Monday 14 July 2014

7 Tech Mistakes You Should Never Do

Regrets, we've had a few — and they're not too few to mention. The more tech you have in your life, the more tech regrets you're likely to have.

Whether it is the platform you jumped on just as everyone else jumped off, the phone battery that died at the worst possible moment, the moment of madness when you bought a Zune or a BlackBerry Playbook.

So which tech decisions are you likely to regret today? These are our suggestions.........

1. Buying The New Window 

 

See if you can spot the pattern. Windows XP was good. Windows Vista wasn't. Windows 7 was good. Windows 8 appears to have destroyed the consumer PC industry.

We're stocking up on tinned food and guns in anticipation of Windows 10.





 

2. Scrimping On Storage


Manufacturers' prices for flash storage are often insane, but opting for the smallest capacity is almost always a mistake. The OS immediately grabs a bunch of gigabytes, and a half-dozen cat GIFs will quickly fill the rest.








3. Forgetting the backup bit

 

Everybody knows that you should always back up your stuff before installing a major software update — but they know it in the same way that they know you should eat healthily, drink moderately and drive within the speed limit.

For most of us, the "remember to back up!" bit of our brain only kicks in halfway through reformatting a hard disk.




4. Leaving the house with less than 63% battery life

 

63% might seem like a lot when you're at home, but that's because you have Wi-Fi and distractions. Step outside the front door and you're good for roughly six minutes.








5. Buying a Device Running Old -Android

 

There are two kinds of old-Android buyers: There are the people who don't care which version they have, and there are the people who bought a device expecting the manufacturer to provide a firmware update to KitKat. The second lot are easy to spot, because they're crying.





6. Keeping The File In Wrong  Format 

 

If you're transcoding video, ripping music or storing anything for future safekeeping, make sure it's in a format you'll still be able to access years from now, not a format whose continued existence or copy protection system depends on the continued goodwill of a handful of companies (or worse, a single company).




7. Investing in 3D TV


3D televisions' time in the sun is already over: This year's CES was all about 4K and Ultra HD. It'll be back in glasses-free guise eventually, but for now it's the elephant in the room that you need stupid specs to see.








@ source-TOI









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