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Five digital life ideas for the new year

Gadgets, gadgets, gadgets. Aren't you tired of them? Honestly, whenever I look at advertisements on TV and print, I feel the very purpose of the Internet is being defeated by an excess of focus on the machines, rather than what you can do with them. N Madhavan writes.

Updated on: Jan 01, 2012 08:36 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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Gadgets, gadgets, gadgets. Aren't you tired of them? Honestly, whenever I look at advertisements on TV and print, I feel the very purpose of the Internet is being defeated by an excess of focus on the machines, rather than what you can do with them. And so, I dedicate my new year column to reiterate ideas that will make you experience your digital life better.

HT Image
HT Image

Think Apps: There are thousands of applications, or apps, out there, whether you are an Android, Windows, BlackBerry or Nokia Symbian user with a smartphone/tablet PC. Tablets are flooding the market but seriously, stop getting confused by physical features and start instead to look for the apps that make sense to you: be it for learning music, finding the right travel deal or simply reading e-books.

Data plans matter more: My prediction is that sooner than later, 3G or other broadband data service plans will be sold with gadgets offered for free. Make a budget that includes both but go with a bias for faster broadband. Shift some of your machine spending to data plan spending for better experience.

Cloud Storage is a good idea: Sites such as Microsoft's Skydrive and Box.net offer storage on the Web. Cloud storage, as it is called, is worth paying for, though free services now offer a lot. Apart from enabling access your files from anywhere, smarter cloud storage helps you share pictures, songs and videos with family and friends.

Smart TVs are cool: This is my only exception to the gadget overkill, because tablets are passe. Online videos and e-books are the apps driving tablet usage but smart TVs take online videos take the place of your prime-time TV shows that are forced by mass consumer behaviour. Nothing like a Net-connected smart TV to watch almost anything on an impulse on YouTube or other video sites. By Diwali this year, I expect more affordable smart TVs.

Happy new year.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
N Madhavan

While India saw heated protests and a debate last week over Net Neutrality -- the call to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) for strictly separating content (apps) and carriage (data plans), the European Union’s Competition Commissioner took a step forward in another side of the business by charging Google with defying what is called “search neutrality”.

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