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Get a free copy of The Self-Promo Handbook with Computer Arts

Whether you're looking to grow your client list, win more work or climb the corporate ladder, you need to master the fine art of self-promotion – and Computer Arts issue 240 is your essential guide to doing just that.

A self-promotion special, it's packed full of expert advice and practical tips for promiting yourself – and it's on sale now.

Opening spread from the special report inside Computer Arts issue 240

The bumper issue also comes with a free digital copy of The Self-Promo Handbook, Computer Arts' best-selling guide to standing out from the crowd.

With the handbook, you get 100 pages of pro advice covering everything from how to boost word-of-mouth to strengthening your online presence, the most cost-effective forms of digital and print promo, designing a killer campaign, picking the right agent and more.

To celebrate the special issue, Hamburg-based designer and illustrator Florian Schommer (aka Kjosk) crafted a stunning isometric cityscape featuring a New York-style apartment block.

Computer Arts' finishing partner Celloglas then went to town on the print edition of issue 240, adding a double-layered emboss, matt silver foil highlights and a slick spot-UV to pick out the apartment windows.

Discover the lessons all designers can learn from the creative industry's very best speakers

If you're interested in saving money on Computer Arts, a two-year subscription to the print magazine will save you a whopping 38% on the newsstand price.

A two-year subscription to the digital edition, meanwhile, will save you 45% (that's 10 free issues) – and a two-year sub to the print and digital Computer Arts bundle will save you a massive 59%.

: Julia Sagar

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Font of the day: Boho

Boho font

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

The best graffiti fonts to download for free

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

 

Boho is designer Coto Mendoza's first script font family, which is based on gestual calligraphy. "Boho is inspired by a bohemian girl who is a free soul and creative spirit," Mendoza comments on HypeForType. "She is a city girl, but she loves spending a lot of time outdoors and being close to nature. She is a wild and free spirit who knows no bounds."

Boho is available to purchase via font foundry HypeForType.

Boho font
Boho font
Boho font

: Kerrie Hughes

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Case badge

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A sticker often found on the front of the computer that identifies hardware or software installed in the computer or what the user enjoys. A good example of such a case badge is the "Intel Inside" sticker that identifies the computer has an Intel processor. Today, there are many companies and websites that also have case badges that can be purchased and placed on computer cases. The picture shows an example of what case badges may look like on the front of your computer.

Also see: Chassis, Hardware terms

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Save 96% On The Microsoft Office Mastery Bundle

Get 96% off with the Microsoft Office Mastery Bundle ($49)

Get 96% off with the Microsoft Office Mastery Bundle ($49)

The world works with Microsoft Office. So even if it isn’t your favorite words-and-numbers suite, it makes sense to know your way around. This bundle of seven courses provides a complete education in all things Office, and it takes 96% off the standard price.

Anyone can make some kind of document in Word, or a simple spreadsheet in Excel, but these apps have a lot of hidden power. In this bundle, you learn how to harness these features to produce professional formatting in Word, deal with complex data in Excel, and create beautiful presentations in PowerPoint. There is also instruction on streamlining your email workflow in Outlook, using Excel’s PivotTable for further data manipulation, and collaborating with colleagues using SharePoint. In total, it is well over 150 hours of content. Head for the link to grab the deal.

>> Get 96% off with the Microsoft Office Mastery Bundle ($49)

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Pros and cons of font management systems

The job you're trying to do with any font management system is to keep track of the various – and sometimes hugely complex – licensing terms for the typefaces you use, whether you're a single self-employed designer or whether you're part of a multinational agency.

That means not just knowing that you bought a font legally, but that you can do all the things with it that you need to – use it commercially, deploy it in an app, embed it in a PDF to send to a printer, or whatever.

You can do this manually, by reading the terms carefully and buying a sufficient number of 'seats' (designating the number of people who can use it).

You'll need to ensure, for example, that your printers have licences too if you're bundling assets to send to them, then loading the fonts onto the relevant machines and removing them when they're not needed or you need to move your seats around.

 

Using a formal, server-based system such as Extensis Universal Type Server or Monotype FontExplorer X Server means that auditing is easy.

Once you've decided on the best font management option for you, try these five tips for taking control of your fonts.

: Christopher Phin

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Algorithmic Music – David Cope and EMI

Lajaren Hiller at the Experimental Music Studio

Lajaren Hiller at the Experimental Music Studio

No area of computing holds more interest to me personally than computer music. For years I’ve been fascinated with everything from the work of Lejaren Hiller at the Experimental Music Studio to Brian Eno’s generative music.  While many see the changes computers brought to production and performance as the more impressive innovations, computers as composers offers incredible possibilities that are only now beginning to come to light.

