06/08/2026
Most small business owners do not think of themselves as high risk.
They are not a giant company. They are not running a massive IT department. They are just trying to keep the phones answered, the invoices moving, the customers happy, and the business running.
But that is exactly why one tech problem can hit so hard.
One email scam. One ransomware attack. One failed backup. One compliance issue. One day without access to files, email, scheduling, or billing.
For a small business, that is not just an inconvenience. It can mean lost time, lost money, stressed employees, upset customers, and emergency bills that come out of nowhere.
The hard truth is this:
Small businesses face many of the same risks as larger companies, but usually without the same protection, planning, or safety net.
That is where managed IT support makes a real difference. It is not about fancy tools or confusing tech terms. It is about keeping your business protected, monitored, updated, backed up, and ready before something goes wrong.
Your business deserves more than emergency repairs after the damage is done.
Read the article to see why small businesses are often higher risk than they realize, and what a real IT safety net should include.
Small Businesses Are High Risk They Just Do Not Get Treated Like It - Bob's Computer Service
Small businesses are high risk targets for cyberattacks, but rarely treated like it. Learn why managed IT services are the safety net every owner needs.
06/05/2026
This Week in Tech History
Napster is Released (June 1999)
In the summer of 1999, a simple program written by Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker changed music forever. Napster hit the scene as the first widely adopted peer-to-peer file-sharing service, allowing users to trade MP3s with just a few clicks. For the first time, anyone with an internet connection could get almost any song instantly—and for free.
What led up to it?
By the late 1990s, CDs dominated the music industry, but they were expensive, and digital music wasn’t easily accessible. MP3 players were new, the internet was getting faster, and people wanted a way to share music online. Napster gave them precisely that.
The impact was massive:
• Millions of users joined within a year.
• The record industry launched lawsuits that eventually shut Napster down in 2001.
• But the genie was out of the bottle—people had tasted digital music.
Napster paved the way for iTunes, Spotify, and the entire streaming economy we know today. Love it or hate it, Napster made music digital, portable, and social. The way we listen, buy, and share music today can be traced right back to that little gray window on our Windows 98 desktops.
👉 Do you remember downloading your first MP3 on Napster?
06/04/2026
It starts with a simple message from someone who says they have the wrong number. They apologize, seem kind, and slowly become part of your daily routine.
That is what makes pig butchering scams so dangerous. There is no rushed demand. No obvious threat. No clumsy sales pitch. Just weeks of trust building before money ever comes up.
This article explains how these scams work, why they feel so real, and what warning signs to watch for before a friendly conversation turns into financial loss.
Read the full article to protect yourself and the people around you.
06/01/2026
It can start with a Facebook ad, a friendly message, a fake investment group, or a deal that looks too good to pass up.
Social media scams are no longer sloppy or obvious. Many of them now look professional, personal, and believable. Scammers are using fake business pages, hacked accounts, AI generated content, and targeted ads to trick everyday people into sending money, clicking links, or trusting the wrong person.
Americans reportedly lost $2.1 billion to social media scams in 2025, and many of these scams started on platforms people use every day like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.
The best protection is not fear. It is awareness.
Before you click, buy, invest, or respond, slow down and verify what you are seeing. A few extra minutes can protect your money, your identity, and your family.
Read the full article to learn what scams are most common right now and how to protect yourself.
05/31/2026
Yes, restarting your computer really does still fix things.
It sounds too simple, but there is a reason IT people ask you to restart first.
Your computer is constantly opening programs, running updates, syncing files, loading browser tabs, checking email, and keeping background services running. Over time, something can get stuck.
A restart gives Windows a clean start.
It can:
Close frozen background processes
Finish updates that are waiting
Clear temporary memory issues
Reconnect services that stopped working
Fix strange printer, internet, or Outlook problems
That does not mean restarting fixes everything. If the same issue keeps coming back, there is probably a bigger problem that needs to be checked.
But for the occasional weird issue, a restart is still one of the fastest and easiest first steps.
Think of it like letting your computer take a deep breath.
Sometimes that is all it needs.
05/29/2026
This Week in Tech History
In May 1972, the world got its first glimpse of the Magnavox Odyssey, the very first home video game console. Long before Xbox, PlayStation, or Nintendo ruled living rooms, the Odyssey showed people that you could bring interactive entertainment right into your home.
What made it groundbreaking? Instead of big arcade cabinets, this console hooked up to an ordinary TV. It came with plastic screen overlays (yes, you had to stick them on the TV!) to add color and scenery, and players used simple controllers to move glowing dots around. It wasn’t flashy by today’s standards, but it sparked the idea that games could be played at home—not just in arcades.
The Odyssey directly inspired Atari’s Pong, launched the home gaming industry, and set the stage for everything from Mario to Fortnite. Without that first demonstration, the entire gaming world as we know it might look very different today.
It’s wild to think that what started with a few bouncing dots on a screen now drives a multi-billion-dollar industry, fuels esports arenas, and even influences how we connect socially online.
👉 Do you remember your first home gaming console?
05/28/2026
Most businesses do not think about leased hardware until the renewal notice shows up. By then, there may not be enough time to plan a smooth replacement, confirm which data is stored locally, or securely wipe the drives before the equipment is returned.
That old server or workstation may be holding customer records, financial files, cached passwords, or business documents long after everyone assumes it is “empty.”
Lease end dates are not just accounting deadlines. They are data security deadlines.
Read the full article to see why leased hardware needs to be tracked, documented, and handled carefully before it leaves your business.
05/25/2026
You may already be paying for Microsoft 365, but are you really getting everything you can from it?
Most people use Word, Excel, and Outlook every day, but never use some features that can save a lot of time. Dictation can help you write emails faster. Outlook Quick Steps can clean up repetitive email tasks. OneNote can organize notes, ideas, and projects in one searchable place. Power Automate can even handle small repetitive tasks for you.
The best part? You do not have to be a tech person to use these tools.
I put together a simple guide to some of the most useful Office 365 features that many home users and small businesses overlook.
Read the article and see which features could make your day a little easier. Link in the comments
05/22/2026
This Week in Tech History
Back in May 2010, a Florida programmer named Laszlo Hanyecz made history by trading 10,000 Bitcoins for two Papa John’s pizzas. At the time, Bitcoin was a relatively new and experimental digital currency with almost no value. That simple transaction became the first real-world purchase made with Bitcoin — forever remembered as “Bitcoin Pizza Day.”
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What seemed like a quirky exchange has turned into one of the most famous stories in tech. Those 10,000 Bitcoins? Today they’d be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The event demonstrated to the world that cryptocurrency could move beyond theory and be applied in everyday life.
Since then, Bitcoin has evolved from niche forums to Wall Street, shaping our perspective on money, security, and the future of digital transactions. Love it or hate it, that pizza order marked the beginning of a financial revolution.
Would you have traded your Bitcoin for pizza back then… or held onto it?
05/21/2026
The worst time to learn your backups are not protected is after a ransom note is already on the screen.
Modern ransomware attacks often go after backups first, quietly removing recovery options long before anyone realizes something is wrong. This article explains why having backups is not always enough, and what makes a backup strategy much harder for attackers to destroy.