It concerns the world’s largest IT project, the UK’s NHS (National Health Service) $25 billion plan to digitize and centralize all patient records. I can, perhaps, offer some good news, or at least a hint on solving the late-project problem. (I refuse to explain what wtf means here, except to say that it is unrelated to the World Taekwondo Federation.) Will ACM soon have a Journal of Insoluble Problems and Persistent Bugs with articles such as “Why Your Projects Will Always be Late and Over Budget”? In spite of which, of course, we will continue to worry about the inevitable. What was once the History Channel is now subdivided into the Hitler, Stalin, and Bush channels. Discovery runs an hourly bird-flu alert digest. National Geographic is the daily Tsunami Times. Each counseling group and realtime disaster has its own dedicated e-magazine and TV channel. Private angsts are no longer confined to Freudian couches but relayed live (stretching the meaning of live) via a million blogs. What used to be the occasional endemic scare is now a continuous pandemic panic. Bad news still predominates the digital headlines as it did in the old media, but now any amateur with Photoshop or iWeb can create 9/11 conspiracies for millions of YouTube and Brasscheck viewers. Thus, wisdom-free information is not just here-and-there and now-and-then but all-over, all-the-time. On the wider cultural front, it spawns instant celebrity cults, not excluding Keen’s own dizzying exposure on the Web! Fads and faddisms come and go thick and fast fashions, thin and thinner, in a snowclone of clichés. Amateur (in the derogatory sense) content is murdering the traditional media. His The Cult of the Amateur (Doubleday, 2007) is provocatively subtitled “How today’s Internet is killing our culture.” Keen bemoans Web 2.0 as the digital dystopia, regretting that the technology he promoted in the early Internet gold rush has become Frankenstein’s monster. We also have our latter-day Wordsworth, the contrarian’s contrarian Andrew Keen (quod googlet). New distant scenes of endless science rise!” “But, more advanced, behold with strange surprise As a contemporary Wordsworth might say: “The Web is too much with us, late and soon, getting and browsing we lay waste our powers.” There is a glut of unfiltered information proving more dangerous than Alexander Pope’s “A Little Learning” where “shallow draughts intoxicate the brain.” Pope surely predicts our age of instant, effortless data access when he writes: First, there’s too much of everything these days, and, second, it’s happening all over. “A lot of what, and about where?” I hear you cry. Everything is refreshed, and you can see what’s been added in each update.There’s a Lot of It About And everybody’s doing it. ![]() Update all your apps in one sweep, including the macOS itself. Did you know you could also reset an app? Keep your apps forever young You can find unused apps that have been left undetected for months. Mass delete unwanted apps, plugins, and extensions. Manage apps and extensions Uninstall known and unknown apps Erase sensitive details like messenger chats and browser history. Privacy: Rewrite your online historyĭelete tracking cookies so advertisers cannot follow you across the web. We give you a real-time shield against trojans, data miners, and recent browser hijackers. Remove malware from Mac It stops macOS-specific virusesĬleanMyMac X officially holds a “Gold” level of Mac virus detection. Switch off background plugins and fix small errors like an Apple genius. Full-scale macOS optimizationįind and disable apps that cannibalize your memory resources. Also, run Maintenance scripts to make your apps more responsive. When your Mac stalls, free up its RAM memory in a click. Speed up your Mac An army of maintenance tools You can visually spot the largest space-wasters to quickly free up space on Mac. This tool builds an interactive map of your entire drive. ![]() Need to filter out just movies or months-old documents? No problem. Locate massive old files that were swept under the rug. You can mass remove unused DMGs, incomplete downloads, and the rest of old baggage. Tons of invisible cache files are finally done with. For a slow computer, use immediately.ĭownload newest release from macOS AppStore or download from website Examples Clean up your Mac The end of system junk Delete system junk, unwanted apps and malware, and tune your Mac for maximum speed. The most user-friendly problem fixer for Mac.
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