One of the great names in the history of computers as composers is Prof. David Cope; the Dickerson Emeritus Professor at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Cope began as a traditional musician and composer, creating hundreds of works performed around the world. 1982’s American Record Guide said of Cope, “David Cope is unquestionably one of this generation’s most ambitious, prolific and multifarious composers.” His works exemplify what the most ambitious composers of the 1970s and ‘80s brought to life and his Concert for Piano and Orchestra is seen as one of the most impressive works of avant grade music of the last forty years.

His attention was drawn to computers in the 1970s. “Part of me has always been that algorithmic side.” Professor Cope said when I interviewed him this March. Cope studied computing, learning programming techniques and studying artificial intelligence. He also began to find ways to apply it to his musical work. He even used an IBM computer and punched cards to compose a short piece of music.

“This is 1975, and it took [an] enormous amount of time to program and a very long time to actually get the results out, because the cards that we received an answer, in response to the input, had to be converted from those little holes in the punch cards to actual little physical notes on a page. But it succeeded — at least in getting performed.” Professor Cope mentioned in an interview with engadget.com, adding, “It was an awful piece, just truly dreadful.”

He later attended the Summer Workshop in Computer Music at Stanford, and studied several computer languages, including LISP, the standard programming language for artificial intelligence work.. He also began teaching the Workshop in Algorithmic Computer Music at the Digital Arts Research Center at UC Santa Cruz.

In the early 1980s, Cope had a commission for an opera, but was dealing with a serious case of composer’s block. Like many artists when facing a deadline, Cope procrastinated by beginning a new project, in this case, working on a music composition program.

“I decided I would just go ahead and work with some of the AI I knew and program something that would produce music in my style. I would say ‘ah, I wouldn’t do that!’ and then go off and do what I would do. So it was kind of a provocateur, something to provoke me into composing.” Cope said.

The program he started working on would eventually become known as Experiments in Musical Intelligence, also known as EMI or Emmy.

“Experiments in Musical Intelligence is an analysis program that uses its output to compose new examples of music in the style of the music in its database without replicating any of those pieces exactly.” he noted.

Tech Closeup: Music Professor David Cope

The program would analyze music Cope had entered enter into EMI’s database, and that input would be used to direct the composition of new works in the same style.

“I couldn’t figure out what my style was, so I suddenly started to say ‘well, I don’t know what my style is, so I should figure out what style is, period,’” Cope said, “I had to work something out, so I developed this program, my first in a long line of programs that are what I called ‘data-driven,’ that work on the basis of data alone, and not on my thoughts of what they should produce … thoughts that arise from the analysis of data.”

Cope entered the work he had begun into EMI and began to use the program to create new works using this data-driven approach, what could be called EMI’s “style.” As he used it to create new pieces, he began to notice patterns in his own work that he had never caught before, and based on those observations, began to change his own style.

“I looked for signatures of Cope style. I was hearing suddenly Ligeti and not David Cope.” the composer noted, “As Stravinski said, ‘good composers borrow, great composers steal’. This was borrowing, this was not stealing and I wanted to be a real, professional thief. So I had to hide some of that stuff, so I changed my style based on what I was observing through the output [of] Emmy, and that was just great.”

Cope successfully used EMI to break his composer’s block, and assist in the composition of his opera. The entire process took eight years.

“Actually, it took about two days, once I got the program done, but it was eight years from the commission to the actual premiere on the East Coast.”

Finished with his opera, Cope set EMI to compose new works in the style of various legendary composers. He would enter significant portions of a composer’s music into the system, and then use it to create new works using their style.

“When I first started working with Bach and other composers I did it for only one reason – to refine and help me understand what style was. No other reason. When I started to play this stuff for faculty and some friends of mine, they would say ‘hey, that’s not bad, it might fool someone if it was played by actual human beings. So, I took that seriously, and realized that at least as far as my promotions were concerned at the university, if I was going to do all this programming, I needed to publish something.”

Bach by Design (1997) from Centaur Records

Bach by Design (1997) from Centaur Records

Cope wrote several books, and began to collect and record EMI’s compositions. Bach, with a massive number of surviving works and an easily identifiable style, was a natural choice for Cope to start EMI’s recording career. Cope compiled EMI’s compositions in the style of Bach, as well as in the form of Bartok, Brahms, Chopin, Gershwin, Joplin, Mozart, Prokoviev, and even David Cope. These formed the album Bach by Design. Producing the album was the easy part; getting it released was the hard part.

“I spent almost a year trying to get an actual record company to produce the music. It was really tough.” Cope said, “I remember my greatest exasperation was, coming in on the same day, were two negative replies. The first said ‘we only publish contemporary music, and this, by our definitions, is not contemporary music, and then the other one said ‘we only do classic music, and this is not classical music’, so I said ‘then, what is it?’”

