Tip of the Week: How to Share a Web Page Between Your Phone and Workstation

Let?s go over how to access the same web page you were viewing on your workstation or mobile device on the other one. Chrome Offers a Few Options, in Terms of Pushing Web Pages Between Devices First, let?s assume that you?re on one device, and want to continue viewing a page on the other. Provided that you?re signed into the same Google account in both places, you can always just view your browsing history, as it tracks activity on all devices logged in. From the desktop, open Chrome and press Ctrl + H to access your History. If using your smartphone, open the Chrome app and access the three-dot menu, selecting Recent tabs. You?ll see your complete browsing history from everywhere you?re signed into that Chrome account, allowing you to retrieve the page you were browsing. If you?re presently reading something and want to proactively push it from one device to another, you can do that as well. From the desktop version of Chrome, you?ll see a small icon on the right side of the address bar that looks like an arrow coming out of a corner. Clicking this icon (or right-clicking the tab?s title) gives you the option to Send to your devices. You?ll be given a list of devices?computers and Android devices alike?where you?re signed in. From Android, tap into the three-dot menu and select Share. A panel will appear, where you can select Send to your devices. We?re big fans of anything that potentially makes work processes easier, so we like this feature quite a bit. Make sure you keep checking back for more ways to use your technology just a little better, or give us a call at (603) 889-0800 to find out what our managed services could do for you.

Too Many IT Projects Fail?Here?s How to Make Yours Succeed

What Percentage of IT Projects Fail? Failure, in the terms of IT projects, is a subjective notion. For our purposes, we are going to define failure as an IT project that doesn?t meet its stated objectives. Typically when an IT project fails it?s because one of the underlying processes had a critical fault. Each project has a planning stage, a production stage, and a testing stage. Throughout this whole process, a lot can go wrong. In fact, 50 percent of projects fall on their head. That?s right, half of all IT projects will fail in some way. Whether the project goes over budget, the timeline is interrupted somehow, or it turns out that the planning stages of the project weren?t completed properly, about half of IT projects fail.  No matter how you view it, it?s a substantial amount of projects that leave a business in a lurch. It?s a lot of wasted time, effort, and capital. It can have a long term effect on your business? ability to operate efficiently.  What You Can Do Let?s take a look at a couple of things you can do to improve project success: You?ll Want to be SMART – The SMART acronym has helped project managers deploy technology well. It stands for specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and timely. If you can confidently manage these variables of your new project, your projects will find much more success.  Lean on?well, Technology –  Funny enough, some of the better tools to help projects find successful conclusions are technological ones. Project management tools, collaboration tools, and other top-down management tools can keep teams on track and get your projects implemented correctly the first time. Planning is Important – Once you are done planning out your project, do yourself a favor and don?t change it. Sure, if the project needs to be altered somehow to work around unforeseen variables, that has to happen, but reevaluating and changing your core strategies can just lead to inefficiency and cost problems.  Project Management Help At White Mountain IT Services, we can help your business get the tools needed to manage your own projects or we can run point on technology projects to ensure that you have the best chances of successfully implementing your new tech. Give us a call today to find out more.

