Ask the Readers: How to stop workday interruptions?

Reader Dan, who spends his days in a cubicle, can't get any work done--too many interruptions!

I've tried putting foam box inserts in the doorway, but people just wander by and ask, "What's going on here?" I've tried working from home, but my manager won't allow me to do it regularly. How do you manage and prevent interruptions without being mean to the interrupter?

Here's how David Allen does it. As for me, because I'm sequestered in my basement, my only interruptions come from my pesky loving family. But I'll bet those of you who work in cubes have some great tips to share with Dan. Put 'em in the comments, of course.

Paste notes on web pages with Stickis

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Ever wish you could leave yourself a note on a web page and have it reappear the next time you returned? Stickis lets you do that and more. It's a social network for sticky notes.

Similar in concept to Mystickies, Stickis lets you add notes to sites you visit--resizable windows . They're not just for you, though: Notes can be shared publicly or privately. Thus, if you find a useful story on, say, Lifehacker, you can leave a note about it for your circle of friends, complete with tags, formatted text, embedded images, etc.

Stickis strikes me as a bit more complicated than it should be, and I don't like the tiny tag text in the "tray" that shows note summaries for the current page. Still, I can see all kinds of useful applications for this once you've mastered the learning curve. The required plug-in is available for IE and Firefox.

Download of the Day: Restart (Windows)

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Windows only: Freeware system tray application Restart turns the generally tedious process of booting into another installation of Windows a breeze.

After you install Restart, you'll see a green restart icon in your system tray. If you've got multiple pre-Vista versions of Windows installed, you should see your list of available boot partitions. Just click the one you want to restart into and Restart will reboot your computer and automatically boot into the chosen partition. Anyone who dual boots knows how easy it is and what a pain it can be to reboot with the intention of choosing a different OS, but missing your chance because you've left the room - which means you have to reboot all over again. Restart is freeware, Windows only; unfortunately, I'm assuming due to Vista's new boot manager, Restart only works pre-Vista.

Ask MetaFilter Roundup

Create and use virtual disk images on your Mac

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The MacApper weblog has a simple, beginner's tutorial for creating and using virtual disks on your Mac using the built-in Disk Utility.

As MacApper explains, Disk Utility allows you to back up a CD or DVD to your hard drive in the form of a disk image, which you can then mount and use just like you had inserted the optical media from whence it came. Aside from the handy I-don't-need-a-disk freedom the disk image gives you, it also means you can have more than one disk image mounted at a time if you so please. As a former Windows-only chap, it's so great to see how Apple actually bundles this sort of useful tool in the OS without the need for a 3rd party software. If the image you want to create contains sensitive data, you might want to consider encrypting it.

Early Adopter Download of the Day: Minimo (Windows Mobile)

minimo.png

Windows Mobile only: Previously mentioned freeware app Minimo is a mobile browser based on the same wonderful Mozilla technologies that bring us Firefox.

Minimo's come a long way since we last posted about it, and its strong feature set includes pretty good javascript/AJAX support and tabbed browsing that looks and feels like regular Firefox tabs. This little browser is still very young, and support for a lot of javascript and AJAX may end up being a bit too much for what you Windows Mobile device can handle while remaining snappy (at least it was for mine - Google Maps did work, but it was a little jumpy), but this is a nice looking mobile browser you might want to keep your eyes on. Like Firefox, Minimo claims to have extension support, but as far as I could find, there currently aren't any extensions available. Either way, it's a definite step up from the mobile version of Internet Explorer if that's what you're browsing with on your mobile device.

Extend Vista's activation period indefinitely

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Web site Windows Secrets posts a registry hack that claims to allow users to bypass Vista activation altogether.

According to the post, after editing a key in the Vista registry, you run the previously mentioned rearm command (designed to let you extend Vista's activation period up to 120 days). If the little registry hack is accurate, you can repeat these steps any number of times to push back your activation indefinitely (by default, you're only supposed to be able to run the rearm command 3 times).

I know Windows wants me to buy a separate copy of Vista for every time I install the damn thing, but I'm not one to drop $300 just so I can have a second or third Vista partition for testing purposes, so I'm hoping this works - at least for a while. Microsoft's Windows Genuine Advantage blog is reporting the the workaround is ineffective, but I may have to try it myself before I take their word.

Daily news roundup

  • Video Games Conquer Another World: Retirees [NYT]
    "Older Americans are increasingly turning to video games that rely on quick thinking as a recreational alternative."
  • Users warned on Windows cursors [BBC]
    "Microsoft is warning users about a flaw in Windows animated cursors that could leave users open to attack."
  • US 'no longer technology king' [BBC]
    "The United States has lost its status as the world's engine of technology innovation, the World Economic Forum says."
  • IBM developing wiki how-to tool [CNET]
    "Wikipedia-like tool aims to help people automate repetitive tasks performed on the Web, such as filling out forms or paying bills."
  • ETech provides peek inside Microsoft labs [CNET]
    "Mobile browser, game that challenges kids to program are among the new technologies that Redmond researchers unveiled at the ETech conference."
  • Hacking Apple TV [Macworld]
    "sooner than Apple TVs start arriving on retail shelves did intrepid users start taking them apart."
  • ICANN votes against .xxx domain [AP]
    "The agency that sets the Internet addressing guidelines influencing how people navigate the Web defeated a proposal Friday to give adult Web sites their own ".xxx" domain."
  • Google goes back to pre-Katrina maps [AP]
    "Google's popular map portal has replaced post-Hurricane Katrina satellite imagery with pictures taken before the storm, leaving locals feeling like they're in a time loop and even fueling suspicions of a conspiracy."
  • Data theft believed to be biggest hack [AP]
    "A hacker or hackers stole data from at least 45.7 million credit and debit cards of shoppers at off-price retailers including T.J. Maxx and Marshalls in a case believed to be the largest such breach of consumer information."

Download of the Day: Send To Toys (Windows)

send%20to%20toys.png

Windows only: Freeware application Send To Toys lets you customize the hell out of your irregularly used (if I'm any indication, that is) Send to context menu.

Send To Tools adds a slew of useful defaults you can send an item to (like the clipboard, command prompt, a mail recipient, or any folder you choose). If you're sending a file to another folder, you can choose to copy it, move it, or just create a shortcut. Allowing for quick customization of pretty much every menu item in the Send To menu, this is clearly a program built by someone who decided it was time to get better use out of a potentially useful menu. (To be honest, the only Send to item I ever use now is the Compressed (zipped) Folder command.) If you're already a big fan of the default Send To menu, let us know how you use it in the comments.

Track Lifehacker comment responses with Yahoo! Pipes

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Now that readers can respond to individual comments here at the big LH, you need a way to keep track of the comments directed at you. While I hope we'll have something to do this built into the site someday, in the meantime it can be done using Yahoo! Pipes.

Filter Lifehacker's comment feed to see only the items with @your-name in them using my new pipe. Enter your your name as it appears when you post into the search box and grab the results as a feed so you never miss it when another reader responds to one of your comments.

Note that when you enter your user name, unless you've been responded to in the last 10 comments published here, there won't be any results. But subscribing to the feed, over time, will yield results when other commenters respond to you. Let me know if you have any troubles with this one, and feel free to clone, riff and improve as you see fit.

Friday Fun: Make a wallet from an old keyboard

keyboard-wallet.jpg

Crafty hacker zieak over at Instructables offers a how-to on making a geektastically gorgeous DIY wallet with an old keyboard's innards. Zieak says:

Why? In taking apart electronics I find uses for most of the parts. Things which can not be reused go into scrap piles for recycling. But these sheets couldn't be easily reused and probably can not be recycled. I tried using overhead transparency sheets that had been printed on for a customized clear wallet pattern but the sheets mark when folded or creased. These circuit sheets are extremely durable.

If the result is really as durable as duct tape wallets, I've got a new DIY wallet love. Thanks, JH!

UltraNewb: How to reset your frozen iPod

Your iPod just crashed, and it's gasping for breath and giving you the black iPod screen of death. Resuscitate it with the magical, life-giving key combination:

1. Toggle the Hold switch on and off. (Slide it to Hold, then turn it off again.)
2. Press and hold the Menu and Center (Select) buttons simultaneously until the Apple logo appears, about 6 to 10 seconds.

This works on the latest click wheel 'pods; check out the whole Apple document for instructions on older models and other iPod troubleshooting techniques.

MacGyver Tip: Shine your shoes with vegetable oil

vegoilshoes.jpg

Real Simple magazine's got a quick tip for shining up scuffed shoes in a pinch:

Use a damp cloth to wipe away dirt, then apply a small drop of [vegetable] oil to a soft cloth and rub the surface to remove scuff marks.

You can get rid of shoe scuffs using Pledge wax/wood shiner, too.

Love and Money: Thanks to this week's sponsors

High fives all around to this week's sponsors: Don Julio, Igo, Intel, Mio, Nokia, Playstation, Sprint, Webroot's Spy Sweeper, and Verizon. You want a high five? Advertise with Lifehacker.

LH Top 10: Free Windows Downloads

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At every turn on the internet, someone's offering a free software download for your PC. But separating the wheat from the evilware-addled chaff isn't for busy users with better things to do than test applications all day long. That's where we come in.

Today we've got our top picks of free Windows software downloads that will make your PC faster, stronger, more functional and productive. This list was tough to whittle down from a huge field of candidate applications, but that means our 10 choices are that much stronger.

Read on for 10 great free Windows downloads sure to make your PC experience that much better.

Step through Lifehacker's Top 10 Free Windows Downloads>>



Or, get the whole list at a glance:

10. 7-Zip (file archive manager)

9. Foxit Reader (PDF reader)

8. SyncBack (backup utility)

7. Picasa (photo manager)

6. Notepad++ (text editor)

5. foobar2000 (media player)

5. foobar2000 (media player)

4. GAIM (instant messenger)

3. Paint.NET (image editor)

2. Launchy (keyboard launcher)

1. Mozilla Firefox (web browser)

Now, we wanted to list almost as many apps on this list as an honorable mention, but I'll leave that up for discussion. What would your top free Windows download list looked like? Let us know in the comments.

Apple's iPhone will be released on June 11 (Declan McCullagh/CNET News.com)

Apple's iPhone will be released on June 11  —  Ever since Steve Jobs' keynote at the Macworld Expo in January, we've known that the iPhone is being released sometime in June.  But we haven't known exactly when.  —  Now Cingular is confirming that the release date will be June 11.

Source:   CNET News.com
Author:   Declan McCullagh
Link:   http://news.com.com/2061-10801_3-6171953.html

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

SellABand Music Model Gaining Traction (Michael Arrington/TechCrunch)

SellABand Music Model Gaining Traction  —  Marshall Kirkpatrick wrote about German startup SellABand when it launched last August.  —  Like Amie Street, SellABand has an innovative way for struggling new artists to get their music heard, and make some money as well.  Artists sign up and upload some of their music.

Source:   TechCrunch
Author:   Michael Arrington
Link:   http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/29/sellaband-music…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

c,mm,n, the world's first open-source car (Mark Vanderbeeken/Core77 Design ...)

c,mm,n, the world's first open-source car  —  Earlier this week c,mm,n (website in Dutch), the world's first open-source car, was revealed at AutoRAI, the Amsterdam car show.  The initiative and vision behind the c,mm,n (pronounced "common") comes from the "Stichting Natuur en Milieu" …

Source:   Core77 Design Studio Bullitts
Author:   Mark Vanderbeeken
Link:   http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

NewTube Is Just The Beginning - Give it up for NBC Universal ... (Business Week)

NewTube Is Just The Beginning  —  Give it up for NBC Universal and News Corp. (NWS ), because in late March the two old-media titans made the biggest splash for a nonexistent product since the iPhone.  —  Of course, Steve Jobs has a couple of prototype phones that a lucky few can dandle.

Source:   Business Week
Link:   http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_15…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Why I Voted For XXX - The ICANN Board voted today 9-5 ... (Susan Crawford blog)

Why I Voted For XXX  —  The ICANN Board voted today 9-5, with Paul Twomey abstaining, to reject a proposal to open .xxx.  This is my statement in connection with that vote.  I found the resolution adopted by the Board (rejecting xxx) both weak and unprincipled.

Source:   Susan Crawford blog
Author:   Susan
Link:   http://scrawford.blogware.com/blog/_archives/2007/3…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Today's Other Malware Threat: IE7.0.exe (Jose Nazario/Security to the Core)

Today's Other Malware Threat: IE7.0.exe  —  Lest you think that the ANI thing was the only thing going on today, you'd miss the other part of today's entertainment.  There's a new Trojan spam going around trying to entice you to download MSFT IE7.0 Beta 2 (never mind that it's been released).

Source:   Security to the Core | Arbor Networks Security Blog
Author:   Jose Nazario
Link:   http://asert.arbornetworks.com/2007/03/todays-other…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Is Google Too Powerful? - As the Web giant tears through media ... (Business Week)

Is Google Too Powerful?  —  As the Web giant tears through media, software, and telecom, rivals fear its growing influence.  Now they're fighting back  —  It's the year 2014, and Googlezon, a fearsomely powerful combination of search engine Google Inc. (GOOG ) and online store Amazon.com Inc. …

Source:   Business Week
Link:   http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_15…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Video Games Conquer Retirees (Seth Schiesel/New York Times)

Video Games Conquer Retirees  —  CHATAWA, Miss. — For 133 years the School Sisters of Notre Dame have lived here in a thick forest just up the hill from the Tangipahoa River.  In a modest but stately compound called St. Mary of the Pines, 52 retired members of this Roman Catholic order spend …

Source:   New York Times
Author:   Seth Schiesel
Link:   http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/30/arts/30seni.html

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Digitizing media with AudioDizer

audiodizer podcast audioAudioDizer wants to pack our iPods and portable devices with more content than we can handle.

This text to speech company is aiming at creating a new distribution channel for traditional media companies, creating high quality MP3 podcasts for newspapers, magazines, websites, and advertisers. AudioDizer uses multiple voices, speech patterns and accents to enhance listening experience while trying to improve the content that is stored on devices.

The whole text to speech does seem creepy when heard, and can be a little distracting if the timing is off or when words don't flow together properly. Technology Review uses AudioDizer for every article they publish online and it has been working great for their users. The process is simple for the user, choose an article, then choose whether you want to listen to the article, or download an mp3. I have to say, it is high quality, but still has that creepy distracting feel to it. Mind you it has the potential to be very beneficial when you are in a rush, or on your way to work and want to catch up on your favorite sites content.

What do you think? Click here for an mp3 sample.