Eventually, Cope managed to get Centaur records to produce the album, but he faced another problem – getting human players!

“Then I tried to get a human performer to do it, and the fingering wasn’t easy or some such, so I gave up and had a Disklavier play it.”

The Disklavier, a form of piano that uses sensors and solenoids to reproduce the performance of actual piano playing, performed the works composed by EMI.  This would make Bach by Design one of the first albums produced with no humans composing or performing the music. The choice to perform the music via Disklavier led to other negative reactions from critics.

“The first three reviews of Bach by Design were negative on the basis that it sounded so stiff, and when I read the reviews, I was very upset that they weren’t primarily about how (the pieces) were composed, they were primarily about how they were performed.”

David Cope used his Experiments in Musical Intellievenge program to compose Zodiac

Despite the critical reactions, the pieces EMI composed were certainly Bach-like. Professor Douglas Hofstadter of the University of Oregon organized a musical form of the Turing Test.  Pianist Winifred Kerner performed three pieces in the style of Bach: one written by EMI, one by Dr. Steve Larson, and the last an actual piece by Bach. The audience then had to attempt to tell which piece was which. The audience selected Emmy’s piece as the actual Bach, while believing that Larson’s was the one composed by computer.

“Bach is absolutely one of my favorite composers,” Dr. Larson said to the New York Times, “my admiration for his music is deep and cosmic. That people could be duped by a computer program was very disconcerting.”

Classical Music Composed by Computer

Classical Music Composed by Computer

For the next recording, Classical Music Composed by Computer, Cope used human musicians to play the pieces composed by EMI. These works, in the styles of Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Cope, Joplin, Mozart, Rachmaninov, and Stravinsky, were performed by musicians including Cope’s wife Mary Jane, and a Balinese gamelan orchestra interpreting a piece in the style of Bach. The album received better reviews and caught the attention of many in both the classical music and artificial intelligence communities. These pieces showed that Emmy could produce works of surprising depth and range.

“EMI forces us to look at great works of art and wonder where they came from and how deep they really are,” Hofstadter said to the New York Times. “Nothing I’ve seen in artificial intelligence has done this so well.”

Cope produced several more albums using EMI, including Virtual Mozart and Virtual Rachmaninov. EMI even composed a complete symphony in the style of Mozart which was performed at the Santa Cruz Baroque Festival in 1997. Cope has produced thousands of other works in various styles using EMI, including 5,000 Bach chorales available on his website. These pieces composed by Emmy challenged many notions, not only about musical style, but of how computers can be used within the arts as a whole. EMI produced music that could fool some of the most knowledgeable classical music fans, but at the same time it relied on the input of existing works.

“I find myself baffled and troubled by EMI,” Hofstaeder noted. “The only comfort I could take at this point comes from realizing that EMI doesn’t generate style on its own. It depends on mimicking prior composers. But that is still not all that much comfort. To what extent is music composed of ‘riffs,’ as jazz people say? If that’s mostly the case, then it would mean that, to my absolute devastation, music is much less than I ever thought it was.”

Cope’s work with EMI and follow-up programs such as Alena and Emily Howell, along with work like Harold Cohen’s AARON paint system, naturally raise the question ‘are computers creative?’ When I asked Cope about whether he believed computers were creative, I was taken aback by his view.

“Oh, there’s no question about it. Yes, yes, a million times yes. Creativity is simple; consciousness, intelligence, those are hard.”

5000 works by EMI available as MIDI files

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Sharetable "desktop" computer puts a PC and a second screen inside your desk

With Sharetable, both the computer and a secondary (21.5-inch 1080p multitouch) monitor ar...

With Sharetable, both the computer and a secondary (21.5-inch 1080p multitouch) monitor are embedded inside the desk

Sharetable is all about simplifying interactions around a computer. Instead of having two people grappling for control, with awkward exchanges of mouse and keyboard and adjustments of screen position, it's designed to let two people work together more elegantly. Its approach is, in essence, to mirror or extend the screen across two displays on the same desk. But there's more to it. For starters, the computer is embedded in the desk. And so is one of the screens.

Sharetable is the brainchild of Swiss design agency ReMago and Italian technology firm CloudProject Generation. Its creators call it "your first computer desktop." Unlike Ideum’s multitouch smart tables, which feature huge end-to-end screens, Sharetable looks and functions like a conventional desk, only with a few suave tech-centric additions.

Its wires and cables run through one of the table legs and the inside of the tabletop, with five built-in plugs for USB and one for an HDMI or VGA monitor on the table edges. Beneath the glass rest two multitouch displays. At one end there's a 7-inch mini-display that provides control over many PC functions and widgets or that can be used as a trackpad or touch keyboard. On the opposite side, facing the other direction, there's a 21.5-inch 1080p screen with a custom interface intended for clients, guests, and collaborators to interact with.

