At Home with Tech

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Tag: fax machines

At Home with Paper

Can you imagine a paperless world? Do you aspire to live in one? Are you already there? If not, please find a bit of solace in my flawed journey towards this elusive goal.

Last week, I was boarding a plane to Chicago, and I was flying with a few work colleagues. At the gate, I pulled out my paper boarding pass. My travel companions all whipped out their iPhones. They clicked to their digital boarding passes. Then, they looked at me like I was holding an ancient hieroglyphic tablet.
(And they also offered a few choice words, which I gladly stole for the title of this post.)

Hey, it’s not like l’ve never tried the digital boarding pass thing. I just didn’t get around to checking in online before I got to the airport.
(Isn’t it ironic when you don’t have the time for something that’s designed to save you time?)

And wouldn’t it be funny if I showed up with a digital boarding pass, and my iPhone was out of juice?
(Just saying)

But the truth is I still like using paper.

Memory Jogger
I just find it easier to keep track of a paper receipt that I can throw in one place with other paper receipts during a trip for later T&E reconciliation.
(Are you ready to stone me as a Luddite?)

Sure, digital receipts are cool.
(Like my Uber email receipt for my trip to the airport.)
But then you’ve got to remember to go back later into your email and retrieve them.

When something is already in physical form, it’s not as easy to forget.
(All right… I’m ready to be banished to the prison of analog misfits.)

But seriously…
Paper does have its benefits.

At Home without a Printer?
Five years ago, a friend of mine told me he didn’t own a home printer. He said he simply didn’t need one anymore. I was impressed but also annoyed.

Why?

Because I couldn’t fathom a life without the convenience of a fax/scanner/copier/printer at home.

Fast forward to the present, and you know what?
I still can’t.

Nobody Faxes Anymore?
Does anyone really need a fax machine at home? I just had this conversation last week with my 84-year-old father, when he asked me to ‘fix’ his old HP fax unit.
(It ended up just being out of ink.)

I tried to convince my dad he didn’t need one anymore, but by the time I was finished presenting my case, I had changed my mind.

Because you do.
You think you don’t, but you do.

It’s not a frequent need, for sure… probably just a couple times a year. But at the most unexpected moment, you’ll suddenly need to sign a silly (or important) form and then fax it.

I suppose you could also scan it as a PDF and email it back, but that assumes the recipient’s rules allow for that.

It’s Still Cool to Copy/Scan
Speaking of scanning, if you ever hope to live in a paperless world, you’ll need a scanner to convert all of those precious family archival photos and documents you’ve been holding onto for future generations.

Digital conversion is a huge time suck. So you might have to depend on one of your descendents to finish the job. But I’m sure they’d be mighty thankful if you did your fair share during your lifetime!

And since you can scan, you can also copy.
Tell me that you never need a copy of something.
Enough said…

Printing is Evil
Yes, I’ve progressively reduced the number of pages I’ve printed out over the years. I try to save whatever I need long term as a digital file instead of printing it out and slipping more paper into my bulging file cabinet.
(And then never looking at it again, only to throw it out ten years later)

But other times, I just want a simple, printed page for the moment. Sure, there are digital workarounds. But I can’t imagine they all take fewer steps than just “File” and “Print.”
(And then ‘grab’ and ‘go!’)

Printing is sometimes…. just faster.
(I suddenly feel a digital lighting bolt forming above my head. You should take cover.)

Physical Photos Can Warm Your Heart
And don’t tell me there’s no longer any value to printing up that priceless family photo moment from your weekend trip to the lunar colony.
(Oh… apologies… I think I was channeling fragments of the future via the Force.
I just rewatched “Star Wars: The Empire Strikes” back and Yoda’s famous line, “…There is another.” Am I the last science fiction geek in the galaxy to make the connection that this line is probably super significant to Episode 8?)

But I digress…

Of course your local chain pharmacy can print up your photos for you, but it’s so much easier to print out your one-off pics with your own photo printer.

All-In-One Printers to the Rescue
So that’s why I’m still at home with paper.
Call me crazy.

The good news is one multifunction printer can handle all of the above needs.

I’ve been a big fan of Epson all-in-one printers over the past few years. Epson’s current flagship model, which gives you “photo quality” printing is the
Epson Expression Photo XP-860.
($262.87 on Amazon)

  • Print
  • Copy
  • Scan
  • Fax
  • #Boom

Guilty As Charged!
If you have completely shed the need for paper in your life, I applaud you.
(And please tell me exactly how you do this.)

For everyone else, don’t feel guilty.
(At least not for your ongoing, messy relationship with paper)

It’s still a journey to the paperless world…

The Secret iPhone Setting to Save Your Emails to iCloud

A proud member of the Silent Generation enjoys a Vietnamese coffee with his baby boomer son.  What controversial topic will the boomer be defending today?  Emails are better than faxes.  (shocking!)

A proud member of the Silent Generation enjoys a Vietnamese coffee with his baby boomer son. What controversial topic will the boomer be defending today? Emails are better than faxes. (shocking!)

My father and I often go out to dinner on Thursday nights.
Usually, he hasn’t even put down the menu when he’s already got some important proclamation to make.
Last week, it had to do with his home tech.

He lowers the daily specials menu insert and out of the blue says to me,
“A fax is much better than email!”

I look at him.

“Come on Dad… really?
Sending an email is so much easier.”

“But a fax gives you a hard copy confirmation,” he replies.
“You have proof it’s been received. An email can get lost.”

“Dad…” I scoff…. “Emails don’t get lost.”

He stares with the assured look of an almost octogenarian.

I try not to roll my eyes as he tries to out-tech-talk me.

But even though my father may not be totally up to speed on current home tech, he does know a thing or two.
(Last week, he’d somehow heard about the latest Apple iWatch rumor before I did.)