Minimo 0.2 released

MinimoLast time we checked in on the Minimo project, the Windows Mobile web browser was in its infant stages. Now, with the release of version 0.2, it might be safe to call this little guy a toddler.

The version of Internet Explorer that comes with Windows Mobile tends to be a bit on the anemic side. Pages are slow to load, and there's no support for tabbed browsing.

Minimo is not an official Mozilla project, but it is hosted on Mozilla.org. The browser takes many cues from Firefox, and the browser tabs even look like Firefox tabs.

Unfortunately, the latest release is only available for Windows Mobil 5.0 and newer devices. The Minimo team recommends anyone with an older model download version 0.16.

Organizing school life with mySchoolog

myschoolog plannerGetting and staying organized in any school level can be a little difficult, now there is a free online application that could help.

mySchoolog is an online application that students can easily use to track and organize their school lives. Users start off by entering lessons they take and organizing them into categories, and make weekly schedules. Schedules can be made through a drag and drop lesson planner with times associated for each class to keep them organized. Of course it has a to-do area where appointments, homework and anything else can be added, and reminders set to be sent out by email or sms. Lesson notes can be entered online, searched, exported and printed so they can be kept and used when required. 20GB of File storage is available for documents, audio or images, and can be categorized by lesson.

But really, is there any time to organize yourself while in school? Sometimes not, so hopefully this might help a bit.

Discover blogs with BlogRovR

blogrovr blog discoveryBlogRovR is a site that has just been launched by the team behind Stikis, creators of the "write notes wherever you browse" overlay.

BlogRovR will let users know about content from blogs that they normally read by telling them about content when and where they are likely to be interested in reading about it.

It works by downloading an application, and entering in blogs that are frequently read. BlogRovR will then search all blogs while you surf, when it finds relating information it displays an overlay into your browser notifying you with summaries about the posts it has found. You can then read what your favorite bloggers have said about the page you are currently visiting without leaving.

Why would someone really want to use this application? Are we missing something? Would you want to read your favorite bloggers commentary on every site you visit? It seem like it could get a little distracting. It is however good for a little cross referencing when doing research, and gathering links to same topic posts from a familiar voice.

Create your own comic strip with ToonDoo - Today's Time-Waster


What better way to waste time then to create a cartoon. Who cares if you have no skills, ToonDoo will help you out.

ToonDoo is created by Jambav, and backed by AdventNet, the folks behind ZoHo. They have put together an easy way to create comic strips where users can choose characters, props, and backgrounds and make a cartoon in under five minutes. Seriously, you can sit for hours playing with different scenes and setups, fine tuning characters and writing scripts in speech bubbles. Cartoons can be saved, and when you feel they are good enough, you can publish them for visitors to the site to check out. It's very addicting.

Feel free to drop a comment with a link to your ToonDoo!

Google Notebooks redesign for added productivity

redesigned google notebook

Get a little more organized with this updated Notebook release from Google. The organizational tool looks a little nicer now, care of some AJAXy goodness from the team at Google. They have updated and transformed the once boring Google Notebook, into something extremely useful.

Notebook now uses a nice blend of AJAX and common Gmail features to store and share notes. Users can create a list of nicely organized Notebooks, or folders on the left hand side where notes are stored and auto saved. Notes can easily be made in each Notebook, and even shared with other users for collaboration, or exported to Google Docs for further work.

Take a look at the new Google Notebook, Its pretty helpful now. Especially with the Google Notebook Firefox Extension that you can easily use to clip and collect information as you go about your WWW travels. Maybe Google will think about adding this into the Gmail interface one of these days? It would do wonders there.

Microsoft releases Deepfish, an enhanced mobile browser

microsoft deepfish mobile browserCould thisbe the start of "Browser Wars 2, the quest for the stronghold on the mobile world"?

Microsoft has just entered the space with their new enhanced mobile browser offering, Deepfish. The Deepfish browser plays off of what the iPhone showed us a short while ago, showing the user a recreation of desktop browsing on mobile devices, not stripping anything out. Deepfish gives users on mobile devices an identical look and feel of pages rendered on typical desktop setups. The application allows scrolling and zooming in and out of web pages, enabling increased readability, standard navigation, and simple form submission. When completely zoomed out, images are lossy, but zooming in provides more detail. If you are a little worried about your Windows Mobile device struggling when browsing with all of this extra content, don't be, Deepfish has bandwidth optimized rendering for faster content delivery.

Microsoft might be getting a little worried about Opera, and Mozilla's minimo.2 quickly entering the Windows Mobile device space and quickly starting to become the default offerings.

Deepfish is sadly in an invite only mode at the Microsoft Live labs. It's for Windows Mobile Smart Phones or Pocket PC's running Windows Mobile 5.0+, with a minimum of 64 MB program memory.

Check out a video of Deepfish's capabilities.

Google map your way to Stockholm


We love road trips at Download Squad. That's why we're so excited about Google Maps ability to provide driving directions. It's not new, but Google Maps works very well. So well in fact that Google Maps can provide you with driving directions that span continents; Continents that aren't even linked by roads.

Try it yourself. Go to Google Maps and enter a location in North America, and a destination in Europe. Your resulting driving driections will include a brisk swim across the north Atlantic ocean. And, you thought you were going to be bored over spring break!

[via Gadling]

Microsoft launches private beta of screen sharing software

TahitiMicrosoft has launched a new program that allows you to share what's on your display with up to 15 other users over the internet. The program, code-named Tahiti is in a private, invitation-only beta at the moment. Here's how it works:

You login using your Windows Live information. Then you can invite users to see applications running on your computer. You can also selectively grant control of those applications, enabling long distance collaboration on projects. If a problem arises, you can click on your mouse or press a button on your keyboard and you regain control.

If you're working on a Word document with other users, Tahiti will track changes and assign a name and color to the changes made by each user.

Tahiti also allows file sharing, so you can send files and documents to other members of your team without using email, FTP or any other external application. Tahiti runs on Windows XP and Vista.


[via Digital Inspiration]
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Microsoft issues security warning regarding animated cursors

CursorsYou know those web sites that have kooky animated cursors? Yeah, don't surf to those with Internet Explorer unless you want to leave your computer vulnerable to hackers.

Microsoft has issued a notice that it is investigating the vulnerability. If users visit a web site or view an e-mail containing hacked .ani files (the animated cursor file type), so Microsoft's advice for the moment: be careful when opening unsolicited emails or browsing new web sites. A long term fix is still a few steps away.

The vulnerability appears to affect Internet Explorer 6 and 7 running on Windows XP SP2. IE7 on Vista doesn't appear to be affected.

[via ZDNet]

101 free applications, 2007 edition

101 free applicationsOnce again PC World publishes an article that is packed with tons of great freebies found all across the internet. We covered it last year, and the gang is back at it. From System Utilities, Communications, File Sharing, File Management, Productivity, Music, Photos, and Video its all here.

The 101 freebie list also includes a great People's Choice winners list that is an awesome place to check out what applications come highly rated by actual everyday users. Winners in this category include Ad-Aware SE, Google Gmail, Windows Live Messenger, Nullsoft Winamp, Google Desktop, YouTube and Picasa.

If you are in need of a free application, take a look here first to check out what the top rated ones are.

Create your own music video with Fliptrack

RIM yanks steering wheel towards mobile computing with new API

Blackberry owners could soon be dancing in the streets over RIM's new developer API which, for the first time, enables those propeller-headed software engineers to do neat stuff like embed multimedia content, support common formats like Mp3, WMA and AAC, and access the camera available in newer models.

In addition, there's also a sweet new maps API which will allow applications to draw a route or show an address with minimal fuss.

Windows Mobile has been kicking some Blackberry-behind of late, but this could give some new life to the family of devices. Frankly, when you think of the first devices RIM brought to the party -- a line of greenscreen pagers with thumbwheels -- they've come pretty far. I wouldn't count this puppy out just yet.

iTunes adds Complete My Album feature

Complete My AlbumApple introduced two new features to the iTunes store today. The first is a new "my alerts" section that lets you know when there's new music available from artists whose music you've previously purchased.

The bigger news is Apple's new "Complete My Album" feature. Previously, if you'd already purchased two or three tracks from an artist and then decided you wanted to buy the whole album, you were essentially forced to pay for those downloads twice.

Now you get credit for the songs you've already bough, meaning you can purchase the rest of the album at a discount. While this is obviously an attempt on Apple's part to convince you to spend money on albums and not just singles, it's also good news. Having to pay twice was probably one of the major reasons albums sales have slowed recently. That and the fact that when it comes to pop music, many listeners might only want to own the popular tracks.

The Complete My Album discount works for any album you purchase up to six months after buying a song from that album.

[via tuaw]

New web and mobile browsers from Opera released

opera browsersLooks like this one slipped by our radar, but Opera previewed their new web and mobile browsers this week, as we mentioned earlier this month. Not only are the new browsers out in beta versions, but Opera Mobile shows off the next generation of browsing for Windows Mobile devices.

The biggest feature change in the desktop browser is the new Speed Dial, an integration where users can create nine visual bookmarks for frequently viewed sites, and have them available at any time in any new tab. Speed Dial can be set up by opening a new tab, clicking on a numbered square, 1-9, then using Ctrl + [1-9] to activate the quick Speed Dial link. It's a very handy feature that makes browsing a little quicker and a little more keyboard shortcut friendly.

Opera Windows Mobile Mini has some very handy updates, including searching directly from the address bar, the ability to copy text, a save function for images, and Internet Explorer bookmark importing. How does it compare with the new Deepfish from Microsoft? We would have to say that Deepfish is a little cooler.

Both the Opera 9.2 and the Opera for Windows Mobile beta are available from the Opera website.

[Updated link to Opera Mobile for Windows 8.65]

Manage your business plan with PlanHQ

planhq business plan manager

Could PlanHQ be the differentiating factor on whether your business succeeds or fails? Well, no, but it could help you to set some goals and compare forecasts in order to run your business a little more smoothly.

At first glimpse, PlanHQ does not say much about what it does, other than it brings plans to life. Upon further digging users will discover that it's an online tool that helps business grow through planning, take business plans online, developing business plans from scratch, and helps investors report on the success of their investments.

There is a 30 day free trial plan, that lets users configure business plans, set goals for sales and customers, set target markets, outline team members and their skills, and plot out financial performance. Other plans are based on the amount of users and goals, and range from $15/month to $50/month.

[via eHub]

Googleholic for March 30th 2007

In this issue of Googleholic we cover:

  • Toll roads in Google
  • Word search in Spreadsheets
  • Google Spam report update
  • LG Phones welcome Google Software
  • Summer of code applications in
  • Swim across the Atlantic Ocean!
  • Importing your archived email into Gmail
  • Google TV ads could be coming soon
  • Twitter gadget for Google's homepage

Continue reading Friday's Googleholic...


Continue reading Googleholic for March 30th 2007

Andy's Death Quest: Time waster of the day

Andy's Death QuestToday's time waster is a tail of death, money, death, weapons and death. In Andy's Death Quest you have the option to play in two different modes: Story mode or death match mode.

In death match mode, you start out with easy opponents, no cash and no weapons. Working your way through your choice of death match gets you more money. Which, in turn, gets you more cash, allowing you to buy different and better swords, guns and/or bombs. The more it costs, the more it will help you through the more difficult levels.

Story mode was a bit of a let down. After Andy made his way through the game unlocking all available death matches, he's able to bring in his own weapons (Shotgun and Laser Sword are Andy's favorites) and had his pick of whatever type of villain he wanted to fight. However, in story mode you have a very limited spread of bad guys to test your strength out on as well as a limit on the amount of money received. Death match mode was much more entertaining for Andy. That and the pool of blood after a glorious victory of a savage battle!

[via digg]

ETech: Big Company Hacks at Yahoo

Earlier today Yahoo launched a Yahoo Mail API. Recently we analyzed the current API and Mashup trends on the Web and noted that Yahoo is one of the big companies most active in this area. Also not long ago we profiled Yahoo! Pipes - a new tool that, we argued, treats the web as the database. We later expanded these ideas in our post entitled When Sites become Web Services. The major theme running through all these posts is that the Web is turning into a database exposed via APIs. Web giants like Google, Amazon and Yahoo! have been tapping into the large web development community, by exposing their services via APIs. 

Here at ETech, Chad Dickerson, Sr. Director of the Yahoo! Developer Network, gave a session about Yahoo's experience in engaging its own engineers to utilize Yahoo! APIs in creative ways.

According to Programmable Web, Yahoo! currently has over twenty APIs. These APIs, along with additional development resources, are available on the Yahoo! Developer Network. There is plenty to dive into - from the better known Flickr, Chat and Map APIs to online Ad Management and Web Site Analytic services. The latest edition is of course the Mail API. These APIs provide a big opportunity to get creative. So to facilitate the exploration and to encourage the discovery of new mashups - and possibly products - Yahoo! management decided to call on their own engineers to play around. Or in Yahoo's lingo, to hack. The official Yahoo! Hacks program calls for self-directed projects by Y! engineers, which do not need to be approved by anyone in advance.

Yahoo's method to the madness

The self-organization is exciting and powerful, but to get results there needs to be control. Yahoo's answer is "Hack days", where developers can showcase their creations to their colleagues. Here are the rules:

  • Build something in 24 hours;
  • No Power Points;
  • Present in 90 seconds;
  • No prior review, anything goes.

These rules encourage small teams to do what they love, letting people create what they want and, occasionally, letting the bizarre out.

In addition to internal hacking, Yahoo! opened up the program to a group of external hackers and invited them in September to the Yahoo! campus for a full day of hacking. According to Yahoo! the day turned out to be a "mega success".

Examples of Hacks

What goes on during the internal hack days is kind of a secret. Chad shared an example of a rather controversial hack. It was a web site built in 'Hot or Not' style, showing pictures of Yahoo! employees and letting people choose who they think is the boss of who. The application kept track of all "mistakes" and then displayed a chart for who should be promoted or demoted. Apparently calls from the Human Resources department followed.

Another hack was a purse that would take a photo after you walk every 100 steps and then use the Flickr API to upload it online. Yet another interesting hack was created by a group of developers, who turned an old TV into a widget display. One of the widgets connected to the internet and showed (you guessed it) the current weather.

Conclusion

At first, this 'hack' culture might seem to be somewhat chaotic and wasteful. It is in a way, but there is also a big potential gain. By using self-organization, Yahoo! bets that while a lot of these hacks will be mildly interesting - there may be a handful that are profound and game changing for the company. Since there are so many APIs, possibilities are almost endless. 