Expected use cases include the boss' office at a company as well as for doctors to share test results and designers or real estate agents to share pictures and other information with their customers. With the display extended onto the touchscreen, Sharetable is also meant to be suitable for browsing a menu while waiting to be seated at a restaurant or for examining a map of a shopping mall.

CloudProject CEO Cristiano Fumagalli tells Gizmag that both touchscreens can be switched on or off with a simple keystroke, so you can easily save power or protect sensitive information when the situation calls for it. Or, as Fumagalli notes, you might prefer to extend the main display to the second screen with a PDF or catalog for a client to browse while you engage in confidential work.

Sharetable also includes an integrated microphone and speakers, a 3G/LTE modem, temperature and humidity sensors, and an NFC authentication system.

A Mac Mini/OS X version will set you back at least US$5,990, while Windows 8.1 or Android builds start at $4,590. There are three main models: Basic, which includes an Intel Atom quad core processor, 2 GB of RAM, and a 64 GB SSD; Advanced, which steps up to a Core i5 processor with 8 GB of RAM and 120 GB of hard-drive space; and Professional, which ups the RAM to 16 GB and has three USB 3.0 ports (whereas the Basic and Advanced models have only USB 2.0).

You can see a video exploring Sharetable's features below.

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How to get your hands on Andy Warhol's iconic artwork

Andy Warhol artwork
You can now get your hands on some of Andy Warhol's most iconic pieces

As the godfather of Pop Art, Andy Warhol's legacy upon the art world is still going strong. Having inspired legions of artists across the world, his influence can be seen across a manner of disciplines, including packaging designs and animations. If you're a fan – with a few thousand pounds to spare – you'll be pleased to know you can now get your hands on some of his most sought-after works.

 

As part of a major new exhibition, starting on May 6th, Andipa Gallery is selling some of Warhol’s most treasured pieces. "Art buyers from Europe, as well as emerging markets including China, the Middle East and Asia are pursuing the most sought-after works internationally, particularly by some of the most influential artists of the 20th century, such as Warhol," explains director, Acoris Andipa.

"Art investors the world over recognise London's Walton Street as a prime destination to purchase Warhol's rarest and most recognisable pieces. Walton Street is Warhol!" So, if you have a spare 20k, head on down to the gallery to peruse your next purchase.

Andy Warhol artwork
Andy Warhol artwork
Andy Warhol artwork
Andy Warhol artwork
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ReCAPTCHA

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A CAPTCHA that not only helps protect a site from bots or other scripts, but also helps read books. With a ReCAPTCHA one word is generated by the script and another word is a scanned word that an OCR program didn't understand. The idea is that if a user successfully understands one of the words that it's more than likely that the other word is also correct. The image shown on this page is an example of a ReCAPTCHA showing "were" and "tattoos" as words that need to be entered with no real way of knowing what one is the generated word and what one is the scanned word. On September 16, 2009, Google announced it was acquiring ReCAPTCHA.

Also see: CAPTCHA

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Win two tickets to What Design Can Do 2015

One of Europe's top design conferences, What Design Can Do in Amsterdam promises to be packed with insight and inspiration.

The diverse line-up of speakers covering everything from graphics and branding to architecture, product and interactive design across the two-day event from 21–22 May.

Michael Johnson
Triple Brand Impact Award winner Michael Johnson is on the line-up

This year's speakers include Michael Johnson of johnson banks, Stefan Sagmeister, Google Creative Lab's Steve Rura and experimental artists Bompas & Parr – and you can read more about the programme here.

Tickets are currently on sale for €395 each – and we have a pair of them to give away.

Computer Arts will be reporting live from the conference, and we'd love to see you there.

If you haven't already got your ticket, we have a pair to give away, worth €790 total. (Note that it's just the tickets you'll win - you'll have to arrange transport, accommodation etc.)

To enter, just tweet @ComputerArts with why you deserve them, using the hashtag , by 5.30pm BST on Thursday 30 April.

We'll pick our favourite by the end of the week. Good luck!

 get two years for the price of one on a Computer Arts subscription
Two years for the price of one on a CA subscription

Computer Arts has teamed up with What Design Can Do to bring you an exclusive offer that we'll be promoting throughout the conference. Simply sign up to a two-year subscription to Computer Arts magazine and only pay for one!

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Microphone

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Sometimes abbreviated as mic, a microphone is a hardware peripheral originally invented by Emile Berliner in 1877 that allows computer users to input audio into their computers. The picture is an example of Blue Microphones Yeti USB Microphone - Silver Edition and an example of what a high quality computer microphone may look like.