If ?Google? Charges You for a Business Profile, You?re Being Scammed

Let?s examine what Google said in their announcement, and what it means your business should be doing. Google is Going After Scammers Trying to Charge Businesses for Business Profiles First of all, a Google Business Profile is completely free for business owners to claim and use to share information about their organization. That?s just a fact. Therefore, if someone calls you and claims to be Google, offering to assist you with your Business Profile for a fee, they are attempting to scam you. This problem has gotten bad enough that Google is actively stepping in as a part of its ongoing efforts against scams. Their theory is that, by publicizing these scams and taking legal action against them, they are both deterring would-be scammers and raising awareness with the public about these threats. According to Google?s blog post about these kinds of scams, they were able to stop 12 million scammers from creating fake Business Profiles, and another 8 million attempts to fraudulently claim Business Profiles. Let?s be clear?Google charges you absolutely nothing to create a business profile on their search platform. Why would they? Creating one is mutually beneficial for you and them. On your end, you make it easier for clients to find and learn more about your business, and on Google?s end, their search engine becomes that much more useful for searchers. That?s a win-win! So, if ?Google? ever reaches out to you and attempts to sell you a Business Profile, it?s pretty clearly a phishing scam?a scam where an attacker pretends to be someone else. How to Spot Phishing Scams Make no mistake: phishing scams can appear to come from anyone?Google, your mother-in-law, one of your vendors, the government. Fortunately, there are a few core best practices that you can follow that help you to catch these attempts. Watch for Urgency: Keep an eye out for emotional language, particularly when it supposedly comes from a business entity. Urgency is a basic tool that a scammer will use to put you in an emotional, irrational state. Don?t let them fool you. Check the Details: So, ?Google? reaches out to tell you that you should pay for their assistance in setting up your Business Profile. Don?t hesitate to look up the Google Business Profile page (which, incidentally, clearly states that the Business Profile is free) to confirm (or, in this case, deny) the claims you?re being pitched. Don?t Give Them the Satisfaction: If you?ve confirmed that a message or a call is a scam, just end the conversation. If it was legitimate, the person will probably understand that you were just doing your due diligence for cybersecurity. We?re Here to Help Your Business Securely Reach Maximum Productivity Reach out to White Mountain IT Services at (603) 889-0800 to find out what we can do to help your business accomplish more.

Tip of the Week: Make a PDF Out of an Outlook Email

Save An Outlook Email as a PDF The key to this trick is to use the virtual PDF printer available through Windows devices. You?re not actually printing out the documents; really the feature is just going to save the page as a PDF file. It converts the page into a downloadable PDF file. You can, of course, print it out later if you want. The first step is to find the email that you want to save as a PDF. Open your Outlook app and find the message you want to download. You can use the web-based application or you can use the desktop app. Next, you?ll go to the Print options. You can use the File > Print method, or you can just use Ctrl + P to open them up. In the Print window, you should see Microsoft Print to PDF in the list of destinations. You should then be prompted to Save Print Output As, so just select the location to save your PDF. Once you?re ready, click Save and you should be all set. For the web browser, the process is quite similar. Once you have your message, you just click on the three-dot menu in the corner of your message and select Print. Then follow the same steps outlined above. That?s all there is to it! You can now open your PDF file and do what you will with it. For more great tips and tricks, be sure to subscribe to our blog and check back. You can even use this trick to save them as PDFs and save them for later!

This Setting Helps Cap Google Chrome?s Battery Usage

How to Enable Energy Saver in Chrome First things first?you need to make sure that you currently have version 108 of Chrome installed. Checking is simple enough. In the triple-dot menu at the top-right of your browser window, go to Settings. Once there, select the About Chrome category from the list at the left of the window. There, you?ll find information about your browser, including the version you have installed. There, you can push an update to Chrome 108. If you?re nervous about doing this (or anything we reference in this blog), don?t hesitate to reach out to us! From there, accessing the energy saving feature will take a little bit of work, too. Chrome has a hidden area where features being developed are shared for those who like to tinker. As of this writing, Energy Saver is one of these features. In your browser?s address bar, type in chrome://flags and hit Enter. You?ll see an extensive list of available and unavailable features?called ?Experiments??that you can search through. Search for ?battery? and you?ll get two options (as of this writing), the first of which being Enable the battery saver mode feature in the settings. Set this to Enabled. Once you?ve done that, you?ll need to relaunch Chrome for the changes to take place. Click the provided button to relaunch Chrome. Afterwards, if you go to your Settings, you?ll see a new tab in the list at the left: Performance. Access it, and you?ll see your new Energy Saver setting. Once activated, this setting will allow you to limit certain aspects of the user experience to save a bit of battery. As the setting says: ?When on, Chrome conserves battery power by limiting background activity and visual effects, such as smooth scrolling and video frame rates.? Once activated, you can decide whether to have this option Turn on only when my battery is at 20% or lower or Turn on when my computer is unplugged. Again, for assistance with this or any other IT question you have, please reach out to us at (603) 889-0800.