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Monday, January 04, 2021

Daily Battles: How to free space and delete unwanted files on your iPhone or iPad

If you are looking for tools for other operating systems or devices, see these links below.

Find large files on your Android Phone

How to find large files on your Windows Computer

Find large files on your Mac Computer


No matter how much storage space our iPhone (iPad) has, make it 256GB, we'll still find ways to fill it up and get the dreaded Storage Full warning message.


So what are ways to free up storage space on your iPhone? There are four categories you can look into.

  1. Delete apps that you no longer use.
  2. Offload apps you don't use very often.
  3. Free up storage from apps that save a lot of data.
  4. Find large files and remove them.

Delete apps that you no longer use

You can just press on the app icon and hold until all the icons start shaking and also shows a cross at the upper corner. Then press the cross will delete the app.


What I recommend is to go into Settings, General, iPhone Storage, and then scroll down to see the apps with their storage data usage listed. Then select one of them will open the settings page for that app and you have the option to Delete. This way you can delete the app that uses a lot of storage.



Offload apps you don't use very often

Sometimes you have an app that you don't use often but would still want to use it occasionally. So you don't want to delete the app and lose your data.

In this case, you can use the feature in iOS called Offload Apps. What this feature does is that it will remove the app from your device to save space, but it will keep the icon still on the screen and also keep all the user data. Next time you open the app, it reinstalls the app and then puts your data back so you never lose any settings or user data.



To enable this feature, you can follow the instructions in this article:


Free up storage from apps that save a lot of data

Some apps are notorious when it comes to using a lot of space. One such example is WeChat, which will just keep using Gigabytes of free space until your storage is full. Other social media apps might also use a lot of your space, such as TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, etc..

What I recommend with this kind of apps is to delete the app and then reinstall it. This will get rid of all the saved data (such as old video clips, large images, etc.) and really free up lots of storage space.

Just following instructions from the first section of this blog by going into SettingsGeneraliPhone Storage, and then scroll down to see the apps with the most storage usage and delete from there.


File large files and remove them

The last one, actually probably the most useful one, is to manage large files on your iOS device. These are typically video files either attached in a message or email or simply videos you recorded yourself.

For large file attachments, you can actually review large attachments. Go into SettingsGeneraliPhone Storage, and then scroll down to the app that might have large attachments. Click on the app and you'll see the Review Large Attachments option.


For videos you recorded yourself, with older iOS versions, there's really no easy way to review file size. The best you can do is to open the Photos app, and then just scroll through to see if you have long video clips (you can see the length info in the clip thumbnail). The longer the clip, likely the larger the file size.

With newer iOS devices (e.g., with iOS 14.2), though, Apple has made life a bit easier for users.  Just go to your Albums and look under Media Types Videos. You can see all your videos with their size information right there. You can also go into Photos settings (SettingsGeneraliPhone Storage, and select Photos app), and then click Review Personal Videos. Just find the really big ones that you don't really need and delete them to free up more space.


Hope this can be helpful for iOS users. Remember, maintenance is always an important task for your computing devices.






The more resource you provide, the more resources people will use.







BTW: The easiest way to remember my blog address is http://blog.lannyland.com

Sunday, January 03, 2021

Daily Battles: Microsoft Word Synonym menu empty and not showing any synonyms

If you use Microsoft Word for creative writing (or translation), you probably use a feature in Word called Synonyms Suggestion. You select a word in your doc, right-click on it, and then select Synonyms from the menu. Word will then suggest a bunch of words that have similar meanings to you. To be honest, it is also a good way to learn new vocabulary.


And one day, after right-clicking on the word, you find an empty list when you go to the Synonyms submenu. Does it mean there are no synonyms for the word you selected? You start testing other words and soon realize something is wrong and you can no longer use the synonyms feature.

Well, I had the exact problem. But don't worry, I also found the solution. The problem is because Word somehow got confused on the language of the document. And when it doesn't know or think you are using a different language, it doesn't know what synonyms to get (such as the one shown below).


To fix this problem, use CTRL+A to select the entire document, then go to Review on your menu, and then click the Language button on your tool ribbon. Make sure you select English and then click OK. Now if you try the Synonyms submenu again, everything is back to normal.


Hope this helps those that also ran into this problem. Happy writing (or translating)!!





Caring for indoor plants can reduce stress (unless it is a cactus).