Most microphones connect to the computer using the "mic" port on the computer sound card. See our sound card definition for further information about these ports and an example of what they look like on your computer. Higher quality microphones or microphones with additional features such as the one shown on this page will connect to the USB port.

Below is a short list of all the different uses a microphone could be used for on a computer.

Also see: Headset, Input device, Line in, Mini plug, Sound card definitions, Ventrilo, Voice recognition

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Get The Satechi 4-Port USB Clamp Hub For Over 25% Off

Get 28% off the USB Clamp Hub ($19.99 incl. shipping)

Get 28% off the USB Clamp Hub ($19.99 incl. shipping)

A shortage of USB ports is always frustrating, worsened by the inaccessible ports on desktop PCs and Macs. An easy solution has arrived in the USB Clamp Hub, serving up four extra ports at the front of your monitor. Now at 28% off, your best opportunity for convenience is here.

The Clamp is an easy install — plug it into a free USB 3.0 port, and attach it to any easily accessible surface by tightening the rear screw. Inside, a rubber cushion prevents scratching, with a brushed aluminum finish on the outside. All four of the Clamp’s ports offer charging abilities and backward compatibility with USB 2.0, while a LED light indicates its readiness for use. The Clamp is compatible with Windows, OS X and Linux, without the need for extra software, and you can attach it to anything between 0.3" and 1.25" thick. Grab the deal while you can...

>> Get 28% off the USB Clamp Hub ($19.99 incl. shipping)

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Font of the day: Ailerons

 Ailerons

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

The 100 best free fonts to download today

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

 

Inspired by aircraft models from the 1940s, Ailerons typeface was created by Brazilian designer Adilson Gonzales de Oliveira. Designed for an experimental project of airmodels, Ailerons is now available for personal use. 

You can download Ailerons, free for personal use, over on Behance.

 Ailerons
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Save 80% On The Wi-Fi Hacking & Penetration Testing From Scratch Course

Get 80% off the Wi-Fi Hacking and Penetration Testing from Scratch Course ($29)

Get 80% off the Wi-Fi Hacking and Penetration Testing from Scratch Course ($29)

If you need to use a network, the chances are you want it to be secure. But the loopholes in any setup will only become apparent when it is attacked. This course shows you how to test your own networks, and it currently has 80% off.

Penetration testing provides a valuable insight into the weaknesses of your wireless or wired network. As the name suggests, Wi-Fi Hacking and Penetration Testing from Scratch makes it accessible for newbies to learn, but the course is pretty comprehensive, too. Over 47 lectures, it covers practical Wi-Fi attacks, how to control clients around you and access private data about them, and how to crack common forms of wireless security (WEP/WPA/WP2). You also receive instruction on how to protect yourself against ARP spoofing and poisoning, and how to use more than twenty pentesting tools. In total, it is more than five hours of content. Grab it via the link below.

>> Get 80% off the Wi-Fi Hacking and Penetration Testing from Scratch Course ($29)

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Joystick

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An input device that allows the user to control a character or machine in a computer program. They look similar to the control device you would find on an arcade game. For example, a joystick allows an individual to move an object in a game; such as navigating a plane in a flight simulator. The picture shows the Logitech Freedom 2.4, an example of a Joystick.

Also see: Game terms, Game port, Input device, Paddle, Yoke

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Calculator

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Calc is the name of the spreadsheet program used in Open Office.

An electronic hardware device or software capable of performing mathematical calculations such as addition, multiplication, subtraction, or division. The picture is an example of the Microsoft Windows Calculator included in every version of Microsoft Windows.

Microsoft Windows users

Users running Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP, and above can access the Windows calculator by following either of the steps below.

or

or

Windows Calculator Tips

By default, Microsoft Windows Calculator is set to basic mode, this can be changed by opening Calculator and clicking View and choosing Scientific. Scientific mode gives the user more options and abilities.

By default, Microsoft Windows Calculator digit grouping is disabled. Enabling this feature causes your long numbers to have commas. For example, instead of 10000000 it would display 10,000,000. To enable this feature click View and select Digit grouping.

For Windows 7 and above users, Microsoft has included a much more sophisticated calculator. As can be seen in the picture there are several new features that have been highlighted that are not available in previous versions of Windows. Additional information and tips on this calculator can be found on our Windows 7 Calculator tips page.

Linux users

Users running Linux and Unix can run the bc command or dc command to open the calculator.

Also see: Abacus, Add, Keypad, Software terms, Tabulator

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Caddy

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A container that holds something. For example, the picture to the right, is of a CD-ROM caddy, a container used with early Apple computer CD-ROM drives that would hold and protect the disc. This caddy is inserted into the drive with the CD instead of placing the CD on a tray or feeding it into a disc slot like most disc drives today. Today, the CD-ROM caddy is rarely used or found with computers.