Yahoo! hacks is a great program that could lead to breakthrough ideas and products. The key question is how to add a process on top of this dynamic and fluid process, that drives productization and monetization of the best prototypes. Presumably, the really interesting solutions get noticed and get on the management radar screen. It is not clear if Yahoo! is doing this already, but it would seem that an nternal, Digg-like system where all Yahoo! employees would be able to rate creations, could be also helpful. We will see over the next year or so how Yahoo! executes this project, but the potential is definitely there.

P2P: Introduction and Real World Applications

Written by Can Erten and edited by Richard MacManus. This is the first in a 2-part series on Read/WriteWeb, exploring the world of P2P on the Web. Part 1 (this post) is a general introduction to P2P, along with some real-world applications of P2P. Part 2 will discuss future applications.

As the connection speed of the internet has increased, the demand for web related services has also increased. After the Web revolution, peer-to-peer networks evolved and currently have a number of different usages - instant messaging, file sharing, etc. Some other revolutionary ideas are still in research. People want to use peer-to-peer in many different applications including e-commerce, education, collaborative work, search, file storage, high performance computing. In this series of posts, we will look at different peer-to-peer ideas and applications.

Introduction

Peer-to-Peer (P2P) networks have been receiving increasing demand from users and are now accepted as a standard way of distributing information, because its architecture enables scalability, efficiency and performance as key concepts. A peer-to-peer network is decentralized, self-organized, and dynamic in its pure sense, and offers an alternative to the traditional client-server model of computing. Client-server architecture enables individuals to connect to a server - but although servers are scalable, there is a limit to what they can do. P2P networks are almost unlimited in their scalability.

In "pure" P2P systems, every node acts as a server and client - and they share resources without any centralized control. However most P2P applications have some degree of centralization. These are called "hybrid" P2P networks and they centralize at least the list of users. This is how instant messengers or file sharing programs work - the system keeps a list of users with their IP addresses.

Different applications of P2P networks enable users to share the computation power (distributed systems), data (file-sharing), and bandwidth (using many nodes for transferring data). P2P uses an individual's computer power and resources, instead of powerful centralized servers. The shared resources guarantee high availability among peers. P2P is a really important area to research, because it has a huge potential in distributed computing. It is also important for the industry as well, as new business models are being created around P2P.

P2P Standards

The key thing for the architecture of P2P networks is to achieve reliability, efficiency, scalability and portability. 

For the moment there are no standards for P2P application development, but standards are needed to enable interoperability. Sun has tried to implement a framework basis called JXTA, which is a network programming and computing platform for distributed computing. Sun was the first company to try and develop standards for P2P, but surely other companies will also try to implement their own standards. Microsoft, Intel and IBM are investing and working in their research laboratories on P2P supported application frameworks or systems. It is an open area where no standards are accepted yet.

Gnutella

Gnutella has been used in many applications to allow connecting to the same network and searching files in a centralized manner. It's an open, decentralized search protocol for finding files through the peers. Gnutella is a pure P2P network, without any centralized servers.

Using the same search protocol, such as Gnutella, forms a compatible network for different applications. Anybody who implements the Gnutella protocol is able to search and locate files on that network. Here's how it works. At start up, Gnutella will try to find at least one node to connect to. After the connection, the client requests a list of working addresses and proceeds to connect to other nodes until it reaches a quota. When the client searches for files, it sends the request to each node it is connected to, which then forwards the request to the other nodes it is connected, until a number of "hops" occurs from the sender.

According to Wikipedia, as of December 2005 Gnutella is the third-most-popular file sharing network on the Internet - following eDonkey 2000 and FastTrack. Gnutella is thought to host on an average of approximately 2.2 million users, although around 750,000-1,000,000 are online at any given moment.

The industry use P2P networks in many different ways, each with different business model and different infrastructure. So  now let's look at some real world applications for P2P... 

Instant Messaging

The first adopted usage of P2P applications was instant messengers. Back in the early days of the internet, people used gopher and IRC servers for communication. These technologies could only handle a certain number of users online at the same time, so there were delays for communicating whenever the server was approaching its limits. However the use of P2P changed the whole idea of IM. The bandwidth was shared between users, enabling faster and more scalable communication.

File Sharing

The peer-to-peer file sharing era started with Napster and continued with much more powerful applications such as Kazaa, Gnutella. These programs brought P2P into the mainstream. Although some P2P file-sharing applications have stopped because of legal issues, there is still a high demand in the industry. Now Napster has gone 'legit' and there are new media P2P apps like Joost (P2P TV) arriving on the scene. We will discuss this more in the next post.

Collaborative Community

Document sharing and collaboration is really important for a company. This issue has tried to be solved by internal portals and collaboration servers. However the information has to be up to date and with portals this wasn't always possible. Collaboration with P2P broke that barrier, by using peoples computer resources instead of a centralized server.

Groove is a software with P2P capabilities which was acquired by Microsoft in April 2005. Groove is now offering Microsoft Office based solutions, mainly using P2P for document collaboration. It also allows the usage of instant messaging and integration with some video conferencing solutions. It provides user and role based security, which is one of the most important aspects of P2P for an organization. Groove is also a "relay server" to enable offline usage. 

IP Telephony

Another major usage of P2P is IP telephony. IP telephony revolutionaries the way we use the internet, enabling us to call anywhere in the world for free using our computers.

Skype is a good example of P2P usage in VoIP. It was acquired by eBay in 2005. Skype was built on top of the infrastructure of P2P file-sharing system, Kazaa. The bandwidth is shared and the sound or video in real-time are shared as resources. The main server exists only for the presence information and billing users of the system whenever they make a call that has charges (e.g. SkypeOut).

High Performance Computing - Grid Computing

High performance computing is important for scientific research or for large companies. P2P plays a role in enabling high performance computing. Sharing of resources like computation power, network bandwidth, and disk space will benefit from P2P.

Hive computing is similar - it is where millions of computers connecting to the internet can form a super computer, if it is successfully managed. One of the popular projects is SETI@HOME (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), which enables users to search for extraterrestrial intelligence. It is a voluntary project with more than 3.3 million users in 226 countries - it has used 796,000 years of CPU time and analyzed 45 terabytes of data in just two and a half years of operation.

Some industrial projects also exist in this area. Datasynapse is charging users for the CPU cycles they use. Open Source projects also exist, like Globus and Globus Grid Forum.

Coming soon...

In Part 2, we will explore future applications of P2P. In the meantime, let us know which real world applications you use right now and what you think of the P2P industry in general.

Image credit: RocketRaccoon

BlogRovr Fetches Content From Your Favorite Blogs

BlogRovr is an interesting new way of getting blog information, on the go while you're surfing the Web. It is a download plugin for Firefox 2.0, which works cross-platform on Windows, Mac and Linux. There's no IE plugin for now, but support for IE6 and IE7 is coming soon (a couple of weeks away). BlogRovr is basically a personalized vertical search engine for every page you visit - processed in real-time. How it works is that once you've downloaded BlogRovr, when you surf the Web BlogRovr is busy working in the background 'fetching' related blog stories for you. Keeping with the canine theme, the BlogRovr blog says that BlogRovr is "your best friend for keeping your finger on the pulse of the blogosphere."

BlogRovr is the latest product from Activeweave, the company behind online social annotation app Stickis. In fact BlogRovr uses the same backend technology as Stickis. The main use case for BlogRovr is for people to see what their favorite bloggers have to say about anything they're browsing. In their blog, CEO Marc Meyer explains that BlogRovr is complementary to RSS Readers, because "RovR tells you about content from your blogs when and where you're most likely to be interested in it."

I downloaded BlogRovr as a Firefox plugin on a Windows machine. It starts off by giving you pre-selected bundles of blogs to choose from, in various categories. I chose the "Science and Technology" bundle, of which Read/WriteWeb is featured. You can add new blogs to your bundles, individually or as a group via OPML - for example I added the Web 2.0 Workgroup OPML file to my BlogRovr page. The software will also offer to fetch blogs you've recently visited and, once you have it installed, you can add blogs via the Rovr toolbar menu.

OK, so you have a set of feeds - then what does BlogRovr do exactly? Basically the software 'sits' at the bottom of your sidebar (see bottom-right of the screenshot above). To your left you will see a larger version of BlogRovr in sit mode.

Then when you browse to a web page and click BlogRovr, it will display - in a roll-out tray - relevant pages from your bundle of chosen bloggers. For example my post on Yahoo Mail API had two relevant articles, one by Alex Barnett - which when clicked popped up as a preview. BlogRovr also provides tags to show the topics.

Conclusion

BlogRovr is another way to find niche content that is relevant to you, so in that respect it's similar to 'memetrackers' like Techmeme or vertical search engines. BlogRovr is a unique way of giving you related content, one I haven't come across before. Check it out and let us know what you think.

Top Irish Web Apps

Continuing Read/WriteWeb's series on international web apps, I bring you a sample of all that the emerald isle has to offer. 20 years ago Ireland was a sleepy backwater with high unemployment and mass emigration. Jobs were rare and the only new startups were farms. But all of that changed when the 'celtic tiger' came along. No one can agree what kick started it - low corporate tax rates or our involvement in the EU. I reckon it was Ray Houghton's goal against England in the 1988 European championships. Either way, things have changed forever.

Today Google, Microsoft, Intel, Dell and IBM all have various european head quarters in Ireland. With a population of over 5 million north and south, we are considered in some circles to be the largest exporter of software in the world. We have no shortage of bigco investment and job creation in Ireland, but what's happening in the indigenous startup scene?

The old timers

Pigsback.com has been running since 2000 and is endeared to the hearts of a large number of internet users in Ireland (and the UK as of last year). In their own words, it's an 'online club of consumers and brands'. You sign up for an account and then receive targeted offers, competitions and surveys from the Pigsback network of advertisers. As you interact with these events you build up 'piggy points', which you can exchange for goods and services.

Pigsback works, simply because the 'piggy points' you collect are really worth something. In little time you can build up enough for a free CD or a discounted holiday, for example. Their advertiser network includes Ford, EBay, Nestle, and Betfair to name but a few.

StatCounter provides web tracking services for millions of websites around the world. Similar to Google Analytics, but around a lot longer, you can sign up for free and start tracking immediately. They also have paid accounts which include more reports and options.

StatCounter is one of the few websites around with a pagerank of 10. They have more back links to their site than anyone else on the web, apart from Google.com!

HostelWorld is one of the most successful Irish startup stories. It was started back in 1999 with the goal of streamlining the booking of hostels anywhere in the world. They take bookings from travelers and backpackers for over 50,000 hostels worldwide. They now have over 70 staff, and by some reports take in excess of $1 million worth of booking on any given day. This contributes to their self proclaimed valuation of anywhere up to $1 billion for their parent company.

The new guys

AllFreeCalls is more of a mobile/telco play, but worthy of inclusion all the same. On their website they provide you with details of how to make international calls from the US, Ireland and the UK for the price of a local call. They are able to do this by exploiting various loopholes in legislation governing the way money is divided between bigger telcos.

I don't think they are up and running in the US at the moment, due to a confrontation with AT&T - which is claiming that Allfreecalls cost them almost $2 million in subsidies for one month alone!

Nooked have been in the RSS marketing business now for a while, but they recently announced a forthcoming product codenamed 'feedshop' - which is all about "Really Simple Shopping (RSS)". They are also about to launch a new widget marketing service, which will allow e-tailers to advertise their products through nooked's network of blogs, widget partners and social networks. It's all part of their strategy for a feedcommerce platform. 

Nooked was listed just this week as a RedHerring 100 Europe winner and a company to watch in 2007. Expect to hear a lot more from them very soon. 

[disclosure: R/WW editor Richard MacManus is an advisor to nooked]

Pixenate is a handy free online photo editor. No accounts necessary, just upload your photo and start editing. It's ad supported, AJAX based and runs smoothly. But the free version of pixenate you see on their website is just a demonstration of a customizable and rebrandable white label version of the application, that you can buy for use on your own website. They even have a widgetized version that you can add to your site or blog and let your users edit photos there and then.

They claim over 100,000 visitors/month to the site and will also be providing a YahooUI-based theme in a forthcoming release.

PutPlace.com is still in private beta at the moment, but it looks like it could be a winner. They have raised a six figure sum from angel investors, to build an online application to help manage your digital media. We all have many different files scattered across our mobiles, pcs, laptops and various other gadgets. Putplace gives all of your files a 'digital fingerprint' and helps you to manage and locate them. You can also publish your files to flickr, youtube and a host of other media sharing services.

You can also share your files between sites, so for instance with one click you can pull all your photos off flickr and publish them to your photobucket account. And of course all of these files can be backed up on PutPlace secure server, in case you lose them. Their public beta is coming in April, so keep an eye out.

Loudervoice.com.... I will let their CEO explain this one to you: "LouderVoice harnesses the distributed expertise in blogs to provide quality rated reviews for us all instead of spam, product placements and search results noise. Our site enables bloggers to publish structured reviews to their blogs and in turn aggregates structured multi-lingual review content from those blogs. Users can search for reviews, rate them, relate them and collect them in ways that are useful to themselves and others."

They are currently in private beta and hope to launch in April. I have seen this app and it's pretty cool. If they get traction, it could be big.

Some Other Interesting Apps

PollDaddy.com, which I developed, has been around for 6 months now. You can create a free poll and place it as a widget on your website, blog, mySpace etc. Disclosure: it's also where I work, so please feel free to drop by if you need a poll for your site. Also note that Read/WriteWeb uses our service.

zinadoo.com lets you create a free mobile site with their online flash based editor. You can create pages, add text and pictures. This will be a very handy tool for people who just want to get some kind of presence online for mobile visitors to their site. Zinadoo creators Nubiq are also about to launch a mobile site search, discovery and personalisation engine called Mobiseer, where users can search, tag and bookmark their favourite mobile sites.

MySay.com is still in private beta but should be coming online any day now. It's a sort of social networking app, but through the phone. Once your friends are in, you can all keep in touch, hearing each other's updates and stories, jokes or whatever - on the phone, on the web, or through the mySay desktop widget. It's social communication using your phone, with no need to download any software - just use your voice! Should be interesting to see how they get on.

Conclusion

Ireland is a happening place. There have been a lot of big success stories, such as a few of the 'old timers' we have mentioned here. But there is also a healthy environment of innovation amongst younger startups. I would like to thank Fergus Burns from Nooked for helping me put this article together. Fergus is also the administrator of web2ireland.org, a blog where you can track the progress of many of the companies mentioned in this article.

