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  • Home
  • Events / News
  • Remote Monitoring
  • Solutions
    • Secure Cloud Backup
    • Managed IT Services
    • Computer Service and Repair
    • Threat Detection MDR
    • Security for Office 365
    • Endpoint Detection and Response
    • Wireless Networking
    • Cybersecurity Compliance
    • VoIP Solutions
  • Contact
    • About Us
    • Who we partner with
    • AI use Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Professional Certifications
    • Security Docs
  • Penetration Testing
Phenicie Business Management

Cyber Security and IT support for Small Business

  • ask an expert, budgets, Credit Cards, Debt, Finances, Loans, Money, Q&A, Student Loans, Top

Ask an Expert: All About Student Loan Debt [Q&A]

Hi everyone, I'm Holly Mangan. I'm the managing editor of Money Crashers, a personal finance website dedicated to educating readers on better ways to manage finances. We cover everything from reducing m...

  • Holly Mangan
  • September 17, 2012
  • bed liner, etch, laser engraver, later cutter, misc hacks, paint, pcb, quadcopter

Integrating a power bus into a quadcopter frame

When working on flying vehicles weight is always a consideration. [Brendin] found a way to get rid of a wiring harness on his quadcopter, simplifying the assembly while lightening the load. He did it by incorporating the power bus into the frame of the vehicle. He started with some copper clad board. Because the substrate [...]

  • Brady Phenicie
  • September 17, 2012
  • Cleaning, Clutter, Home, Household, Organization

Maintain Your Clutter-Free House by Always Taking One Item with You When Leaving a Room [Clutter]

Clutter piles up pretty quickly when you're the type to bounce from room to room in your house. When you're moving around, objects end up in odd places and end up staying there. Unclutterer's solution i...

  • Brady Phenicie
  • September 17, 2012
  • arduino, arduino hacks, twitter, wifi, wifi shield

Scrolling tweets with a WiFi LED matrix

For his most ambitious build to date, [Param] thought it would be a cool idea to have a LED matrix display spitting tweets out via a WiFi connection. The build is now done, and we’ve got to hand it to him for a very nice build. The build is based on an Arduino with a [...]

  • Brian Benchoff
  • September 17, 2012
  • Amazon, DIY, eReaders, Kindle, Weather

Hack a Kindle Into a Weather Display [DIY]

A Kindle is already a great reading device, but if you want to get a little more out of it, blogger Matthew Petroff shows off a hack that turns a Kindle into a simple useful weather display. More&nb...

  • Brady Phenicie
  • September 17, 2012
  • Downloads, Facebook, Mac downloads, Notifications, Os X, Os x mountain lion

Glow for FB Stuffs Unobtrusive Facebook Notifications in Your Menu Bar [Mac Downloads]

Mac: For people who use Facebook more as a communication tool, it's often not worth the potential productivity drop to head over to the main site all the time. Glow is a Mac app that aggregates your Fac...

  • Brady Phenicie
  • September 17, 2012
  • epaper, Kindle, tablet pcs hacks, weather display

Turning a Kindle into a weather display

Since the first time [Matt] saw an e-paper display, the idea of using it as a regularly updated, non real-time display consumed him. It really is the perfect platform for very readable calendars, agendas or, as [Matt] found out, a weather display. [Matt]‘s build uses a server to fetch and parse weather data and forecasts from NOAA. [...]

  • Brian Benchoff
  • September 17, 2012
  • Batteries, Electronics, Gadgets, Money, Saving Money

Buy the Best AA Batteries for Your Money [Saving Money]

Most of our gadgets run on built-in rechargeable batteries these days, but we all still have a few things that run on good ol' AAs. DIYer Thomas tested 30 different brands of AA batteries and found whic...

  • Brady Phenicie
  • September 17, 2012
  • arm, cortex m0, cortex-m3, cortex-m4, debugger, Microcontrollers

Help create a universal ARM programmer

The new crop of ARM Cortex M0/M3/M4 microcontrollers have a lot of interesting features for developers. In addition to supporting drag and drop programming via USB, the same hardware can also be used as a debugger. Setting breakpoints and inspecting memory at any point in the code is a wonderful feature, but not all the [...]

  • Brian Benchoff
  • September 17, 2012
  • Annoyances, colleagues, coworkers, Etiquette, Jobs, Office, Office culture, Repub, Republished, Top, Work

What to Do When You Work With Someone You Don't Like [Coworkers]

We all have to deal with unpleasant coworkers. Maybe their habits annoy you, they're lazy, or they write rude emails. Don't let them completely ruin your work environment—Harvard Business Review's...

  • Peter Bregman
  • September 17, 2012
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