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6 PC tools for better open-office privacy

  • September 03, 2018
  • Technology

Once you’ve decided to become a cryptocurrency investor, it’s not uncommon to feel overwhelmed.

After all, cryptocurrencies are relatively new, and any kind of investing requires understanding markets, trends and more.

1. Bitcoin Hero

One of the tricky things about investing is that, like many other things, it can be difficult to do well when you lack experience. However, testing the waters too much as an investor could drain your resources and force you to stop before you get the hang of things.

Bitcoin Hero solves that problem by giving you a simulated environment to help you understand how to trade Bitcoin and Ethereum, plus Litecoin and Dash. It makes learning to trade into a game, thereby eliminating the possibility of having to practice by trading in the real markets.

You can alter your possible simulated profits by changing the amount you invest, and the leverage too. This free app also uses actual cryptocurrency prices to make your learning experiences maximally accurate.

2. Bitcoin Flip

Here is another free simulator to consider. When you start, it provides $10,000 worth of game money to play with. Bitcoin Flip shows a graph representing cryptocurrency prices changing over time.

You can start interacting with this game right away without registering an account, but taking time to sign up lets you save your progress and choose various other cryptocurrencies besides the four offered to non-registered users.

3. Blockfolio

Knowing the status of your portfolio as market conditions change is an essential capability for any cryptocurrency investor — beginner or expert. Blockfolio brings all the crucial information to your smartphone screen, including detailed profit/loss metrics for each type of cryptocurrency you own.

Also, because there’s support for thousands of cryptocurrencies, you don’t need to worry excessively about investing in one not mentioned in the app. There’s information from dozens of cryptocurrency exchanges around the world, as well.

A news feed feature allows accessing the latest headlines from sources like Coin Telegraph and CoinDesk. Plus, you can convert cryptocurrency earnings to flat currencies such as euros or American dollars.

Both of the simulators covered above function in browsers. However, Blockfolio is a standalone offering for both iOS and Android platforms. It’s free to download.
Managers, corporate executives and workplace analysts were once sure that open-plan offices were ideal for helping people get more done and interact with each other.

Since then, numerous studies have contradicted those views, including one from Harvard that found face-to-face time between employees decreased by 70 percent while the number of text messages and emails sent rose.

Not surprisingly, people also complain of open offices cutting down on the privacy they enjoy and causing too many distractions. If you can relate, these six tools could help you reclaim some privacy and enjoy improved coping mechanisms.

1. Computer privacy screens

Computer privacy screens work by only making your screen visible when people look at it straight on, not from the side. If you’re worried about the upward-mobility-motivated colleague who sits to your right peeking at your screen in hopes of getting details that could help him gain a competitive edge for the recently announced promotion, invest in a privacy screen.

Prices start at about $20 and go up depending on your monitor size and the desired features. Some accessories have anti-glare coatings or mechanisms that allow sliding them on or off.

2. The Compushade Visor

You may become fixated on a perceived lack of privacy at your office if the people who walk past your laptop momentarily pull your attention away from the screen.

Even if those employees don’t look at the screen content, your fear of the possibility could be intense enough to cause substantial distractions.

A Compushade Laptop Visor solves both real and imagined privacy threats by creating a tunnel around your desktop or laptop screen. Its extensions are on both sides of the screen plus the top. When it’s time to go home, the accessory folds flat on the back of a laptop. Concerning the desktop model, you can take it off for easy storage. (Priced at $29.95 and up.)

Article source: https://www.technobuffalo.com/2018/09/03/6-pc-tools-for-better-open-office-privacy/

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