This post is part of Read/WriteWeb's continuing coverage of international Web markets. Other countries profiled so far have been Germany, Holland, Poland, Korea, United Kingdom, Russia, Spain, China, Turkey, Italy, Brazil, France, Japan, India, Austria, Sweden, Australia, Hungary, Serbia, Croatia and Latvia.

The Real Scrapblog is Here. Finally

Scrapbook maker Scrapblog strutted its stuff at the We Media conference last month, went off the grid, and finally came back online today. Scrapblogs are Flash-based slide shows made up of pages of photo or video layouts you can jazz up with a myriad of designs and effects. Transitions can be added between each page and [...]

Shakespeare, Happy Days and Prom Queen

Online Videos by Veoh.com Prom Queen is coming, and it will be distributed on MySpace. Is the future of new media going to be a world where stories are told over eighty episodes that are each ninety seconds long? And advertising galore - pre rolls, post rolls, and product placements. This may be the highest advertising [...]

SellABand Music Model Gaining Traction

Marshall Kirkpatrick wrote about German startup SellABand when it launched last August. Like Amie Street, SellABand has an innovative way for struggling new artists to get their music heard, and make some money as well. Artists sign up and upload some of their music. Users listen to it. If they like it, they pay $10. [...]

John McCain's MySpace "Enhancement" Makes Daily Show

The “enhancement” that Newsvine CEO Mike Davidson made to Presidential Candidate John McCain’s website was mentioned on the Daily Show Thursday evening. Lots of other mainstream press attention, too. Davidson’s shareholders should be happy - this was a major guerrilla marketing event for Newsvine. Screenshots and video are below. Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest [...]

Project Agape: Sean Parker To Apply Virality To Altruism

Yesterday I sat down with Sean Parker at his offices at the Founders Fund in San Francisco to see a demo of his new and yet-to-be-named startup (the working name for the project is Project Agape). Parker is a larger-than-life twenty seven year old who co-founded Napster and Plaxo and was the founding president of [...]

Amazon's War on Statsaholic

Statsaholic (formerly Alexaholic) launched a year ago and provided much easier access to Alexa traffic data than the Alexa site itself. Statsaholic also had other features Alexa didn’t offer, like embeddable graphs and data smoothing. Others agreed, and soon started linking to Statsaholic instead of Alexa when doing traffic comparisons. At one point, [...]

Incorporate your startup at MyNewCompany.com

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Web site MyNewCompany.com handles all the legal paperwork for incorporating your startup. Entrepreneurial web site WorkHappy says:

They really make the entire process painless and transparent. You can easily 'create' a company in about 8-10 minutes online. Collection of necessary data is not really much more difficult than filling out a few online forms - and they've done a great job of explaining things along the way.

The service isn't free, but Work Happy says it is reasonable (and it varies from state to state for each company type). I haven't started up my own company lately so I didn't get a chance to try this out myself - if you have, let us know how it went in the comments.

Office Supplies Fetish: Power plug ID labels

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There are 12 outlets on that power strip under your desk, and you hate playing the "pull the plug and see what gadget cuts off" game to identify what's what. Stick one of these ID Pilot Wire Identification Labels on each plug instead.

Each sticker has a drawing of each kind of gadget you've got (with a number, too, so for Monitor #1 and Monitor #2). Packages come in the "Office," "Household" and "Electronics" themes along with appropriate gadget labels. Sure you could make your own boring text labels that wrap around the plug (so the monitor plug reads "ONIT"), but this $6 investment seems like the finishing touch to your perfect cord management solution. Thanks, Mozman!

How-To Roundup

How to:

Daily news roundup

Google Notebook gets a facelift

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Web-clipping service Google Notebook has a new interface and a couple new features, including the option to add maps to published notebooks.

The interface changes are minor but worthwhile, like the option to sort your notebooks alphabetically or by date. The notebook area now features text-editing tools at the top of the page, and you can add a new note or section just by clicking the space in between notebooks. Other tweaks include notebook comments and the option to delete the title and/or URL from a clipped page. Curiously, Notebook can no longer search public notebooks, which seems odd given the addition of map views to public notebooks. (This is definitely the best new feature: It has countless applications, like, say, building a sightseeing list prior to taking a trip.)

Google Notebook still isn't nearly as pretty as my preferred web-clipping service, Clipmarks. What service do you like best? Tell us which and why in the comments.

Boot Camp goes 1.2, supports Vista

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Boot Camp, Apple's solution for installing and dual booting Windows on a Mac, has just pushed out a new release with a few significant changes.

Most notably, Boot Camp now supports Windows Vista, but there's a lot of other improvements in the release - like better drivers and Apple Remote support - that make it seem like a more attractive option every day. At Lifehacker HQ, we tend to stick to Parallels virtualization tool to run Windows in the Mac environment, but 1) it's $80 vs. Boot Camp's free, and 2) since it's virtualization, it's never going to be quite as good as the real thing. That's where Boot Camp comes in. If you want to harness the full power of your Mac hardware in a Windows OS (now including Vista), Boot Camp is your ticket.

FoxyTunes Planet aggregates music info under one roof

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Love music? FoxyTunes Planet serves up bios, photos, videos and more for your favorite artists.

Just search for an artist (or browse by genres) and FoxyTunes Planet delivers a page of widgets: downloads from iTunes, lyrics from LyricWiki, photos from Flickr, videos from YouTube, streaming tracks from Last.fm and Pandora, search results from Google and so on. You can customize the page by adding or removing widgets and dragging them around. Indeed, it's not unlike the Google Personalized Homepage, but with a music slant. The site remembers your layout and widget selections from one session to the next.

One of the big perks is sharing: You can e-mail any artist page to friends, and they can view it in their browser same as you. There's no special software required (like when you share from, say, iTunes or Rhapsody). FoxyTunes Planet also integrates beautifully with the beloved Firefox plug-in FoxyTunes: Just click a button to see the FoxyTunes Planet page for the artist that's currently playing. If you have even the slightest interest in music, you'll definitely want to visit this Planet.

More ways to date on the cheap

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These days, dinner and a movie can easily set you back $100. Zen Habits has 15 date ideas that will cost you a lot less--or nothing at all. Some examples:

  • Festivals. Look in your local paper ... you might find all kinds of festivals, from movies to dance to desserts and more. They cost very little, and they are a blast. Walk around, make jokes, sample everything.
  • Museum. I love museums. They're fascinating. If the girl thinks they're fascinating too, you've got a winner.

We've covered cheap-date territory before, but this list includes even more ideas--many of which involve being outdoors. And now that spring is springing, stuff like picnics and meteor shower-watching are finally fair game. Let us know in the comments if you get lucky--er, have a good time.

Organize your home by adding "stations"

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Professional organizer Lorie Marrero says that the secret to effective home organization is having "stations"--one for communication, one for administration and so on. For example:

Communication Station - This station is for the family calendar, messages, mail, and other communications that help the house run smoothly. One thing we encourage is having a Family Binder that will contain all of the frequently used information such as contacts, medical records, school handouts and lists, and sports team rosters and schedules.

What, no booze station? But seriously, if you have sufficient space in your house, this looks like a smart way to reduce clutter and improve household efficiency. Would you do things differently? Tell us how in the comments! In the meantime, check this post on using whiteboards to organize the family home.

Maximize your hotel points with PointMaven

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Before you book your next hotel, head to PointMaven.com. You might be able to score some bonus points.

From the same folks who brought you the frequent-flyer bonus site MileMaven, PointMaven catalogs the latest and greatest hotel promotions. Just enter a city name or airport code and the site serves up a list of current deals, which you can filter by hotel program, hotel brand or individual hotel. PointMaven currently researches seven popular hotel programs (such as Marriot Rewards), with a few more listed in the "coming soon" category. If you're a frequent traveler, this site can definitely help you rack up bonus hotel points.

Download of the Day: Black Light (Mac)

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Mac OS X only: Freeware application Black Light inverts the colors on your screen with the click of your mouse.

Inverting your screen's colors is a good way to extend your battery life when you're on the go, it makes your screen more readable to you at dim levels, and it can be much easier on your eyes than a bright screen (provided you get used to the inversion). Actually, Macs come built in with a keyboard shortcut (Cmd-Opt-Ctrl-8) that's supposed to do the whole invert colors thing for you (provided you've enabled access for assistive devices in the Universal Access preferences), but for one reason or another it's never worked for me. Aside from that, Black Light does offer several of its own filtering options so you can tweak it to your liking. Black Light is freeware, Mac OS X only. ThanksTheAcolyte!

Screenshot Tour: A look under the hood of Quicksilver

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On Monday we took a beginner's look at Quicksilver. We covered a lot of territory, but I didn't address Quicksilver's extensive and somewhat confusing preference pane - which actually contains a lot more than preferences.

In fact, what lies inside the preferences box is all your options for assigning powerful global triggers, tweaking your Quicksilver catalog, adding new plug-ins, and, of course, playing with what Quicksilver's application preferences. Dive into the gallery below for a detailed explanation of each component of Quicksilver. Understanding this bit will go a long ways toward increasing your Quicksilver power.

Specifically, inside the gallery I take a look at Quicksilver's application preferences, command preferences, triggers, catalog, plug-ins, and the initial, but not terribly useful, guide.

I've accompanied each with a description of what you can do there, and understanding what's happening in the preferences should give you a much better understanding of several more things you can do with Quicksilver.

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I mentioned it in my beginner's guide but forgot to include it in my gallery, but you should also take a look at the Actions section of the Preferences tab to get a look at all of the possible actions you can perform with Quicksilver. You can also enable/disable actions and rearrange the order they'll show up in your results through this pane, so it's worth a good look.

We are flattered, but... (Live Search's WebLog)

We are flattered, but...  For those of you who use some of the advanced query syntax in our search engine such as link:, linkdomain: and inurl:, you may have noticed that this functionality has been recently turned off.  We have been seeing broad use of these features by legitimate users …

Source:   Live Search's WebLog
Author:   Msnsearch
Link:   http://blogs.msdn.com/livesearch/archive/2007/03/28…

Techmeme permalink

[via] Techmeme

Searching for Ads Offline (Miguel Helft/New York Times)

Searching for Ads Offline  —  If there was any doubt about the scope of Google's ambitions in the advertising world, one of its recent job postings should dispel them: It seeks a "head of national TV sales" to help build "a world-class national TV advertising sales team."  —  Then there is radio.

Source:   New York Times
Author:   Miguel Helft
Link:   http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/29/technology/29google…

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[via] Techmeme

Web ad spend overtakes newspapers (BBC)

Web ad spend overtakes newspapers  —  Spending on UK internet advertising surged in 2006, overtaking newspaper ads for the first time, a report says.  —  Online advertising expenditure jumped 41.2% to £2.01bn during the year, the report by the Internet Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers said.

Source:   BBC
Link:   http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6502773.stm

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[via] Techmeme

Nokia 5700 XpressMusic: Adding a new twist to mobile music (Nokia)

Nokia 5700 XpressMusic: Adding a new twist to mobile music  —  3G Smartphone can download and play tracks from range of Internet music stores  —  Espoo, Finland - Today, Nokia revealed the Nokia 5700 XpressMusic, an accessible 3G smartphone augmented by a dedicated audio chip for enhanced music performance.

Source:   Nokia
Link:   http://www.nokia.com/A4136001?newsid=1115496

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[via] Techmeme

The biggest Web site you've never heard of (David Kirkpatrick/Fortune)

The biggest Web site you've never heard of  —  Photobucket has 38 million members, but unless you use MySpace or Facebook, you might not know them.  Fortune's David Kirkpatrick provides a snapshot of the Web's hottest photo site.  —  NEW YORK (Fortune) — Photobucket is the most important site …

Source:   Fortune
Author:   David Kirkpatrick
Link:   http://money.cnn.com/2007/03/27/magazines/fortune…

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Should Microsoft buy DoubleClick? Better double think that one (Don Dodge/Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing)

Should Microsoft buy DoubleClick?  Better double think that one  —  There is a lot of buzz in the financial press about Microsoft making a bid to acquire DoubleClick.  Larry Dignan at ZDNet thinks Microsoft should do it.  The Wall Street Journal says; … My Take?  It could be a good deal, but;

Source:   Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing
Author:   Don Dodge
Link:   http://dondodge.typepad.com/the_next_big_thing/2007…

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How Much Is Photobucket Worth? - Silicon Valley/Colorado based photo ... (Michael Arrington/TechCrunch)

How Much Is Photobucket Worth?  —  Silicon Valley/Colorado based photo and video sharing site Photobucket has 36 million registered users and adds another 85,000 per day.  If the growth rate continues, they'll have 60 million users by the end of the year.  More users visit Photobucket each month - 17 million, than Facebook.

Source:   TechCrunch
Author:   Michael Arrington
Link:   http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/29/how-much-is…

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DoubleClick Sale Could Risk Publisher Exodus (Kate Kaye/ClickZ)

DoubleClick Sale Could Risk Publisher Exodus  —  The stale world of online ad serving just got interesting again, as a possible acquisition of ad management firm DoubleClick was floated yesterday.  According to the Wall Street Journal, Microsoft or another buyer may grab the ad serving colossus soon.

Source:   ClickZ
Author:   Kate Kaye
Link:   http://clickz.com/showPage.html?page=3625394

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Yahoo! Mail opens up API for 249 Million Users

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ETech: Cool Stuff From Microsoft Live Labs

Microsoft Labs gave a talk today on the latest projects going on in Microsoft that focus on web innovation. The projects presented, as well as other explorations, can be found at http://labs.live.com/.

Deepfish - Enhanced Browsing on Mobile Devices

Deepfish is Microsoft's intelligent web browsing technology for mobile devices. It renders mobile web pages "in a view that is closer to the desktop experience". This kind of mobile Web navigation is very similar to the one shown by Steve Jobs in January at his demo of the iPhone. The Deepfish technology works on both cell phones and the pocket PC. But unlike the iPhone, the navigation is done via Zoom box - sort of like Google Maps, in that it allows the user to focus on a specific part of the page. [Ed: is this the same technology as ZenZui?]

Just by looking at the examples, we can tell that the scaling is not ad hoc - rather it is 'intelligent' and sensitive to phone size, colors and images on the page. Like iPhone, Deepfish also supports vertical and horizontal viewing mode, although this is probably dependent on the kind of device you are using. Deepfish works now on Windows Mobile 5 and can be downloaded from the live labs web site (also more info here). Overall it does not look as slick as iPhone, but it is certainly on a par with iPhone's technology.

