super easy on the eyes, and very transportable. During the pandemic I used it to download Moby Dick, and the entire Jane Austen Library, all free books. I also downloaded and read The Metamorphosis, but I still don’t understand that one.

Amazon makes it simple to buy books for your Kindle but there is a way to load free books outside their world. You can also download PDFs into a Kindle. The easiest way to do this is to email the book to your secret, magical Kindle email address. Didn’t know your Kindle had one? Well, it does. You likely need to look it up in your settings. I did.
A great instructional link to do all this is right HERE. How to Sideload Books to a Kindle – Review Geek

​Recover Disk space on your PC

2/25/2022

 
Windows 10 and Windows 11 both have system methods for recovering disk space. I use a program called CCleaner that does some of that cleaning, but Windows makes it pretty simple. You just need to know where to look. I have an article you can use as a guide for Windows 10 HERE. 

Windows 11 is fairly similar.
Basically, you go into System, Storage, and then choose what you want to do. Read the above article first if you aren’t sure or aren’t comfortable with this sort of thing. If you’ve had your computer several years, or you have never done a cleaning, you will likely have some serious space to recover. Even if you have plenty of free space on your drive, cleaning can help with performance.
​
It’s worth doing.

Working From Home

2/18/2022

 
For 15 years I worked from home. This began when we moved to Abiquiu. Carol kept her Chicago job also. It was great.

Nowadays, working from home is in the news like it never happened before. We started in 1999, and it was on dial-up. It was sometimes miserably slow, but I was a text based programmer, so it worked OK. When there was a change to a GUI, Graphical User Interface, then it became a problem. It flat out did not work. That was the middle of 2006 and I was worried. That project fell through though and I was spared, plus, in January 2007, Abiquiu got DSL.

I found this fun article on the DO’s and DON’Ts of working from home and I thought it was timely. I don’t agree with everything. I did get dressed to go to work. It was part of the discipline of taking the work seriously. On the other hand, my desk is a MESS, and we never did video calls. Not once.

If you are working from home or you have a kid schooling from home, then this may be a useful READ.

<<Previous
Forward>>

    Tech Tips



    There's a lot of fake information out there.  Please be scrupulous about what you share on Facebook and other platforms.  Here are some trusted sources.  Please don't rely on social media for your information.  ​

    Picture

    Abiquiu Computer Recycling

    Abiquiu Computers gives away available computers for FREE. We recover used pc’s and upgrade them, repair them, refurbish them so they may have another life with someone else.
    ​
    Free stuff:
    Windows 11 SFF desktops 
    Smartphone

     
    Thank you!
    Fidel​
    ​

    ​I could really use some Monitors. I also get asked for smart phones and tablets.
    ​
    Email 
    Do you have a computer sitting in your closet or garage? Brian will wipe all personal information off the hard drive. Pass on that computer today.
    Please contact
    Abiquiu Computers. 

    Abiquiu Computers has retired from the computer repair business but still fixes up and gives away donated computers.

    Categories

    All
    Rick Rouse

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018

affiliate_link