BTW: The easiest way to remember my blog address is http://blog.lannyland.com

Saturday, January 02, 2021

Daily Battles: How to Find Large Files on Your Windows Computer

If you are looking for tools for other operating systems or devices, see these links below.

Find large files on your Android Phone

Free space and delete unwanted files on your iPhone or iPad

Find large files on your Mac Computer


Even though these days we have gigantic hard drives in our windows computers and laptops, things add up quickly and eat away your storage space, especially when you have lots of videos imported from your phones and lots of movies on the hard drive.

Sometimes you just have to do some house cleaning and get rid of junk on your computer, so you have enough hard drive for the operating system to run smoothly.

If you are using a Windows computer, the tool you need for this task is called:

Windirstat

With a user interface that almost looks like last century technology, the app is very easy to use. Start a scan on the folder or drive you want to clean, and it shows you where your large files are located with a very intuitive block map interface. You can right-click on it and delete it directly if you are sure.


Once you start the scan, you'll actually realize that a lot of your junk files are Windows updates. Generally speaking, if it is just an image or installation files (with the msi extension), then you should be okay to delete them. However, if you are not sure, don't do it.

Here's a short tutorial video showing you how the program works:


Hope you find this tool helpful and also feel in total control of your files on your Windows machine! This program should work on all current Windows versions.

Also, another good idea is to get a large external hard drive. You can get a 4TB external hard drive that's completely powered by your computer from Amazon for about $90.

Moving on to the next Daily Battle!






Sometimes, you don't have to have a Tao of the Day! 







BTW: The easiest way to remember my blog address is http://blog.lannyland.com

Friday, January 01, 2021

Daily Battles: How To Find Large Files On Your Android Phone

If you are looking for tools for other operating systems or devices, see these links below.

How to find large files on your Windows Computer

Find large files on your Mac Computer

Free space and delete unwanted files on your iPhone or iPad


Have you got the dreaded message on your Android phone when you were recording a video that your Android phone has run out of storage space? The worst part is that you don't know what's taking up so much space on your phone.

Well, here's a free tool you can use to identify and then clean out large files:

DataSize Explorer

You can find it in your Google Play store, or the Google Play web page I linked above.

Once installed, the program will scan your Android phone and show you where your large files are with a display like this:

Image Source: Softpedia

You can then go into the folder and see more details or select the file and just delete it. Here's a video showing you how you can do it.


Hope this can be helpful. I'll blog about how to find large files on other platforms in the near future.






Just when you thought 2020 is over and things will get better...







BTW: The easiest way to remember my blog address is http://blog.lannyland.com

Thursday, July 09, 2020

Google trained ResNet50 in 0.47 seconds, setting new MLPerf AI training record

Google has built the world's fastest ML training supercomputer and was able to set new records in six out of eight MLPerf benchmarks.

Speedup_of_Googles_best_M.0860040916660770.png

For example, they trained ResNet50 in 0.47 seconds. What does this really mean? According to Import AI newsletter:

Multi-year progress: These results show the time it takes Google to train a ResNet50 network to convergence against ImageNet, giving us performance for a widely used, fairly standard AI task:
- 0.47 seconds: July 2020, MLPerf 0.7.
- 1.28 minutes: June 2019, MLPerf 0.6.
- 7.1 minutes: May 2018, MLPerf 0.5.
- Hours - it used to take hours to train this stuff, back in 2017, even at the frontier. Things have sped up a lot.

You can read more about it from Google's Blog.

But What Does This Really Mean?

In a recent video posted by Lex Fridman, he talked about how the very hot GPT-3 compares to a human brain. Specifically, he told us that GPT-3 has 175 billion parameters and costs a whopping $4.6 million to train.


So here's what it means:
Only tech giants like FAANG, Microsoft, and alike can afford the hardware and money to train large networks like this, and small startups/players really don't stand a chance.
You can learn what GPT-3 is in 3 minutes in this article.

So anyway, while we celebrate the advancement of AI, we also have to be careful about the increased impact capital has on innovation. I really do not want this to turn into something like our legal system where big corporations always win even though they "lose" the case or have to settle.






A pandemic does not just go away no matter how much you ignore it, deny it, or wish it would just magically disappear.







BTW: The easiest way to remember my blog address is http://blog.lannyland.com