Boku - Visual Programming Language for Kids

Boku is a visual programming language aimed at teaching kids how to program. Boku looks like Microsoft Bob circa 2007, but it is actually quite cute - so kids will like it. The setup is that Boku is on a desert island and he is facing challenges. To help him solve these challenges, kids have to program it. The program renders in a realistic 3D landscape and has built in 'primitives' for sensing the surroundings and executing commands. Kids can program it by chaining together boxes.

For example, a chain might be: If you [see] [something red] [move towards it]. Seeing is a sensor function (like touch, smell, etc), something red is the filter and move is the command. The wide variety of sensors, filters and commands is what makes the world of Boku rich and interesting. 

To be fair, at first look it is no different in principle from the old MIT LOGO. But it certainly is flashy and video-game like, so it might be just right for kids.

Epitome - Image Feature Extraction Technology

Epitome is an interesting image compression technique, which creates a smaller image from the essential features of the original image. The 'epitome' of an image is its miniature, condensed version - containing the essence of the textural and shape properties of the image. It is based on probabilistic methods, which works by dissecting an image into a smaller set of patches. Each patch is of a different size and represents a piece of the original image. Feature extraction is then applied to create a small image that captures the "essence" of the original.

A really interesting example, that illustrates the application of this technology, showed a picture of 300 people. After creating an epitome of the entire set, the researcher pointed out a piece of the epitome, which represented all smiles found in the original image. By clicking on the smile, he was able to retrieve all people who were smiling in the original picture. You can learn more about this technology, as well as see some examples, on the project web site.

ETech: Mozilla Manifesto And Its Impact On Major Web Players

Mike Shaver from the Mozilla foundation is here at ETech talking about the Mozilla Manifesto. Traditionally, a manifesto on an organization's web site says what they stands for. These declarations are not necessary or typical, but are often made to emphasize the values that an organization believes in. It is also a strong message to their users and competitors, in that they pledge to play by certain rules.

So why does Mozilla need a manifesto? As Mozilla increases its share of the browser market and gains more visibility in the public eye, it wants to to show its principles and build public trust.

Mozilla's Principles

Here are the principles in Mozilla's manifesto:

  • The Internet is an integral part of modern life - a key component in education, communication, collaboration, business, entertainment and society as a whole.
  • The Internet is a global public resource that must remain open and accessible.
  • The Internet should enrich the lives of individual human beings.
  • Individuals' security on the Internet is fundamental and cannot be treated as optional.
  • Individuals must have the ability to shape their own experiences on the Internet.
  • The effectiveness of the Internet as a public resource depends upon interoperability (protocols, data formats, content), innovation and decentralized participation worldwide.
  • Free and open source software promotes the development of the Internet as a public resource.
  • Transparent community-based processes promote participation, accountability, and trust.
  • Commercial involvement in the development of the Internet brings many benefits; a balance between commercial goals and public benefit is critical.
  • Magnifying the public benefit aspects of the Internet is an important goal, worthy of time, attention and commitment.

Major Themes in Mozilla Principles

Looking at these 10 principles, we notice 5 major themes: Openness, Security, Personalization, Interoperability and Commerce.

  • Openness: Mozilla calls the Internet an open, public resource that belongs to humanity. Mozilla believes that their way to openness is a code of honor, open source community and a focus on international aspect of the web.
  • Security: Even though the internet is open, it does not mean that it should be insecure. Security always has been - and will remain - a major concern for individuals and companies. Mozilla's commitment to security is commendable.
  • Personalization: Mozilla acknowledges diversity and emphasizes the power of this. Tailoring online experiences to each individual's goals is an important and ongoing part of Mozilla's mission.
  • Interoperability: The Mozilla Manifesto also acknowledges the power and importance of interoperability and standards. Through the evolution of computer industry, we know that standards are critical - as they have direct consumer benefits. Without standards, the user experience of the Web quickly degrades.
  • Commerce: Mozilla explains that commercial involvement is critical in order for the web to grow. The Internet is an open public information exchange, but it is supported via commerce. By declaring this, Mozilla invites businesses who play by the rules to monetize via web sites, web services and browser extensions.

What is the impact on major Web Players?

The natural question is: is this manifesto aimed at Internet Explorer? Yes and no. Yes, because Internet Explorer is not open and is not quite as compliant as Firefox. No, because the overarching theme of the manifesto is to present what Mozilla stands for, to the public. In a way, this is a brand message that Mozilla is trying to send to the public.

The impact on Google and Yahoo! is minimal. We could view this as a call to those companies to support Mozilla's principles, but a manifesto can only be supported in the context of an organization's own goals. While it is likely that Mozilla would benefit from having an open round table on these issues with both Google and Yahoo!, it is unlikely that this is intended by the current manifesto, or that it might result as a consequence.

Conclusion

Mozilla's Manifesto is a genuine attempt to reach out and communicate their ideas to the world. It is also another call to raise awareness of how the Internet and its tools should be developed. And of course, it is also another way to raise awareness of a certain alternative web browser called Firefox.

Want To Blog For Wired?

Wired Magazine is hiring one or two bloggers for its Epicenter business blog. You must be “fast, accurate, curious, motivated and willing to trash Digg every once in a while to be considered (I added that last qualification myself ). To apply, email them a 200 word blog post on a recent Silicon Valley business [...]

TripSync: Simple Business Trip Planning and Management

TripSync, a distributed booking system aimed at trip planning for small to medium sized businesses, quietly launched last week. We recently reported on some other distributed booking systems as well. TripSync is a web based application that lets your business book and manage the three major details of any business trip: flight, rental car, and [...]

New JibJab Video - The News

JibJab, the creators of the famous 2004 U.S. presidential election parody cartoon "This Land" have a new original video out called “The News,” embedded above. The new video premiered tonight at the annual Radio and Television Correspondents Dinner. All of their original videos can be viewed here. JibJab is slowly expanding from pure content creation to becoming [...]

OpenFloodgate: Online Publishing with Control

Openfloodgate, like Scribd, lets content creators publish their works to the web, but with decidedly more control. The site is the project of Tina Seelig, Executive Director of Stanford Technology Venture Partners and Adjunct Professor of Entrepreneurship. Recently released from beta about two weeks ago, OpenFloodgate currently features a variety of stories, poems, lyrics, photos, [...]

MOG Cleans Up Some of The Chaos

Music community site MOG launched a 2.0 version of their site today. We previously covered MOG in our roundup of social music services, and when they launched an embeddable music player. The core MOG service is a client application called Mog-o-matic that monitors what music you listen on a variety of media players. That’s paired [...]

Take Neighborhood Gossip To A Whole New Level

StreetAdvisor is a new entry in the plethora of rating services popping up all over the internet. Some ask us to rate what we buy, the places we go, and even each other. This Australian startup applies ratings to your neighborhood. StreetAdvisor is a search engine for neighborhood reviews. Reviews are broken down by street and [...]

How Much Is Photobucket Worth?

Silicon Valley/Colorado based photo and video sharing site Photobucket has 36 million registered users and adds another 85,000 per day. If the growth rate continues, they’ll have 60 million users by the end of the year. More users visit Photobucket each month - 17 million, than Facebook. 56% of those users are under 35, and [...]

Redefining The Tag

britepic_id = "297898" britepic_src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/53/144942552_81a96c87cb_o.jpg"; britepic_keywords="Laguna, dog, pets, cute, perfect"; britepic_show_ads="1"; britepic_caption="Laguna: Attack Dog"; britepic_width="560"; The basic format for embedding images into a web page using the <img> tag has been around almost as long at HTML itself, since the first graphical web browser. It works, and it is used constantly. But can it be [...]

DoubleClick Explores a Sale (Wall Street Journal)

DoubleClick Explores a Sale  —  Potential Suitors  —  Include Microsoft;  —  Listing Is an Option  —  Online advertising firm DoubleClick Inc. is exploring a sale, and is already in active talks with Microsoft Corp., among other potential suitors, according to people familiar with the matter.

Source:   Wall Street Journal
Link:   http://online.wsj.com/article_email…

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Skype 3.2 beta incorporates PayPal

Skype PayPal
Skype 3.2 beta is out, with a few new features:
  • Send money with PayPal
  • View your account from within the application
  • Import contacts from more sources
  • Use a video snapshot for your profile
The biggest update is probably the ability to send money to other Skype users through PayPal. Skype can act as a contact list for sending money, a feature PayPal didn't previously have. If you send money to a user with a Skype account, they'll receive a notification in Skype. You'll need to send money to someone who is in a country serviced by PayPal.

Next up, if you wanted to check your SkypeOut, SkypeIn, and other purchase history in the past you had to go to Skype's website. Now you can do that from within the application by clicking the "view account" button.

Another new feature lets you import contacts from Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo! Mail. Up until now you could only import contacts from Outlook and Outlook Express.

And finally, Skype 3.2 beta lets you snap a photo with a webcam and add it to your profile. Previously you had to use an external application to do this, even though you can use that very same webcam for video chat with Skype.

SAP Realigns Executive Board Responsibilities (PR Newswire)

SAP Realigns Executive Board Responsibilities  —  Executive Board Member Shai Agassi to Leave the Company  —  Leo Apotheker Named Deputy CEO; New Executive Council Formed  —  WALLDORF, Germany, March 28 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ SAP AG (NYSE: SAP - News) today announced that it will extend …

Source:   PR Newswire
Link:   http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/070328/sfw097.html

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Joost successfully run on Apple TV (JoostTeam.com)

Joost successfully run on Apple TV  —  tutorialninjas.net has reported success in running Joost on the Apple TV.  There are currently some problems with fonts but I am sure this will be fixed in a near future... right?  What does this mean?  Once Joost goes live you will get free …

Source:   JoostTeam.com
Link:   http://www.joostteam.com/2007/03/27/joost…

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Boston Googleplex coming soon?

google opening a bigger shop in boston?There's no beans about it, Google is rumored to be hunting out a location for a newly planned Boston area facility. They currently occupy a small office in the Cambridge area that houses mainly sales and engineering people but are looking to expand.

Cambridge is on the top of the list for Google's planned 100,000 to 200,000 square feet of office space. Compare that to the recent opening of Google's New York office which encompasses a 300,000 square foot facility, you know they are going to be hiring a bunch of new bodies to occupy space. Check out Google's job board for a list of 15 current openings if you're interested in working with this search giant.

Verizon Wireless To Offer Rich Data Services Powered by Adobe FlashCast (Adobe)

Verizon Wireless To Offer Rich Data Services Powered by Adobe FlashCast  —  For immediate release  —  Verizon Wireless Customers To Have Access To Engaging Always-on Channels  —  ORLANDO, Fla., BASKING RIDGE, N.J. and SAN JOSE, Calif. — March 28, 2007 — From the CTIA Wireless show in Orlando …

Source:   Adobe
Link:   http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom…

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Call for blogging code of conduct (BBC)

Call for blogging code of conduct  —  The support for a blogger hounded by death threats has intensified with some high profile web experts calling for a code of conduct in the blogosphere.  —  The female blogger at the centre of the row has been shocked to discover that hers is not an isolated incident.

Source:   BBC
Link:   http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6502643.stm

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A message to the techblogging elite (Michelle Malkin)

A message to the techblogging elite  —  "Kathy Sierra" is currently the top search term at Technorati.com.  Sierra is a tech blogger here.  Yesterday, she announced she would not appear at a public convention because anonymous death threats and nasty comments had left her terrified and house-bound:

Source:   Michelle Malkin
Author:   Michelle Malkin
Link:   http://michellemalkin.com/archives/007191.htm

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What it isn't - This morning I recieved an email from Alan Herrell ... (Doc Searls Weblog)

What it isn't  —  This morning I recieved an email from Alan Herrell, who has blogged for many years as The Head Lemur: … This is the communication I've been waiting for.  Alan appeared to have been the source of some (or perhaps most, or all — I'm not in a position to tell) of the offending posts on MeanKids.

Source:   Doc Searls Weblog
Link:   http://doc.weblogs.com/2007/03/28#whatItIsnt

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How basic is Twitter? (Dave Winer/Scripting News)

How basic is Twitter?  —  Like so many others in the tech blogging world, I've spent the last few weeks exploring Twitter.  I understand that there were lots of people using it before me, and before that, the developers of Twitter envisioned something that all the rest of us didn't.

Source:   Scripting News
Author:   Dave Winer
Link:   http://www.scripting.com/stories/2007/03/28…

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TailRank Opens Service As A Platform

TailRank, a popular blog news organizer that competes with TechMeme and Megite, has opened up its back end and will provide the service as a platform to application developers who would like to add a blog index and ranking service. The new service is called Spinn3r and goes live at around noon today. Rumor is [...]

YouTube to launch mobile website soon (Katie Fehrenbacher/GigaOM)

YouTube to launch mobile website soon  —  CTIA 2007 — YouTube will launch its mobile website in June 2007 for U.S. users, according to a spokesperson.  The mobile YouTube site will go live once the exclusivity clause on the company's mobile video deal with Verizon Wireless expires.

Source:   GigaOM
Author:   Katie Fehrenbacher
Link:   http://gigaom.com/2007/03/27/mobile-youtube/

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Happy Birthday! Unlimited email storage from Yahoo!

yahoo unlimited email storageWe got the scoop on some very special Yahoo news! Yahoo Mail will be celebrating its 10 year anniversary shortly, and they REALLY want to celebrate. Everyone that has a Yahoo mail account will be offered unlimited email storage starting May 2007, rolling out to all users over a couple of months.

The current version of Yahoo Mail started out in 1997 when they acquired RocketMail and offered users a mere 4MB of email storage. Hmm, what could you fit in there now? Let's just say not much by today's standards. By 2005 the email capacity reached 100MB, then on to 1GB where it sits at today.

Will this groundbreaking new move from Yahoo make a few of the main free email providers like Google and Microsoft wonder how many users will switch over? Imagine never deleting emails again, storing countless mp3's, and data backups all in your Yahoo email account.

Yahoo Mail Announces Unlimited Storage

Yahoo is announcing that all Yahoo Mail users will have unlimited storage starting in May 2007. The current storage limit is 1 GB per account (2 GB for $20/year premium users). With this change, Yahoo leapfrogs Gmail (2.8 GB and growing) and Live.com Mail (2GB). Yahoo mail currently has 250 million global users, more than [...]

