> Getting acquainted with the zero-pound computer > (Des Moines Register; 05/11/98) > > By PHILLIP ROBINSON > > San Jose Mercury News > > I've carried around "portable" computers ranging from 30-pound behemoths in > the 1980s to the latest credit-card-sized data-display devices. > > All of them are too heavy, too bulky and too expensive. Plus, because > they're expensive, I worry about them being stolen, an extra "weight" on my > mind. > > So I'm experimenting with a breakthrough device I call the "zero-pound > computer." > > In other words, I don't carry a computer at all. Well, other than the gray > mushy one built into my skull. > > Instead, I look to the computers and Internet connections I can find on the > road. Like those portables and pocket gizmos, the zero-pound computer can be > inconvenient, expensive, and under-powered, but at least it doesn't weigh me > down. > > Where can you find the zero-pounder? > > Start with the local public library. Many now have Windows personal > computers or Macintoshes, often with some basic word-processing software, > nearly always with a pretty speedy Internet connection. > > And they're free! All you have to do, in most libraries, is sign in for > your half-hour or hour of use, so others can know when their turn will come. > > To learn if a particular library is equipped, you can call the library > directly or look on its World Wide Web site. Try your favorite search engine to > find the library's page. For example, looking up "libraries" and then clicking > on "Public Libraries" in Yahoo (www.yahoo.com) shows a long list of public > library Web addresses. Or you can search on the actual place name, remembering > as you do that governmental sites end not in ".com" but in ".gov." > > How do you get your electronic mail when connecting with someone else's > computer and Internet service provider? The easiest way is to sign up for a > free e-mail service such as Hotmail, Juno, RocketMail, Yahoo Mail, LycosEmail, > MailExcite, AmExMail or hundreds of others. > > Most let you check your e-mail from any Web browser. Some also let you > check for e-mail from your account with an Internet service provider, or ISP, > if the ISP follows the industry-standard "POP3" format. > > Some include mail-forwarding abilities and a few will forward your e-mail > to a fax or pager address. > > There's no space here to compare the many services, but you can poke around > yourself by looking for "free e-mail" with your favorite search engine or by > going to a list such as "Free E-mail Address Directory" > (www.emailaddresses.com). > > Many are entirely free, though some charge a monthly fee for services such > as forwarding, and most cover part of your working screen with ads. > > By the way, there are two other advantages of such services. > > * They can provide a permanent e-mail address, assuming they don't go out > of business, one that doesn't change when you switch Internet service providers > chasing the lowest fees and best service. > > * They can provide anonymity, blocking a recipient from knowing who you are > when you send a message. > > If you just want to check e-mail from your ISP account without opening a > free e-mail account, there are two Web-based services that will retrieve and > display your messages: "MailStart" (www.mailstart.com) and "ReadMail" > (www.readmail.com). > > Back to the question of finding a computer: You can also check in many of > today's hotels. A few have rooms with Internet access, such as through a WebTV > or other Internet terminal attached to the television. > > Many larger hotels have a "business center" that can send and receive faxes > and rent you various equipment, from pagers and cell phones to PCs or Macs. > > These might cost $20 per hour in the business center itself or $150 to $250 > per day for you to take away to your room or around town. The charges can be > steep because the centers expect you're putting it all on expense account. Even > faxes can cost $5 for the first page and $3 for each additional page. > > Expect the minimum computer charge to grab only a bare-bones system. Each > item you add -printer, modem, software -will quickly boost the price. And don't > assume the business center computers are attached to the Net. Often they're > not. These places can be so behind that they're still renting out typewriters > for $10 an hour. > > Unfortunately, there's no single registry of which hotel has what. Even the > computerized reservation systems that let you search for hotels with swimming > pools, wheelchair accessibility and an exercise room don't know about computer > rooms. > > You'll just have to call ahead, ask around, maybe join some travel > newsgroups on the Net to learn where to stay with your zero-pound computer. > > The same is true of airports and even planes. Some airports now have > computers sealed in kiosks. QuickAID (quickaid.com) has set up its QuickATM > kiosks at San Francisco International and plans to be in five more airports by > the end of 1998. > > You plug in a credit-card as though buying self-serve gas, and set to work > on the Web or e-mail. Again, you may want one of the free e-mail services to > take full advantage of this. You pay around $2.50 for every 10 minutes, or $15 > an hour. > > A few airplanes are building screens into the back of the seats. Initially, > these are for watching movies or playing video games, but they could soon be > put to use for computing and the Internet. > > Don't count on finding such a flight going where you're headed, however. > They're too rare. Maybe as rental car companies, already dallying with > satellite-based navigation system in their cars, will also someday add back-of- > the-seat computing screens for fun and business. > > Not for the driver, naturally, though I've already seen drivers with one > eye on the road and another on a portable computer on the passenger-seat. > > Cybercafes are another reliable choice. Also known as "Internet cafes," > these are coffee-shops or even restaurants that have added a few computers. > Some are computer centers dressed up with a few pastries and coffee machines. > > The fewest computers I've seen in one has been two machines. The most > equipment has been a dozen powerful PCs and Macs with graphics boards for high- > speed games and a fast T1 Internet hookup for Web, e-mail and even video > conferencing. I've heard of others with 50 computers and 3-D Virtual Reality > arcade sets. > > Rentals run from free -if you're buying some food and drink -to $5 or $12 > an hour. Many cybercafes are small operations in college towns. Some are parts > of chains with names like Cybersmith and Cyberia, cropping up in big towns on > several continents. > > You can look to the newsgroup "alt.cybercafes" for opinions on which are > best or search the Web for the online pages and details of the hundreds of > cybercafes around the world. I couldn't find any good central listing of > cybercafes on the Web, although you can often locate them through search > engines such as Yahoo. > > One last place to put your zero-pounder to work is in a copy shop. Some of > these have computers you can rent by the hour. The best example I know of is > Kinko's, the 24-hour shops found in many U.S. cities and some sites outside the > United States. > > At the company's Web site (www.kinkos.com) you can get the details on their > computers for rent -$12 per hour for the basics, $24 per hour for graphic > design powerhouses -as well as their options -Zip and **Jaz** drives to store > your information for takeaway, 50-cent per page laser printing and $2 per page > color laser printing. |