Also see: Apple dictionary, CD terms

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Fonts of the week w/e 26 April

 Jekyll and Hyde
Yapa font
 
Loveton font
 Hero
Directors Gothic font

: Craig Stewart

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Bus Topology

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Alternatively referred to as a line topology, a bus topology is a network setup where each computer and network device are connected to a single cable or backbone. Bus networks are useful in small networks (like those setup in a small offices) and have the advantage of using less cable. Their main disadvantage is that if any segment of the network fails, all transmissions do as well. Below is a visual example of a simple computer setup on a network using the bus topology.

Also see: Network terms, Topology

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Font of the day: Directors Gothic

Directors Gothic font

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

The best free script fonts to download right now

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

 

Today's typeface of choice is Directors Gothic by type designer Neil Summerour. Available from MyFonts, the design is described as: "Handcrafted by Lettering Inc as part of its core library of typefaces in the 1930s, Directors Gothic was dramatically expanded throughout the lifetime of the company and remains a timeless classic.

"Inspired by the Art Deco movement popular at the time of its creation, Directors Gothic was designed with an eye toward expanded utility for use in advertising headline and smart corporate materials."

Directors Gothic is available to purchase over on MyFonts.

Directors Gothic font
Directors Gothic font
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Learn How To Build Your Own Tech Company With The Build A Startup Course Bundle 96% Off

Get 96% off the Build-A-Startup Course Bundle ($29)

Get 96% off the Build-A-Startup Course Bundle ($29)

Many different skills are required in order to build your own tech startup, from technical ability to marketing knowhow. This bundle of seven courses is designed to cover the lot, and it takes 96% off the standard price.

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Why smaller clients are often braver

Two decades ago, Bob Mytton and Sophie Williams gave up the hustle and bustle of London, and relcoated their award-winning studio Mytton Williams in a beautiful old carriage house down a cobbled mews in the Georgian city of Bath.

The agency balances design work for internationally recognised companies like Waitrose, The National Trust, Clarks and Premier Inn alongside a plethora of local clients.

 

We spoke to Bob Mytton, founder and creative director of Mytton Williams, to find out what going local means for a successful design agency...

Prior to setting up Mytton Williams, my wife and I met at Pentagram in London. She was a project manager and I was a junior designer. We loved working in the capital, it's a fantastic place. We worked there for about eight years before eventually deciding we wanted to settle down and start a family.

We fancied living outside of London, and Bath and Bristol felt like good places to work. I also landed a one-day-a-week teaching position at Bath Spa University, so lots of things fell into place.

Mytton Willaims' clients vary from national and international brands like Waitrose and Premier Inn to small start-ups

Bath is a perfectly sized a city for us and it's an easy commute back to London, plus there's an airport not so far away. Personally I wanted to be able to walk to work – that was always a dream and Bath's small enough to be able to live and work in the same place. Bristol is close by, and I love the vibrancy of the place and what's going on there.

There's also a lot of work locally and if you go a little bit further out you've got Swindon, Gloucester, Cheltenham – lots of reasonably sized cities around the M4 corridor to find work. As much as I love working further afield, it's great to have things on your doorstep. 

Bath Spa University is a key local client for Mytton Williams. The studio's 2015 undergraduate prospectus is vibrant and innovative – like the university

The pace of life is very different compared to the buzz of London. I remember making a phone call in our first week of being here and asking someone about getting something done in the evening, and them just telling me they would be going home at five o'clock.

I found that extraordinary! So that took a bit of time getting used to. I think that's changed a lot now – the design community has really evolved in the way it works. Communications have changed dramatically since.

We found work basically by going to as many local events as we could. We networked at events and talked to as many people as we could. Before websites were around (this was about 20 years ago) we would get work purely by word of mouth.

Quite early on, we started to build up a bit of a database for keeping in touch with people. Calendars were something we started sending out on a yearly basis. This approach turned out to be a good way of keeping in touch with people we met during the year, so we continued with it.

"Working for a local restaurant, The Porter, was great because we could pop up there, talk to the owners and understand how our work would fit into that environment," says Mytton

Are we allowed more creative freedom with local agencies or local companies? I would say smaller organisations, because we've worked with global, international, massive organisations, and we've worked with start-ups and SMEs. I always say probably the most enjoyment comes from working with, generally, the slightly smaller organisations, the SMEs, the start-ups.

A lot of the local organisations we work with have been of that slightly smaller size. We thoroughly enjoy it because you're often working with the owners – you're talking directly to the people at the top who make the decisions.

And being a little bit smaller they're sometimes a little bit braver. There's a little bit more scope for more creativity, and we really enjoy that.