Trampoline: Harnessing Social Behavior in the Enterprise

I wrote a piece back in January called IBM's Entry Into Social Networking, where I discussed the potential for applying web 2.0 techniques in the enterprise. Subsequently, I have written extensively about Enterprise 3.0 and the Extended Enterprise trends. A company from England contacted me after reading the IBM piece. This company, Trampoline Systems, is the subject of our discussion today. Its tagline is "Enterprise software that harnesses social behavior". The value proposition is Expertise Location within the enterprise, which encompasses relationships in the Extended Enterprise. I find the product a great combination of NLP (Natural language processing), Knowledge Management, and Web 2.0.

Editor's Note: the rest of this post takes an in-depth look at Trampoline's features. Some of the information below is very technical, particularly the terminology. But it's a great introduction to the product, if you are interested in Enterprise software that uses web 2.0 principles. Incidentally, they are also presenting at ETech today.

What is Trampoline SONAR

Trampoline's SONAR platform brings a fresh approach to information management, by harnessing the social behaviour that occurs within organizations. SONAR plugs into the corporate network and connects to existing systems, including email servers, contact databases and document stores. It analyses this data to map social networks, information flows, expertise and individuals' interests throughout the enterprise. Finally, a truly useful application for social networking, or rather professional networking! Rather than the LinkedIn-like approach, where users need to keep their profiles updated, SONAR is an automatic knowledge mapping system.

SONAR allows an organization to leverage the embedded intelligence of the whole community, as well as information stored electronically. Unlike traditional knowledge management applications, SONAR takes account of the 'soft' or hidden knowledge assets contained within an organization - for example the expertise employees pick up during their tenure at a company, but which is never formally recorded. With SONAR, individuals get the information they need instantly, unrecognized expertise becomes visible, the enterprise increases the reuse and value of its knowledge assets, and the firm improves its agility and competitiveness.

At the core of SONAR's technology is a combination of social network analysis and natural language processing, which unites information contained in multiple electronic forms and the social behaviour surrounding it.

SONAR works around two key concepts: Connections and Themes. Connections are the people who users communicate with. They might be project team mates, other employees or contacts in outside organizations. Themes are topics of interest. They might be projects, deals or areas of expertise - whatever people are communicating about.

About SONAR's Theme Extraction Technology

Theme Extraction is one of the main services provided by SONAR's Intelligence Core module. It automatically identifies the expertise and interests of individuals and groups inside an enterprise, as well as external contacts in communication with the enterprise.

SONAR's Theme Extraction method is designed to maximize the value of results and efficiency of deployment in enterprise environments. SONAR Theme Extraction functions without the need for lengthy consultancy to compile a taxonomy at the deployment stage, so the system begins to give value as soon as it is connected to an email server, instant messaging platform or document repository.

Inside Theme Extraction

SONAR uses multiple language models to enable comparisons between the results it extracts from text. Core measures focus on the pair of characteristics 'phraseness' and 'informativeness' - i.e. whether a string of words is a meaningful phrase rather than a chance juxtaposition, and whether a combination of words has significance within its context. The combination of phraseness and informativeness into a single score produces a measure of 'keyphraseness', the extent to which a phrase encapsulates a core idea of the text. SONAR scans pairs and triplets of words in their context, ranks them by keyphraseness and displays the top results to the user as themes.

Foreground and background content

The system is predicated on an understanding that the corpus in question is composed of 'foreground' and 'background' content. The foreground content is the text in focus at a particular moment, and the background is the wider group of data from which it is taken. For example, a single email can be seen as foreground or focus information, with the background being the user's entire email archive; or the foreground could be the user's entire email corpus in comparison to the background of the whole enterprise's email content. Additionally, to expedite the highlighting of relevant information, function words with little meaning - such as 'and', 'it' or 'she' - are filtered out at the start of the process.

Language models

Theme extraction is facilitated by SONAR's language models. In simple terms, the language models take a body of text and decompose it into blocks of words for analysis. The size of the blocks which a language model analyses give the model its name. A model which analyses individual words is 'order 1' (1-gram), a model which counts the frequency of pairs is 'order 2' (2-gram), and so on. In a 2-gram model, the probability of the occurrence of a word is dependent on the previous word.

Establishing keyphraseness

To establish keyphraseness, SONAR undertakes two comparisons - a foreground phraseness comparison and a foreground/background informativeness comparison - which are then combined to reveal a rating of keyphraseness. The foreground phraseness comparison compares the probability of a phrase appearing in a lesser-gram model, versus a larger-gram model within the foreground data only. This could, for example, be used to pull out core phrases from an email.

The informativeness comparison compares the probability of the occurrence of phrases discovered by foreground models to background gram models. Phrases which appear more frequently within the foreground will stand out as significant to the individual user (perhaps an area of their particular expertise) and phrases which appear more in the background will fade out as insignificant (such as general discussion of company expenses policy).

By combining these results, SONAR reveals the keyphraseness of elements of information, and with it the core themes of the corpus.

Conclusion: Trampoline's Business

I think Trampoline is one of the best applications for the enterprise that leverages web 2.0 principles, in its harnessing of social behaviors. It is a complex system and fairly unique at this point. You can learn more about Trampoline and SONAR at my site, where I have an interview with CEO Charles Armstrong. We discuss SONAR's first big customer (Raytheon), their integration requirements, and the competitive landscape, as well as funding and related topics. We also discuss the Extended Enterprise in quite a bit of detail.

How to access a Mac's files on your PC

mac-windows-sharing-header.png

You've got both Macs and PC's on your home network, and you want to share files between them. Yesterday we ran down the steps for mounting a Windows shared folder on the Mac. Today the tides have turned.

Read on for the details on how to read and write files to a shared Mac folder from your PC.

Enable Windows sharing. First, on your Mac, in System Preferences' Sharing panel, under Services, check off "Windows sharing." Your Mac may ask you to "enable an account to use Windows sharing" - which means you choose which Mac user's files will be accessible. Click on the "Enable Accounts" button and check off a user. When Windows Sharing is turned on with an enabled account, it will look like this:

mac-windows-sharing.png

Take note of the text on that dialog that reads "Windows users can access your computer at \\192.168.1.101\gina." Your address and username will be different, obviously, so write it down.

Connect to your Mac from Windows. On your PC, from the Start menu, open the Run... dialog, and type the address you wrote down in the step above. Instead of the less-than-memorable IP address, you can use your computer's name, too. My Mac's name is nyx, so the sharing address I used is \\nyx\gina:

run-go-to-mac-share.png

Windows will open a regular Explorer window that's peering in on your Mac user's home directory. If you have "show hidden files" enabled in Windows like I do, you'll see all of the Mac's hidden "dot" files and folders in the listing, like here:

browsing-mac-share.png

And that's that! You're happily saving files to your Mac from your Windows PC. Isn't it nice when we all get along? Share your Mac and PC networking tips in the comments.

Flight info care of Google

google flight statusFlying with Google has never been this easy. Your favorite search engine is now offering everyone a way to easily check the status of flights through SMS while running down the halls of the airport.

Users can simply text flight numbers to 466453 (GOOGLE), and the status information, provided by flightstats.com, will be relayed back to you. If you want the want to get in touch with a specific airline by phone, text the airline name to the same number, and Google will shoot you back the main telephone number you can call for inquiries.

Even though the Google flight info service is currently only available for departing or arriving flights in the US, flightstats.com the supplier does offer international stats, so Google could be releasing this service worldwide.

The Google Flight Status gadget can also be added to your personalized homepage.

Coghead Raises $8 Million

Silicon Valley based Coghead is announcing an $8 million Series B round of financing this afternoon, adding to the $3.2 million raised previously from El Dorado Ventures in March 2006. New investors American Capital and SAP Ventures invested in this round, and El Dorado participated as well. We covered Coghead on its launch in October 2005. [...]

Google Pack updates: better screensaver, new AV and spyware apps

google-photos-screensaver.png

Google's updated to their previously-posted Windows software package, Google Pack.

Changes to the Pack address our biggest initial complaint: that the original AV software, free for six months, would nag you for pay-for updates after the trial was over. Now Google's included the no-nag, no pay-for-updates-needed Norton Security Scan antivirus and PC Tools' Spyware Doctor Starter Edition. We're still fans of Ad-Aware for spyware scanning and ClamWin AV, but hey - at least GOOG's new choices are free.

Also, the screensaver (which was our favorite part) now supports photo feed slideshows, like from Flickr. Neat!

About operates deeper in the health business

about buys health companyAbout Inc, the lonely search engine company that tends to be forgotten about, is targeting health searchers with its recent purchase of the health care ratings site, UCompareHealthCare.com.

The site specializes in rating and providing information on doctors, nursing homes, hospitals, and specialty centers so that people can make more informed decisions on their healthcare.

With this purchase, About.com and the About Health team will see the addition of approximately five million additional monthly uniques.

Currently Google, Yahoo and MSN Live already provide specialty searches and results for Health related topics, and have for some time now.

[via PaidContent]

Reader Poll: What's your browser's homepage?

homepages.png

Yesterday, Rick made a comprehensive rundown of some of the most popular internet homepages out there, and in the comments, a lot of you weighed in on what you use.

Based on your feedback in the comments, and in the spirit of putting some numbers to all this business, it's time to do a little polling. We want to know just how many of you use what. We did a similar poll about a year and a half ago, but a helluva lot has changed in that time, so give a shout out to your favorite start page after the jump.

If you feel that your favorite was unjustly left out of the bunch, look again - Lifehacker is on the list. (Har har.) If by some chance you have some other favorite that's missing, click on Other and tell us about it in the comments.

PlayStation breaks sales records (BBC)

PlayStation breaks sales records  —  The PlayStation 3 console has broken UK sales records with more than 165,000 machines sold in the first two days of release, say analysts Chart Track.  —  More than a million consoles were shipped across Europe on launch day last week with 600,000 sold.

Source:   BBC
Link:   http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6499841.stm

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ETech: Amazon CTO Werner Vogels on Building Web-Scale Computing

Alex Iskold is reporting live from ETech 2007

Werner Vogels, VP and CTO of Amazon.com, took the ETech stage to discuss the challenges in building a large-scale, reliable web infrastructure. Amazon spent a decade and a whopping $2 billion dollars to build the world class technology that powers their web sites. Today Amazon makes available their own infrastructure to the anyone, via Amazon Web Services. We have extensively analyzed Amazon Web Services, as well as companies that are already leveraging it in their businesses.

AWS value proposition

Why build on Amazon Web Services? Vogels said because there are compelling business and technical advantages:

  • Total Cost: Running services via Amazon is substantially lower than building infrastructure and running it on your own;
  • Pay as you go: Pay only for what you consume;
  • Time to market: AWS lets businesses focus on their core competency instead of infrastructure;
  • Scalability: Automatic scalability is guaranteed by adding more hardware;
  • Robustness: Amazon guarantees 99.9999% of up time;
  • Security: Using Amazon Services collectively makes your offering more secure;
  • Technical complexity: Building things from scratch requires a lot of knowledge and experience.

A recap of what Amazon offers today

Amazon is rapidly moving to build a new kind of infrastructure, one that can really be considered a new WebOS. The stack of services offered by Amazon today is quite impressive. Here is how we summarized it in graph form in November:

As we discussed in November, Amazon is likely to roll out more services in the near future. Here are some further pointers that can be helpful if you are new to AWS:

Werner Vogels: focus on your idea!

Dr. Vogels made the case for why it makes sense for businesses, particularly startups, to use AWS. He started by pointing out that building Web-scale services is incredibly difficult. He showed examples of traffic graphs from major retailers like Target and Walmart that demonstrated that even these companies are not able to handle peak loads. He added that conventional wisdom is just wrong when it comes to understanding what it takes to build a scalable infrastructure.

For startups, Vogels advocated the 37Signals philosophy - build now, scale later. This is not because scaling isn't important, it is because scaling is just too hard. As a young company, focusing on infrastructure is very costly. His statistics indicated that up to 70% of resources can go into what he calls Undifferentiated heavy lifting - work that does not fit into your company's core competency. Instead, he suggests that businesses should rely on AWS to do all this work.

Conclusion

AWS is continuing to impress. Amazon is now focused on amplifying the customer success stories and turning that buzz into more customers. Given the pricing and simplicity of AWS, it appears that it is not going to be long before a large percentage of small and medium size companies will be using one or more Amazon Services. Larger companies are likely to lag behind, mostly for political and branding reasons, so it will be interesting to see if this inflexibility will hurt them in the long run.

Intercept packages before delivery with UPS

ups.png

UPS has just rolled out a new Delivery Intercept feature that adds a new level of control over everything that happens to your package after it's shipped but before it's delivered.

After you ship your package, Delivery Intercept lets you return the package to sender, change the delivery address, reschedule delivery, or have UPS hold the package for pickup over the internet any time before delivery. The service isn't free (it looks like it may be as much as $10/intercept), but anyone who's had to hassle with shipping problems that could have easily been remedied with a mid-ship intercept will likely find this a handy option.

Walking, Talking, Searching, Finding. (Molly Graham/Official Google Blog)

Walking, Talking, Searching, Finding.  —  Posted by Yael Shacham, Product Manager, Mobile Team  —  For the last few weeks, some of our users have been test-driving our new mobile search and providing us with feedback so we can make it better.  Now, we've actually been using your feedback to improve our mobile search since 2001.

Source:   Official Google Blog
Author:   Molly Graham
Link:   http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/03/walking…

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MS Office Tip: Search and replace Word formatting

ms_word_sr_format.jpg

Search and replace isn't just for text content; in Microsoft Word, you can search and replace how text looks, too. For example, you can make all the bolded text italicized instead. The secret knob is the More dropdown in the Search and Replace dialog box.

The CodeJacked weblog offers a step-by-step on getting this done, and says there's a lot more that can be done with this type of style replacement to spruce up your documents.

Changing fonts is just the tip of the iceberg. This technique can be used with any sort of formatting (paragraphs, styles, etc.) Also, be sure to click on the Special button to see the options that are available there (Any Digit, Any Letter, etc.) These wildcards and special symbols (along with plain text) can be used in combination with the formatting criteria. For example, it's possible to change all negative numbers to red this way, by specifying the Find What as a minus sign followed by the Any Digit notation and by specifying the Replace With as nothing but with a font color of red.

Ok, I'm off to make all my negative numbers red now.

Around the Water Cooler: Best comment thread roundup

Daily news roundup

Download of the Day: ScribeFire (Firefox)

scribefire.png

Firefox only: ScribeFire, formerly Performancing for Firefox, lets you compose and publish blog posts directly from your browser.

Like its predecessor, ScribeFire opens a split panel that provides a full of text-editing tools, complete with rich/source editing tabs, a live preview, a post history and more. You can easily drag and drop text, images and links to the ScribeFire pane, making it super-easy to reference other sites and info within your blog entries. The latest version, 1.4, promises improved support for Blogger accounts and better file uploading. It also supports the new WordPress API.

