Improving your computer troubleshooting skills so you become more tech savvy is never an overwhelming task given the sheer number of ways anyone can learn to do so, given the right amount of diligence. So if ever you think that learning and improving your computer troubleshooting skills can’t be done online, think again, because that’s basically where you start.


Do your online research
The first and most important step in becoming computer savvy is to learn how to use the search engines to your advantage.  It’s important to learn how to correctly pose a question for search, and how to use Google, Yahoo, or Bing to find your answer. Basically, if there’s something you don’t know about a computer, the first thing is to check out the first few hits of a search to get some information. For example, when someone gets a specific virus or has a specific problem affecting their computer, a quick search will often show how to resolve it. After a few years of using search engines to research different things about computer troubleshooting, you begin to form a solid working knowledge without even trying.

You won’t know unless you practice
Don’t be afraid to try something on a used computer. After all, there is hardly ever an action you can perform on a computer that will permanently break it. That being said, make sure you have back-ups of anything important if you plan to try it on your own computer. Find a used computer on Craigslist for cheap. This provides a great platform for you to practice troubleshooting. If you don’t have a computer you can experiment, you can check out episodes on creating a virtual computer, “How to Use a Virtual Machine” by searching on Google. A virtual machine allows you to mess up anything you want because you can reset it back to any point in time, or just start over.

Read a lot
There are free courses for Windows, Apple, and Linux users on the internet. If you want to get more acquainted with Windows, you can find a ton of tutorials and other learning material on the Microsoft website. The same goes for Apple, which provides more than enough documentation for you to study. If you want to learn about Linux, there’s a full course on edx.org that is partially narrated by the creator of Linux himself. For anything else, there are endless and awesome series of YouTube videos that covers almost any computer topic you can think of in extreme detail. A little bit of time and practice with this material and you’ll gain a pretty comprehensive understanding of computers. And to think all of this is for free.


Summer don't last long enough for kids, and it can be a stressful time to get everything in order so that students have new clothes, school supplies, dorm stuff, and...back to school apps? According to a 2015 study, 77 percent of students reported that using tablets and smartphones has helped improve their grades, and 62 percent said that tech helps them feel more ready for class.

Below is our compilation of apps that will help you get back to school the right way. And since it's pretty common sense that students don't have much of a budget to work with, you can download all of these apps for free.

Evernote


Free: iOS, Apple Watch, Android, Windows

Evernote is considered as one of the most popular note-taking apps for quite a while. Its clean, uncomplicated interface makes it perfect for students wherein they can take notes, make to-do lists, set reminders, attach files, create agendas and access everything through any device. Evernote doesn't have a storage limit, but free users are limited to an upload limit of 60 MB per month. You also have to activate push notifications to sync all your notes when the app isn't running. The camera feature is highly useful, because it allows you to save any photo, document, Post-it note or business card.

Dropbox Mobile


Free: iOS, Android, Windows

As a student, you save, send, and lose a lot of files -- usually in the depths of your inbox. The free Dropbox Mobile app lets you store and share up to 2 GB of documents, photos, and videos in one secure location. It's easy to add notes to files you want to share, too, which is ideal especially when your group project seems to be taking forever. Recently, Dropbox partnered with Microsoft so that users can edit Microsoft Office files straight from their mobile phones and save them to their Dropbox accounts.

You may also want to consider Dropbox Paper, a collaboration platform that allows multiple people to edit the same document.

WolframAlpha


$2.99; iOS, Android, Windows
Meet your know-it-all bestfriend, which also happens to help Apple's Siri. Dubbed as the "Star Trek computer," WolframAlpha holds more than 10 trillion pieces of data and 50,000 equations. The app, which costs $2.99, uses these information to compute answers and generate reports on topics ranging from trigonometry and astronomy, to genealogy and mythology. It provides you with graphs, step-by-step explanations, and formula details.

EasyBib


Free: iOS, Android>

EasyBib takes over one of the most time-consuming parts of writing a research paper -- the bibliography. This app helps you format your list of references in more than 7,000 citation styles, including the most common APA and MLA formats. Just type in the name of the book and EasyBib will give you several options to choose from and then makes a citation for you. The app has a website that does the job just as well, but with the app you can take a picture of a book's bar code and then generate a citation for it.

My Study Life


Free: iOS, Android, Windows
The My Study Life is a free app that replaces any paper planner by keeping track of your workload across multiple platforms and devices. Manage your classes with week and day timetables, keep track of your tasks and upcoming exams in the cloud, and receive notifications to keep you updated with your exams and class schedules. The calendar is very easy to read, thanks to its clean interface and the ability to color code your classes.

Now you'll enjoy school more with My Study Life!

Tiny Scanner


Free: iOS, Android

Tiny Scanner is an app that is perfect in making sure your handwritten class notes are at least legible enough to send to a classmate. The app uses the camera on your phone or tablet to scan documents and export them into PDFs that you can email or save to your camera roll. You can also crop and color-correct your images before you export them into PDFs.