Mytton Williams updated all aspects of the Wilsons brand, without forgetting the solicitors' 300-year history. [Opening image: Wilsons' responsive website]

There are a lot of creative agencies in the area. When we were in London, there was a really strong design community and people wanted to get together. So when we first moved here, we wanted to do the same.

I think some were a little bit suspicious at first: what were our motives? But I've always been a firm believer in getting together with other designers and design groups. I think it's better for us as a design community to go out there to the outside world, to clients, and to support one another.

Over the years, the community has grown into something really exciting. I think a lot of people did the same as us.

Someone once described our work as having no fluff. I guess that goes to the heart of what we believe in. We've termed this idea 'intelligent simplicity', which effectively means well-thought-through ideas that are simple, beautiful and effective.

The idea of simplicity that we strive for is quite difficult to get right, but we believe in it and we try and bring it to bear in all our work. I think the best ideas and the best branding work tends to be based around a very simple, strong idea.

It tends to be simply expressed – and it's our aim to craft that expression beautifully. That way it becomes a very effective piece of work and our clients appreciate it because it's more distinctive, it's much easier for them to use, and it's far more memorable.

Mytton Williams reinvigorated the brand of drama-based training agency React, positioning it as confident, creative, edgy and fun

Sustainability comes into our focus in a number of ways. When we first started the agency it was simple internal things like print, paper stocks, and questioning whether we needed something. That's come right into our client approach these days.

When somebody comes to us and says "We need a brochure," we say, "Well, do you, really?" There's that questioning attitude that we think is really important and goes to the heart of the idea of avoiding damage to the planet in any possible way.

Now we consider what people are asking for and whether they really need what they think they do. It goes back to that idea of simplifying. If we're asked for a certain size of print, for example, we'll ask, "Are people really going to read it? Is there another way of doing it?"

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CyberPower Trinity gaming PC offers distinctive "blade" design

The Trinity gaming PC offers some distinctive looks

The Trinity gaming PC offers some distinctive looks

CyberPower's latest gaming rig, known as the Trinity, is one of the most unusual systems we've seen, offering a design that wouldn't look out of place in a sci-fi blockbuster. The system features three "blades", placing the processor, graphics card and storage components in their own separate sections of the enclosure.

While most gaming PCs feature some sort of design flare, usually in the form of a customizable case lighting or a stylized grill, the Trinity's eccentricity extends beyond a mere few aesthetic frills, offering a drastically different setup to conventional PC towers.

The first segment of the high-end machine can be fitted with a mini ITX motherboard, allowing for compatibility with both Intel and AMD processors. There's room for up to 16 GB of DDR3 RAM and support for 120-mm (4.7-in) liquid cooling solutions. Meanwhile, the second blade has space for a high-output power supply, two HHDs, up to three SSDs and an optical drive.

The base configuration offers an AMD A10 processor, 8 GB RAM and a Nvidia GeForce GTX 750 ...

The final segment is reserved for the GPU, with support for full-length cards, including the high-end AMD Radeon R9 series and Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan X. There's also room for "several" extra SSDs in this segment of the case.

According to CyberPower, Trinity's unusual design allows for more effective cooling than conventional setups, with better airflow to individual components. The case itself is made of steel, and weighs in at 10 lb (4.5 kg). Users can either stand the system on the edges of two blades, or on just one of the hardware-packed outcrops. One of those options seems decidedly more sensible than the other.

If you're interested in getting your hands on the eye-catching machine, you'll be happy to learn that it's available for pre-order right now, with prices starting at a not-unreasonable US$955. The base configuration offers an AMD A10 processor, 8 GB RAM and a Nvidia GeForce GTX 750 Ti GPU, as well as a combination HDD/SSD storage solution.

Of course, if you're interested in packing the tower full of high-end components, you can easily push the asking price over the $4,000 mark. Systems are expected to ship in early May.

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Font of the day: Hero

 Hero

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

The 100 best free fonts to download today

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

 

Today's typeface is Hero, from the team at Fontfabric. It is described on the font foundry's website as being 'characterised by excellent legibility, well-finished geometric designs and optimized kerning - suited to headlines of all sizes and various types of graphic design, including posters and logos.

Hero is available to download for free over on Fontfabric.

 Hero
 Hero
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BSoD

>

Alternatively referred to as a bluescreen or bugcheck in Microsoft Windows NT, 2000, and XP, BSoD is short for Blue Screen of Death and is a full blue screen error message generated by Microsoft Windows operating systems. Below are some examples of how a BSoD may appear in Windows.

