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I open google xhrome on my phone and there is an ad
I open google xhrome on my phone and there is an ad









  1. I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD HOW TO
  2. I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD SERIES
  3. I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD WINDOWS

The confusion seems outlandish to anyone reading THIS blog, of course, but frankly the confusion is entirely understandable in the non-tech savvy world. People stick with the basics and then call for help when they want to do more. Even redial is little used, and what about call forwarding and parking on an extension? It's all great, useful stuff but hardly used at all. You probably call, check voicemail, and maybe use conference calling every now and then. And ask yourself just how much of your phone service you know where you work. You HIRE someone to know about computing and you ask them questions, just like you hire someone to know about telephones. For now, though, despite the ubiquity of computers and internet access, computing is still largely thought of as a peripheral skill that you can easily survive without. They will know searching the net the same way we knew picking up the phone to call people without talking to an operator first and will find it perplexing and quaint that their parents couldn't call up anything they wanted at anytime and listened to music from little plastic discs (as opposed to the big plastic discs their grandparents used). True, in a few years that will no longer suffice, but in a few years there will be generations coming up that have not known life without the internet, much less without computers. They have work to do and they use computers to do their work. There are many tech savvy folks, but the big portion of folks are working and thinking about OTHER things besides their computers and their operating systems and their applications and their browsers.

I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD SERIES

The majority of people I support, PhDs and MDs and all, largely operate on a series of steps to be performed to get to what they want to do. But the reality is that people DO have fantasies about WHAT they want their computer to do and HOW it does it for them is largely irrelevant. I use that term liberally where I work, and I don't mean it derisively at all, but there is a lot of push back from my managers (who do not talk to customers) to not use that word.

I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD HOW TO

Everyday users know in some weird way that is completely indefinable to them that the computer CAN be used for many things, but their ideas about how to achieve that are, for a lack of a better word, fantasies. There is simply is a blur of actions related to people's day-to-day use of computing that has nothing to do with how technically minded users see THEIR computes. When I ask what most of us here would considering simple questions like "What do you use to check your email?" it is a daunting question.

I OPEN GOOGLE XHROME ON MY PHONE AND THERE IS AN AD WINDOWS

Many of these folks are in their mid-20s and have grown up around computers using them every day, but they still do not know the difference between Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Office. The majority of people I support all have PhDs in various medical related fields and the only time they are interested in technology is when there's some tsunami of popular demand about a particular thing (iPhone, Skype, etc.). I have been providing desktop computer support for ten years. When I read the questions and the response I wasn't remotely surprised. "The biggest challenge all face is that most people don't even know what a browser is or that there's choice," told Brian Rakowski, director of product management at Google. Maybe Google should first explain users what's a browser. "Should I remove my original Google now that I have installed Google Chrome?" That's a very difficult question and I don't think that Chrome's developers anticipated how difficult is to launch an alternative browser. If I uninstall it, will I be able to get just plain Google?" wonders Stellar. All of the toolbars I'm familiar with are missing, and I don't even know how i got it. "I don't like the design of the Google Chrome.page. "If I change from Outlook Express to Chrome browser does my E Mail address have to be changed to a G Mail address?" wants to know Haljoan. How do I go back to regular old Google? I want to change my default search engine from Chrome to Google. "I want the old Google search engine, not Google Chrome. Here are some strange questions from users who can't distinguish a browser from a search engine or a mail client. There are many interesting questions in the Chrome help forum, but some of the requests are quite unusual.











I open google xhrome on my phone and there is an ad