In addition to Blogger and WordPress, ScribeFire works with Jeeran, LiveJournal, TypePad and Windows Live Spaces. This killer extension costs nothing; it requires Firefox 1.5 or later. Thanks, Luis!

Read a book on your Zune

zune%20book.png

A Zune fan at DIY site Instructables shows you how to read e-books on your Zune using a simple bit of freeware.

The instructions are sparse but straightforward: Install jpegbook, load your e-book (it needs to be a text file) and then change the output size to 320x240 (the Zune's screen resolution). Steer the output files to a folder monitored by the Zune software and you're good to go. The program generates the book as sequentially numbered JPEGs. Not the most efficient way to read a book on your Zune, but it gets the job done.

How to use MD5 sums to verifiy downloaded files

md5sum.jpg

An MD5 sum is a string of letters and numbers that acts like a fingerprint for a file. If two files have the same MD5 sum, the files are exactly alike - which is why MD5 "fingerprints" can verify whether or not your downloaded file got corrupted in transit.

MD5's sound like advanced geekery - and indeed, they're calculated at the command line - but you don't have to be C3PO to use 'em. The CodeJacked weblog demonstrates how to use MD5's to make sure that big-ass download landed on your hard drive intact and identical to the version on the server.

How passwords get cracked

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The man at One Man's Blog explains how alarmingly easy it is to crack passwords and offers tips on choosing safer ones.

First, he breaks down the steps he'd take in cracking a password. That includes the simple act of guessing the top ten passwords (pet's name, "1234," date of birth, etc.) used by 20 percent of all users. If that doesn't work, he'll turn to a brute-force attack, which, as you can see in the table above, can get the job done in as little as 0.02 seconds.

This is eye-opening stuff, even for users who know better than to use "1234" as their password. Thankfully, the author goes on to provide seven great tips on choosing safer passwords, including using Microsoft's password strength tester. Required reading. When you're done, check out our other posts on smart password selection.

Check your site's popularity with popuri.us

popurius.png

Ever wonder how your site ranks? Popuri.us serves up "popularity statistics" from a variety of sources.

Specifically, it reports ranking information from Alexa and Google; backlink numbers from the likes of Google, Live Search and Yahoo; bookmark numbers from del.icio.us; and subscriber numbers from Bloglines. You also get Whois info and DNS reports. Everything is presented using a nice little AJAX list, with options to get detailed info about each of the results.

Owing to high traffic, a couple services have booted popuri.us, but the developer promises to restore them soon. In the meantime, this is definitely a handy tool for fetching site stats.

Google SMS adds flight info

google%20sms.png

We've long been fans of using Google SMS to fetch information from our phones. Now we can use it to retrieve airline numbers and flight status.

Just text your flight number to GOOGLE (466453) and in short order you'll receive a message listing arrival/departure times, flight status and even the airline's phone number. If you need only the latter, just text the airline's name. Of course, you can still use Google SMS to get driving directions, stock quotes and tons of other useful info. This is just a bit of extra icing on that already yummy cake.

Ask MetaFilter roundup

Hack Attack: A beginner's guide to Quicksilver

qs header.png

by Adam Pash

Quicksilver is bar-none the best productivity application on the market today. Whether we're talking Mac, Windows, or Linux, freeware or shareware, this Mac-only, freeware application launcher-and-then-some is the best productivity booster I have on my computer.

Quicksilver can be used to launch files and applications, manipulate data, and seamlessly plug into almost any application on your Mac so that you can perform actions as soon as you think of them in a few short keystrokes. The only problem with Quicksilver is that a lot of people also find it to be one of the most obtuse desktop applications around. In this first part of our Quicksilver series, I'm going to introduce you to the basics of Quicksilver to lay the groundwork for more advanced Quicksilver kung fu to come.

The beginnings

welcome to Quicksilver.png

First things first: If you haven't already got it installed, head over to the Quicksilver web site and grab the latest version. The first time you run Quicksilver, you'll have to go through an installation process that gives you an overview of Quicksilver, suggests a few plug-ins, and lets you define the Quicksilver keyboard shortcut and catalog scan frequency. If you don't know what any of this means, don't worry - we'll get there shortly.

plug-ins.png

Quicksilver recommends popular plug-ins along with plug-ins matching up with items Quicksilver has scanned in your Applications folder, so it only recommends plug-ins you might potentially use. At this point, you can install whatever plug-ins you want; you can always grab more later.

On the keyboard shortcut front, Quicksilver defaults to Ctrl-Space. I prefer Cmd-Space, but it's taken by Spotlight by default. I'd recommend changing Spotlight's shortcut in the Spotlight preferences and assigning Cmd-Space to Quicksilver (this is personal preference, but once you get good with Quicksilver, the more convenient Cmd-Space shortcut will be worth it).

primer on startup.png

When you finish the setup wizard, you'll see the Quicksilver primer interface in the screenshot above (you can change interfaces in the Appearance section of the Quicksilver preferences - I prefer Bezel, which you'll see in the rest of the screenshots).

You can invoke Quicksilver at any time, no matter what application you're using, by pressing the hotkey combination you've set up (again, Ctrl-Space by default). To get rid of the Quicksilver interface, either press the invoke combination again or press escape.

So there you have it. Quicksilver is installed, and you understand how to invoke it. Now what?

Launching applications, files, and folders

Launching apps with Quicksilver works the same as any other keyboard app launcher. Invoke Quicksilver and then begin typing the name of the program you want to launch. It's cataloged your Applications folder so that it knows what's in there, so it quickly finds a match for what you're typing. In fact, Quicksilver is so smart that you don't even have to type all of the letters. You just as easily get a match for Firefox by typing 'ffox'. The point is, Quicksilver is smart; it even learns what you launch most often and begins ranking popular items higher in your results.

turn off search reset.png

The worst default Quicksilver setting for beginners is the "Reset search after..." feature enabled by default in the Command section of the preferences, which clears the text you've typed after a short delay and is really annoying when you're getting started with Quicksilver and you want to take your time so you can take everything in. If you're new to Quicksilver, I'd recommend turning this off before you go any further.

launch firefox.png

When you match the app you want to launch, you'll see that the default action for applications (in the second pane) is Open. That means to launch an app, invoke Quicksilver, search until you find the app, then hit Enter. Simple, right? You can launch files and folders in the same way, provided you know how to find them or they're already in your Quicksilver catalog (more on this next week). So what makes Quicksilver any different from other app launchers?

Advancing

The point at which you begin to use Quicksilver for more than just application launching is very similar to the step between traditional application launching (mousing around, finding the app, double-clicking it) and using a keyboard app launcher. You'll begin to wonder why and how you ever worked any other way.

More advanced Quicksilver use can be confusing for beginners. However, once you get the idea, it turns out to be a very intuitive way to work with your computer.

Quicksilver consists of a three-paned interface (the third of which only shows up when it can be used). You move from one pane to the next by using the Tab key. A lot of people (myself included) find it helpful to think of using Quicksilver's three panes like they're constructing a sentence.

The first pane, the pane you type into to search for an application or other object (whether it's a file, folder, bookmark, etc.), is going to be the direct object of the action contained in the second pane. For example, when we launch Firefox, we've constructed a short sentence saying, "Open Firefox." Open is our action, and Firefox is our direct object (the thing that's being opened). This object-action relationship is what makes Quicksilver so powerful, especially when coupled with the third pane.

making sentences.png

For actions ending in ellipses, you get to use the delightful third pane. The third pane describes with, to what, or how you want to apply the action. So in the screenshot above, the sentence I've constructed has told Quicksilver to Open todo.txt with TextMate" (I could choose nearly any appropriate app in the third pane).

actions.png

All you need to do to get good with Quicksilver is to start getting familiar with the range of commands you can perform with Quicksilver. By default, Quicksilver has lots of useful commands. To get an idea of the commands you can perform on an object, try invoking Quicksilver, searching for an object (like an application, a file, or a folder), then hit Tab to jump over to the action pane. At this point, hit the down arrow. You'll see a drop-down list of all of the actions you can perform on this object. Feel free to try out a few that look like they might be handy.

You can also browse your entire list of commands by going to the Actions section of the preferences, where all of your actions are listed in the ranked order they're going to show up when they match your text. Spend a little time looking around at the available actions and you'll quickly see just how much useful stuff there is under the hood.

Plug-ins

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You can add more commands and functionality to Quicksilver by installing more plug-ins (sort of like Firefox extensions). Some plug-ins tie into applications on your Mac, while others add powerful functionality to Quicksilver without the need of any external program.

All of Quicksilver's plug-ins are installed through the Quicksilver interface, so just invoke Quicksilver and type the plug-ins shortcut (Cmd-", aka Cmd-Shift-'), or just use the standard Cmd-, for preferences and then find the plug-ins tab.

My favorite plug-ins include:

    address book 2.png
  • Apple Address Book: Indexes your Address Book contacts and lets you access all of the information therein.
  • Apple Mail: Lets you browse your mail and perform different mail actions, like composing, attaching, or sending emails directly from Quicksilver.
  • Dictionary: By entering text mode (invoke Quicksilver and hit period [.]), you can type in a word, then perform the "Define with dict.org" action. Quicksilver will automatically look up the word and pull the definition to a small window.
  • compress using zip.png
  • File Compression: Compress files and folders into a number of different archive formats from Quicksilver.
  • Firefox/Mozilla: Indexes all of your Firefox bookmarks and bookmarklets so you can invoke them no matter where you are.
  • Image Manipulation Actions: Scale and change the file format of almost any image file on the fly from Quicksilver.
  • iTunes: This one's a doozy - lets you fully interact with your iTunes library without ever opening it up.
  • append to.png
  • Text Manipulation Actions: We've covered this one before, but it never gets old. Append (or prepend) text directly to a text file from the comfort of Quicksilver.

More to come

This has been a quick overview of Quicksilver, but stay tuned for a lot more showing and a lot less telling next week, when I'll dive into some of my favorite uses for Quicksilver in a bit more detail.

Adam Pash is a senior editor for Lifehacker who feels crippled without his Quicksilver. His special feature Hack Attack appears every Tuesday on Lifehacker. Subscribe to the Hack Attack RSS feed to get new installments in your newsreader.

How to go green with your electronics

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The TreeHugger weblog posts an excellent collection of tips for "greening" your electronics.

Being green with electronics doesn't mean living in a teepee listening to truckers squalk on the old short-wave. Greening your electronics is a matter of knowing what tech to get, how to use it best, and what to do with it when its useful life is done.

For example, electronics like your TV consume power whether it's turned on or not, meaning that even though you may not be watching TV, your TV's still eating up a lot of power. The same is true of AC adapters. A good way to remedy this problem is by plugging these items into a power strip and flipping the switch there whenever you're not using those devices. Share your green electronics tips in the comments.

Microsoft Spins Off ZenZui, Mobile Browsing Via Widgets (Nick Gonzalez/TechCrunch)

Microsoft Spins Off ZenZui, Mobile Browsing Via Widgets  —  Microsoft-backed ZenZui launched this morning.  It's a new mobile browser that aims to make surfing the web on your mobile device easier through widgets.  The application that lets you surf over a 6×6 grid of website widgets by panning and zooming around the grid.

Source:   TechCrunch
Author:   Nick Gonzalez
Link:   http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/27/zenzui-on-mobile…

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SAMSUNG Introduces 1.8" - Type 64GB Flash-based Solid State Drive (Samsung)

SAMSUNG Introduces 1.8" - Type 64GB Flash-based Solid State Drive  —  Taipei, Taiwan - March 27, 2007: Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., the leader in advanced semiconductor technology, announced at its annual Mobile Solution Forum in Taipei that it has developed a 1.8"-type 64 Gigabyte (GB) flash-solid state drive (SSD).

Source:   Samsung
Link:   http://www.samsung.com/PressCenter/PressRelease…

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Blog death threats spark debate (BBC)

Blog death threats spark debate  —  Prominent blogger Kathy Sierra has called on the blogosphere to combat the culture of abuse online.  —  It follows a series of death threats which have forced her to cancel a public appearance and suspend her blog.  —  Ms Sierra described on her blog …

Source:   BBC
Link:   http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6499095.stm

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Best Buy Acquires Speakeasy (Speakeasy)

Best Buy Acquires Speakeasy  —  Addition of VoIP Communications Provider Gives Small Businesses  —  a Single Source for All of Their Technology Needs  —  Best Buy Co., Inc. (NYSE: BBY) has agreed to acquire Speakeasy, Inc., one of the largest independent broadband voice, data and IT service providers in the United States.

Source:   Speakeasy - Broadband Voice and Data Communications
Link:   http://www.speakeasy.net/press/pr/pr032707.php

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re Kathy Sierra's allegations (Kat Herding/all noise all the time)

re Kathy Sierra's allegations  —  Well, the s**t has hit the fan this time to be sure.  Those of you who plan to read what I've written here should first go read this post by Kathy Sierra.  —  As you can guess, I've been getting "interesting" email since that was published yesterday …

Source:   all noise all the time
Author:   Kat Herding
Link:   http://www.rageboy.com/2007/03/re-kathy-sierras…

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Twitter as a Communications Platform (Nik Cubrilovic/New Web Order)

Twitter as a Communications Platform  —  Today Techcrunch reported that Twitter will be releasing extensions to their API that will allow applications to receive private messages from users.  Currently the API allows you to post messages, get a list of your friends and to query the public messages …

Source:   New Web Order - Nik Cubrilovic
Author:   Nik Cubrilovic
Link:   http://www.nik.com.au/archives/2007/03/27/twitter-as…

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John McCain's MySpace Page Hacked (Michael Arrington/TechCrunch)

John McCain's MySpace Page Hacked  —  Someone on Presidential hopeful John McCain's staff is going to be in trouble today.  They used a well known template to create his Myspace page.  The template was designed by NewsVine Founder and CEO Mike Davidson (original template is here).

Source:   TechCrunch
Author:   Michael Arrington
Link:   http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/27/john-mccains…

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Intel modifies Wi-Fi to add mileage (Michael Kanellos/CNET News.com)

Intel modifies Wi-Fi to add mileage  —  BERKELEY, Calif.—Intel has come up with a form of Wi-Fi that would let a laptop in San Francisco connect to the Internet from a base station in San Jose, Calif.  —  And there would still be about 10 miles of wiggle room to spare.

