Fresh news and solutions for small business. By Ron Seybold

  • Published: Dec 5th, 2011
  • Category: MacWorld
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Last day to get lowest cost on best Macworld training

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Macworld has packaged its User Conference experience as iWorld this year, tech talks and presentations that run Thursday through Saturday during the Macworld Expo, January 26-28.

Today’s the last day to get a $75 rate on iWorld, the end of the early-bird registration. They’re also packaging an opening night Blast with the three-days of classes for a total of $110. In fact, today is the last early bird day for all of the Macworld experiences, from pre-show training to the Mac IT meetings for administrators and high-end business users. Even the Expo Pass, the lowliest entry ticket to the January events, goes up by $5 tomorrow.

A full list of everything that’s on offer in the iWorld sessions is online. For example, at 10AM Friday is a Super iPad Tools for Work tech talk that promises to “cover office type applications, presentations without projector, database management, PDF management, outlining and brainstorming, tracking secure data, tracking travel and expenses, dictation and transcription, remote OS administration, making phone calls (on an iPad!), and remote meetings (like WebEx and GoToMeeting).”

You can compare the packages and register to save some dough at the Macworld 2012 website.

New to the iPad 2? Take a look at the book

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Rolling tablets out into companies and businesses presents a special challenge. How do you get your users or employees comfortable with the change from laptop to tablet computing? It’s a good idea to provide some kind of a primer for the iPad, especially since Apple has done so little on its own to document the product. In paper, anyway; there’s a modest collection of videos on using the included elements of the tablet, like iTunes, Safari and Mail. And Apple has a 140-age user guide you can download and read in a PDF reader.

That kind of vendor-supplied documentation is fine, to a point. But this kind of training rarely gets as honest as an independent guide to a product. For example, if you look over those videos on the Apple website, you’ll find they’ve got a snappy 2 minutes on buying music via iTunes on the iPad — when what you really need is a primer on how to use iTunes on the Mac or PC to control what’s on your iPad. No such video exists.

No Starch Press has produced a “My New iPad 2” book, written by Wallace Wang, to help. We reached out to a first-time iPad user  who’s running a travel agent business, Ron Wilcox of Seabird Cruises, to tell us how this book stacked up for him. He added, after reviewing it, “now just try to get it out of my hands.”

I’ve often found instruction manuals to be frustrating and confusing.  Many are written with an assumption about the level of understanding that the reader already has about the subject. Online manuals tend to be exasperatingly user-UNfriendly, but manufacturers are so fond of the format that good print manuals are often difficult to find.

However, this manual, for this user, was pretty close to perfect. The index was detailed and complete. As a reference manual, it was quick and easy to locate information specific to a particular function. Read the rest of this entry »

Macworld Expo opens up its presentations

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Throughout March, the organizers of Macworld Expo 2010 are making the conference session presentations available to attendees. These are usually PowerPoint slide decks, and they are offered without audio commentary. But they are online this month at the Expo’s Web site, a real value for any attendee who couldn’t find enough time to sit in sessions and enjoy the riches of the show floor and keynotes.

The Web site is lightly protected, if you didn’t make it to the conference but had suspicions that the meeting would be as useful as ever. We wouldn’t want to encourage anybody to swipe anything, but the access is so simple that we think Macworld must be encouraging a little borrowing on the path to promoting 2011.

Some of these are basically billboards for the presenters, while others are standalone training. Rob Griffiths Best of OS X Hints has plenty of value by itself, but Griffiths has even posted a QuickTime file with his presentation (beware, it’s a 60MB download.)

But that it’s available at all proves that Macworld hasn’t lost too many steps from the glory days of Apple’s involvement. If you attended the show, have at the slide downloads for the next month. Grab ahold of a conference program to sort out who’s who from the bare bones download menus — and maybe queue up next year’s conference on your travel agenda.

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