Sure, he’s usually biased towards technology from the ‘good old days.’
(He still talks about the wonders of the telegram and the McCormick Reaper.)
And he’s certainly not comfortable with figuring out every tech upgrade that comes along.
But his opinion as a tech consumer is as relevant as anyone’s.

He sometimes quotes me a supposed German saying his father taught him-
Too soon, Old.
Too late, Smart.

And I’m old enough now to begin to recognize how true that is!

Dad Has a Point
Even though my father’s fax machine is wicked old tech, it’s still hanging onto its relevance.
You can’t dispute that gripping a fax report confirmation sheet still gives you a little chill of happiness.
It’s your analog security blanket.

The down side is your successfully sent fax may still never get read.
It may forever be buried in some basket brimming with unread faxes.
But you can remain heartened by the fact it still exists in corporeal form.
That’s got to count for something, right?

But come on Dad!
All of this is so yesterday.
(It’s a dated issue from twenty years ago!)

Email is how the world mostly communicates now, Dad.
Heck, even this is a decade-old conversation.
Maybe we should be talking about how texting is killing email.

Here’s what my father would simply say,
“With a fax, I’ve got my confirmation sheet.
What do you get when you send an email?”

And my dad has a point.

If You Send an Email and Nobody Gets It, Did It Ever Exist?
I recently sent out an email on my iPhone using my iCloud account.

A couple days passed, and I didn’t get a response.

Not that this kind of thing is so rare.
Some people take their time getting back to you.

So I sent a follow up email, also through my iPhone.

No bounce back.
Just nothing…

Then I got paranoid.
Did I dream sending the emails?

I suddenly wanted some proof…

In Search of Proof
So how do you know if any of your emails actually get to where they’re supposed to go?

Well, if you see a copy of your email message in your computer’s email program or your webmail account, you’ve got some evidence.

Of course, there’s any number of dangers confronting your fragile email while on its journey.
(Sometimes you’ll get a bounce back report if your email doesn’t make it. Sometimes not.)

But you really can’t protect your email once its leaves the nest.
All you can do is try to make sure it blasts off successfully.

And much like a fax confirmation page, a saved copy of your email message can offer some comfort.

So I sat down at my iMac to confirm my two emails were also showing up in my email program’s ‘Sent Items’ folder.
(I use Microsoft Outlook for Mac 2011, which I recently upgraded to from Entourage.)

I took a look, and my two emails in question…
…were…not…there.
(gulp)

But I didn’t panic.
(not yet)

So I did a little research into the email settings on my iPhone.

By Default, Your iPhone Doesn’t Save Your Sent Emails to iCloud
Did you know you’ve actually got to tell your iPhone to save your sent iCloud emails to Apple’s mighty mail server?

What?!
(yes)

Otherwise, your iPhone retains your only copy!
(It’s your iCloud account’s default setting.)

So unless you’ve been inclined to check out every iCloud nuance buried in your iPhone’s settings, there’s likely no secondary evidence your emails have ever made it out of your iPhone.

(The small brown paper bag is behind you. Continue reading after you’ve stopped hyperventilating!)

The Secret Setting to Save Your Emails to iCloud
Better?
Okay, here’s the simple fix:
The correct setting is buried seven levels down, deep in the IOS 6 Settings App dungeon.

First, click the Settings icon.
Then begin your multi-level journey down the this rabbit hole by clicking-

  1. Mail, Contacts, Calendars
  2. “Your iCloud email account”
  3. Account (at the top)
  4. Advanced- Mail (at the bottom)
  5. Advanced (at the bottom)
  6. Mailbox Behaviors- Sent Items

You’ve finally arrived at your destination.
You’ll see ‘On the Server’
Here is where you’ll need to check off a specific folder for your email to go in the iCloud mail server.
iPhone email settings

I selected “Sent Items,” which seemed like the obvious choice.

Then, I drafted a test email, and voila!
Ping.
There it was, also on the mail server.

PROOF!!
(I feel so much better.)

Apple makes it so easy to save everything else to iCloud.
Why not your emails?
It probably has to do with Apple’s iCloud storage limits
Remember, every saved email counts against your iCloud storage limit.

Too Many Email Addresses Clog Up Your Brain
You might be wondering how come it took me this long to realize I wasn’t saving my emails to iCloud?
I think it’s partly because I hadn’t thought to track down one of my emails lately.

And what further masked the problem is the complication of my multiple email accounts…

  • I’ve passively collected them over the years:
  • Apple gave me one when I bought my first iMac
  • Then another when I bought my old laptop
  • My Optimum service offered me its own branded email
  • Plus, who doesn’t have an extra Gmail or Yahoo address?
  • And the obligatory address for emails you don’t really want to go to die

At first I thought it was great having several email accounts.
I developed a logic years back on how I would use each account.
(Then I forgot what it was.)

The truth is I don’t send out iCloud emails with my iPhone too often.
So I just hadn’t run into the problem yet.

Read Receipt?
I’m sure someone out there is thinking, “If Barrett is so concerned about his emails, why not send them with the ‘Read Receipt’ setting activated?”

Well, I stopped using that Big Brother functionality in Outlook a long time ago, because I felt it was intrusive.
And both Apple’s Mail and Outlook for Mac don’t support it anyway.

Cancel Fax Vs. Email Smackdown
Dad, I can’t claim my emails are any more bulletproof than your faxes.
But at as long as I strong-arm my iPhone into saving my emails to the mail server, I feel my backup plan equals the value of your fax confirmation page.

Beyond that, there’s no way either technology can guarantee a recipient will receive your important communication, let alone read it.

Dessert?

But my father is never one to let one of our debates end in a draw.
I think I know what he would say…

“Telegram!”

(Ugh)

“Check, please!”