Source:   CNET News.com
Author:   Michael Kanellos
Link:   http://news.com.com/2100-7351_3-6170713.html

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Yahoo steals the mobile world, and opens it up for publishers

yahoo mobile publisher servicesHot off the presses; Yahoo keeps trucking along with its mobile announcements, this time they take aim at publishers wanting to enter the mobile market.

In continuing its mobile success streak, Yahoo is now looking for Publishers interested in providing mobile content. The newly launched Yahoo! Mobile Publisher Services is a suite of services that helps publishers increases the distribution and monetization of their content on mobile devices. The goal of this service is to deliver tools to advertisers and publishers that help them enable the growth of the mobile internet to benefit consumers. By joining, publishers will have access to the Yahoo! Mobile Ad Network, Mobile Content Engine, Mobile Media Directory and the Mobile Site Submit.

  • The Yahoo! Mobile Ad Network will enable publishers to serve syndicated advertising in mobile content, in a variety of formats including video, in game placements and sponsored links.
  • An innovative tool that Yahoo has come up with is the Yahoo! Mobile Content Engine. This will allow publishers who do not have a mobile site, the ability to create mobile content to distribute on mobile devices efficiently and effectively.
  • The Mobile Media Directory will make it easy for publishers to make their mobile media accessible through Yahoo's oneSearch, by submitting their list of products for review by Yahoo, who will then rank and review it.
  • Mobile Site Submit, like a regular web site submit, will allow mobile publishers the ability to provide information on their mobile site with a description and tags to ensure proper indexing in Yahoo oneSearch.
Talk about growth, Yahoo has been taking the mobile application world by storm lately. We will be following this one closely to see how Yahoo!'s Mobile Publisher Services really does help out publishers.

UPDATE: I took out the underlines, and replaced with bold. Sorry Jeffrey, my bad.

New UPS feature lets you redirect packages over the web

UPS It's 3:00 in the morning, and after pulling your hair out all night, you realize that the reason you can't get that program to run is that you need more RAM. A few seconds later you've got 4GB of memory shipping from Newegg. And then you remember that you entered your home address for shipping but you'll be at work when the box arrives.

Up until now, you had to wait until UPS put a sticker on your door saying they tried to make a delivery while you weren't home before you can deal with the problem. But now the company has rolled out UPS Intercept, a service that lets you, well, intercept packages while they're in transit.

Through the UPS Intercept page you can request:

  • return to sender
  • deliver to another address
  • reschedule delivery
  • have the package held at a UPS location for pickup
UPS will not explain to your wife why you just blew your savings on memory for your computer so that you could play Doom.

[via Uneasy Silence]

Googleholic for March 27th 2007

googleholic
In this issue of Googleholic we cover:

  • Is Google the king of media
  • Google is itching Indian acquisitions
  • And the winners are... YouTube video awards
  • Adjusting Google's personalized homepages
  • Google Base Gadgets
  • More Google Keyboard Shortcuts
  • Google testing links
  • The Goose Creek project
Continue reading Tuesday's Googleholic...

Continue reading Googleholic for March 27th 2007

Palm to offer free Windows Mobile 6 upgrade for Treo 750

Palm Treo 750 WM6Not only will Palm be offering Treo 750 users a chance to upgrade their phones from Windows Mobile 5.0 to Windows Mobil 6, but the company won't charge for it.

That means support for HTML-formatted email, Office 2007 file formats, and HSDPA support. There's slightly less memory available on a Treo 750 running Windows Mobile 6, but the folks over at Mobility Site got a chance to play with one at CTIA, and they say it seems just as responsive as a Treo with Windows Mobile 5.0

There's no word on when the update will be available or how current Treo users will be able to sign up for it.



TriQQr, twitter submitter tool for windows

triqqr for windowsTwitter, oh twitter you are everywhere, and now you come to my desktop, and the desktops of all other Window's users.

TriQQr is a little tool for windows users that makes it simple for Twitter users to enter posts by using a desktop application that can be constantly left open. The tool is currently only available for pre-Windows Vista users.

The TriQQr blog is unfortunately (for those who don't speak it) written entirely in German, so it is a little hard to figure out what is being said about the application, and there isn't much on the website. If there is anyone out there with a German background that cares to translate, please drop us a line.

Microsoft announces ZenZui small screen interface

Microsoft has announced the launch of an independent company called ZenZui that makes use of Microsoft technology. The idea is to redesign the way users interact with mobile devices by using a zooming interface for web browsing.



Either ZenZui presents a whole new way to interact with a mobile device, or it's just a flashy new interface. On the one hand, it seems like a logical way to organize data for small screens. On the other hand, is it really that different from the way Windows Mobile's start menu works?

[via Pocket PC Thoughts]

Unbiased product reports, available at ProductWiki

productwiki

Want to get a total unbiased report on a new product you are thinking about purchasing? ProductWiki can help.

ProductWiki is a product information site that is based off of a collaborative wiki format. The website is entirely maintained by visitors and users who share information or review consumer products from around the world.

The goal the team behind ProductWiki has is to create a comprehensive information resource that covers all products in depth. All products might be a little hard to get onto the site, but it's overflowing with a range of products already, from LCD TV's, external hard drives, tea cups, games, health and beauty products, cars and a truckload more.

When searching for an item, the site not only will give a review from the submitter, but will also show pictures, key features, and places where it can be bought. Users can choose to tag items, and write additional pros and cons based on experience they have had with the item.

ProductWiki is another great place to go to check out the items that are on your shopping list, getting great first hand results from people that actually own and use it.


[via eHub]

Microsoft's Z Fetish: First Zune, Now ZenZui and its Zoomspace

Microsoft today announced the launch of ZenZui, an independent Mobile Web company. ZenZui offers a patented (by Microsoft) "Zooming User Interface" for mobile phones. The technology was initially developed by the Microsoft Research lab in Redmond, then acquired by ZenZui - who also got venture capital funding from Microsoft IP Ventures to help launch its company.

What is ZenZui?

ZenZui's core feature is its 'zooming' interface, which gave rise to its current marketing slogan: "Stop Surfing. Start Zooming." In technical terms, ZenZui is said to have "a high-frame rate zooming user interface [which] employs up to 36 individual "tiles" that are selected and customized by users". On the ZenZui website, they further explain how to use this zooming interface:

"Using a single thumb, you fly in and out of your Zoomspace - two simple taps get you directly to any Tile. Through some clever engineering, we constantly refresh your Tiles in the background, so they're always fresh, available, and ready to be Zoomed."

Well, it's easier to grok if you view this quick 2-minute video demo on YouTube. Here's a pictorial representation of how it works:

Companies that have partnered with ZenZui for the initial trial include Kayak.com, OTOlabs, Avenue A | Razorfish and Traffic.com Inc.

ZenZui recently closed a Series-A financing round of $12 million, from Oak Investment Partners and Hunt Ventures. And with Microsoft in its corner, it has heavyweight marketing backing too.

Business Model

ZenZui has come up with an ecosystem for its product, which essentially aims to make money by advertisers and marketers sponsoring Tiles. For users, ZenZui will then match "relevant sponsors with each Tile". They describe this model, a little too cutely, as "CPZ - Cost Per Zoom". The ecosystem is summed up in this diagram, which I must admit I haven't fully grokked yet:

Conclusion

ZenZui seems like a cool interface for mobile, but the business model is a little confusing to me. I don't quite understand how viewing sponsored Tiles, which are essentially mini-advertisements, will be viral to consumers. The diagram has lots of nice triangles, squares and arrows - but can someone explain to me in plain english how the ecosystem works? Preferably without using the word "zoom"...

Snap Preview Anywhere Launches Localized Versions

Later today Web previews product Snap is launching 8 new localized versions of their Snap Preview Anywhere product. They will support 9 languages in all:

  • English (by Default) 
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Chinese - Simplified 
  • Chinese - Traditional 
  • French 
  • German 
  • Spanish 
  • Portuguese

Web Previews - good or bad?

But whatever the language, it's up to end users the world over to decide if web previews are useful or an annoyance. Back in January Alex Iskold looked at several Web previews products, including Snap, Browster, Cooliris. Also in February I reviewed iReader, a browser extension that lets you preview the content of a link before you click on it. The general verdict for all these products was that they are potentially useful, but more often than not the implementation was an annoyance for the reader.

Since that time, Snap has released a number of upgrades to their Web previews product - specifically aimed at addressing those usability issues. Snap Preview Anywhere added a bubble icon, css themes, better and more granular control of the hover trigger, and a larger image size option. Also there is now an option to have just the icon as the preview trigger, which seems like an elegant way to let readers know that it's something in addition to a normal hyperlink - which they will soon realize is a web preview. This gets around the potential issue of people hovering their mouse cursor over links and getting unexpected preview pop-ups.

As you may have noticed, I've implemented Snap Preview Anywhere onto the site. I've already found it useful to 'preview' the webpage links of the commenters on Read/WriteWeb. But let me know your feedback on it - particularly the usability aspects.

Numenta - Has Artificial Intelligence Arrived?

Jeff Hawkins made a name for himself in the tech industry as the founder of Palm Computing and inventor of the Palm Pilot. He later founded Handspring, where he invented the Treo. If you were a fan of his work then, you are going to love what Jeff is up to now. He is currently pursuing his life-long passions, neuroscience and intelligence. His latest work made quite a splash a few years ago when he published On Intelligence. In this thin volume Jeff Hawkins elegantly summarised his theory of how the brain gave rise to intelligence. Disputing conventional wisdom that the brain is complex, or that intelligence is inseparable from other human qualities such as emotions, Jeff put forward a proof that human intelligence is a function of the neocortex and that it is temporal in nature.

To prove his theory, Jeff founded Numenta - a company dedicated to developing algorithms and software based on the ideas put forward in the book. This spring Numenta released its first product, an experimental software aimed at researchers and advanced developers which embodies the algorithms and techniques pioneered by Jeff and his crew. Numenta is presenting here at ETech today and so it's a great opportunity to familiarize you with these exciting new developments. Has the age of Artificial Intelligence arrived? Is it what we thought it would be? Read on to find out.

Hierarchical Temporal Memory (HTM)

One of the key insights that Jeff had was based on the fact that life has a spacio-temporal quality. This is a fancy way of saying that things happen in space and time. It is of course basic physics, but Jeff concluded that the structure in our brain that models reality, should also have spacio-temporal characteristics. After all, a good model is an approximation of the actual process. With that, Jeff looked for a part of the brain that would fit the description and immediately realized that it is the Neocortex.

Jeff and his collegues spent a lot of time studying the neocortext and were able to understand its essential operations. Based on their understanding they created the Hierarchical Temporal Memory (HTM) model, which captured the essential computation by constructing tree-like hierarchies. Like its biological forefather, the Neocortext, HTM applies the same algorithm to all inputs. The four basic operations performed by each element are:

  • Discover causes in the world
  • Infer causes of novel input
  • Make predictions
  • Direct actions

This model, the scientists claim, simulates what would commonly be classified as intelligence.

1. Discover causes in the world

Similar to the neural networks, HTM does not have any prewired classification of the world. Instead, HTM accepts a sequence of spacio-temporal inputs and 'learns' the patterns in the input stream. In the diagram above, the senses digitize the signal and turn them into bitmaps (or vectors), which are then are processed by a classification system. The system then assigns the likelihood of a particular cause to each symbol. In plain english, you are shown a sequence of pictures of cats and dogs - and each picture you classify as either a cat or a dog. But just like we can't do that when we are born, neither can HTM. In fact HTM needs to go through a training process before it can 'learn' to distinguish things.

2. Infer causes of novel input

A trained HTM is able to assign the likelihood of a particular cause. Given a new input, the system then uses its previous knowledge to classify it. People actually do the same thing; given a sequence of pictures of cats and dogs, there is a chance (small) that we will make a mistake. What is particularly interesting is how HTM deals with novel input - it is used to continue the learning process. Each new input, along with its temporal aspect, is processed by the system and causes the system to change. As an example, think of the process involved in recognizing an object via sensory input - we move our hands around it in order to recognize the object. Jeff Hawkins explains that this ability to handle continuously variable input is one of the keys to make the whole system work.

3. Make predictions

The ability to predict or to imagine things is one of the most basic human abilities. Forecasting, mental modeling, imagination and planning - these are powerful attributes of intelligent behavior in humans, which each find place in HTM. Each node in the HTM network combines its memory with incoming signals, to predict what is going to happen next. This prediction can actually serve as an input itself, mimicing the process of imagination in humans. The entire network is able to compute a series of future states - so for example, like people, it is able to anticipate bad or dangerous sitations before they actually take place.

4. Direct actions

Probably the most important thing that people do after they think (most of the time) is act. The ability to calculate the sum of all inputs, conclude and do something, has been wired into HTM. Since the model itself has no way of interacting with the external world, its actions need to essentially go through a translator before being implemented (think how brain controls movement for example). So in its raw version, HTM actions are just internal commands that can be interpreted in various ways. For example, they can be hooked up to the motor generator to power physical behavior. In this first version of the model, the set of basic behaviors is pre-wired. However even in this early stage, the model is capable of generating complex responses by combining the basic building blocks.

Hal, are you there?

So what are we to make of this? Have Jeff Hawkins and his researchers at Numenta invented Artificial Intelligence? The answer is yes and no. It is likely that some future version of their system is going to be able to pass the famous Turing Test, but hardly anyone would mistake the Numeta creation for a human being. In fact the very beauty of this creation is that it decouples intelligence from other human qualities. Jeff and his colleagues invented an algorithm that mimics typical computation which occurs in our brains, but it is far from being a complete artificial intelligence.

So in terms of moral and ethical implications, right now there are no issues. Could there be in the future? Yes. The future generation of this algorithm, if implemented in advanced robots, could become closer to what Arnold Schwarzenegger so elegantly portrayed in the Terminator series. But seriously, as with any technology care must be taken as to how and where it is used.

In the meantime, we are excited to report on this breakthrough. Jeff's invention has paved the road to a new, brain-like computing paradigm. It is possible that the long-awaited promise of neural networks and cellular automata is finally being delivered. This means that computers will be able to tackle problems that come so easy to us, like recognizing faces or seeing patterns in music. But since computers are much faster than humans when it comes to computation, we also hope that new frontiers will be broken - enabling us to solve the problems that were unreachable before.

This post is based on the white paper on Numenta's web site. We highly recommend it, as it has a lot enlightening details about the architecture of HTM. Please take a look and let us know what you think about this exciting development.

Are You a Top 12 Connected Innovator?

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Source:   Financial Times
Link:   http://www.ft.com/cms/s/d0ccbc46-daf7-11db-ba4d…

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