Example of a Microsoft Windows XP
blue screen of death

Example of a Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98,
and Windows ME blue screen of death

The blue screen is most commonly encountered and associated with a computer running Microsoft Windows. However, other operating systems such as the Apple Macintosh may also get a blank blue screen, which is also referred to as a BSOD. Apple computers that have a blank blue screen indicate that the hard drive is bad in that computer.

The Windows blue screen errors occur when a program encounters an error. Typically, these errors are caused with errors in the programming such as trying to call something that does not exist or do something that is not allowed. These errors can also be caused when hardware in the computer encounters a problem or is bad.

Write down the important parts of the error message. These error messages are usually long because they point to the locations of the error, which usually are not necessary. Write down any of the information mentioned below that is found in the blue screen error.

You do not have to write anything down if you have a digital camera or smartphone and can take a picture of the error message.

Also see: Black screen of death, Bomb, Error, GPF, Guru Meditation, Kernel panic, Operating system terms, Windows minidump

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Top 5 free video streaming websites

 

Online webcast is one of the most popular Internet activities. To view a video of the world, news summaries, TV shows, tutorials, or funny videos, you are sure to find something you like in one of the five best video streaming sites.

1. Youtube.com

Youtube

The video broadcast on the most popular web, YouTube has thousands of videos on nearly every topic imaginable, all users submitted and free to see. The videos are currently offered in widescreen format, though most videos submitted retain the original 4: 3 widescreen In addition, videos can now be loaded and displayed in high quality.

YouTube videos are often short home movies, but many record companies are releasing versions of their most popular video in low quality site. If you want a summary of the latest sports game, news cast, or speech, Youtube is your best choice.

Pros: Youtube offers: 9 ;: 16 Video playback quality; supports almost all video formats; a large audience for your videos; the ability to embed videos on a blog or website; The reactivity of the video; The custom video home page; and the ability to restrict access to the video.

Cons: Although the site is very popular, has some problems. There are too many spam comments; Video 100MB limit; and standard quality video can not be embedded in blogs or websites.

2. Vimeo.com

Vimeo

Vimeo is a free sophisticated video sharing site. Basic users can upload up to 500MB of video content per week, or pay for an account to download more. Vimeo attracts a wide variety of video artists, and is often used to upload short films, games, and wallets.

The site offers full support for widescreen streaming high definition and a wide range of video codecs, so it is ideal for viewing and sharing high-quality, high-definition personal video instead.

Pros: Vimeo has an easy to navigate interface; the ability to create and moderate video groups; support for high-definition video; up to 1GB of video files for premium accounts; Community forums and an artistic user base.

Cons: Because Vimeo is used so often Uploader great films, it can take over an hour to convert a single video.

3. Metacafe.com

Metacafe

Metacafe pulled his popularity with his flock views monetary system. Many videos on YouTube are duplicates, but also the content, there are a variety of video tutorials on various topics, including: DIY hacks; magic; and scientific experiments. If you are interested in making money on the opinion page of your video, Metacafe is the ideal site for use.

Pros: Metacafe has a popular display system payment page that allows users to be compensated for their videos. Videos can be downloaded with a link under the video or embedded in blogs or websites. The site has many high quality tutorials.

Cons: Metacafe increased their video resolution, and most of the videos are now pixelated due to oversampling. Many videos are from YouTube clones.

4. Hulu.com

Hulu

The first site to legally offer a wide range of TV programs for free, Hulu was founded by NBC and offers dozens of free TV series - both current and off-air broadcasts. Some of the TV shows offered includes: The Simpsons, Family Guy, Philadelphia, Bones, Buffy against vampires, and The Office. Unfortunately, Fox and some other stations fired some free shows in the list to force you to upgrade to a paid version.

In addition to offering TV shows, Hulu also has a catalog of movies available for viewing, as popular shows as: Spy Game, The Liar, Ghostbusters, Men in Black and The Karate Kid.

More: Hulu videos can be viewed in 360p for slow Internet connections. Popular clips are available for shows and recent movies and popular television. New series are available, with new episodes appearing up to a week after being shown on cable. The site is free. The videos can be purchased and downloaded. A staff queue can be created for favorite content.

Cons: Videos can be embedded in blogs and websites; The HD video stream is not available for most videos; and ads are displayed three or more times per video. Website is available only to US residents.

5. Veoh.com

Veoh

Veoh is a video content site, but has made a name for itself through partnerships with several companies to offer TV shows for free. Offering no television available from Hulu, the more popular shows such as The Bang Theory, Big Friends, According to Jim, CSI, and Everwood.

Besides a large number of free television programs, Veoh also offers submitted content, including video clips funny animations and users.

More: Videos sink the highest resolution quality. Video files can be downloaded and stored on a hard drive for later viewing. User submitted content can be embedded in blogs and websites, shared directly with friends, and stored in a list of personal favorites.

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