If you still need to book your holiday travel plans, time's running short. On the plus side, Travelocity's new desktop application will watch destinations and alert you as prices drop, so you can snag a deal as soon as it's available.
Travelocity's free Adobe AIR-based desktop app for Windows, Mac, and Linux saves your preferred city of origin and destination, then automatically refreshes anywhere from every four to 24 hours (your choice) to keep an eye out for airfare and hotel deals. The truly impatient can manually refresh the app whenever the mood strikes.
The app coughs up lists of the best deals in the area you're searching and even populates a map with the results so you can get your bearings in an unfamiliar area. If you see a great deal you think you're friends might appreciate, share it with the built-in Twitter and Facebook APIs.
How do you find the best last-minute travel deals—or did you plan ahead and purchase your tickets six months ago? Let us know in the comments.
Verizon and Apple are deemed miles apart on an iPhone deal, huff-and-puff media firms get a response from Google, and 3-D modeling nerds could see their efforts rewarded with a party.
- Show me the pictures: better format for image results
Rolling out over the next 24 hours (so you might not see it yet), Google Images gets a big "I'm feeling lucky" result and more thumbnail-sized results. [Official Google Blog] - Google and paid content
Fox/News Corp. and other media firms have discussed opting out of Google's web indexing. In response, the Big G allows publishers to show search clickers just one article, or five, before asking for registration or payment, or allows preview pages to be indexed. [Google News Blog] - Mozilla Weave Beta Upgraded
Mozilla's browser synchronizing add-on gets bug fixes and upgrades that smooth out a lot of user experience issues, and adds neat things like universal history deletions. [jkOnTheRun] - Put your town on the 3D map: Google Model Your Town Competition
Google wants you to get together with other 3-D modeling/SketchUp enthusiasts in your town and create distinctive renderings of local landmarks and oddities. Win their contest, and you'll potentially get a party thrown for you, and a bit of publicity. [Google LatLong] - 'Complicated' Verizon iPhone deal said to be unlikely in 2010
It's from an analyst, who are notably not exactly accurate on Apple matters. But one stock-watching honcho thinks T-Mobile is much more likely to get an iPhone than Verizon or Sprint, due to technology similarities and corporate cultures. [AppleInsider]
Mnemonics are great memory-boosters when your learning requires rote memorization, like the bones of the skeletal system or edible berries. Next time you need a study aid, check out this compilation of mnemonics on topics that range from physics to religion.
You may already know a few mnemonics without really thinking of them as that. For instance, " Righty, tighty, lefty loosey" is a common way to remember which way to remove or tighten a screw, and ROY G. BIV helps you recall the colors of the rainbow. This guide has plenty of familiar mnemonics, plus obscure ones that will help you tell camels apart or remind you what James Bond films starred Sean Connery.
What are your favorite mnemonics for remembering things? Share them in the comments.
Windows: When you're whipping together a presentation in a hurry, don't spend hours poring over fonts to find exactly the right one. Free app WinFontsView displays all the fonts on your system so you can quickly grab one you need.
To find fonts on your system, simply run the portable EXE file from a thumb drive or wherever it's stored on your hard drive. The app displays a handful of samples for each font, including bold, italic, underline, and different sizes, too. You'll be able to tell at a glance which fonts might work for your needs and which you can skip right off the bat.
WinFontsView isn't as full-featured as some of the other font managers out there, but it's perfect for previewing batches of fonts so you don't have to painstakingly click on every single one you want to test. It also won't change the font in blocks of text you've already typed so it won't help you compare how your work will look in different typeface. You'll want something like previously mentioned Windows Fonts Explorer for that.
WinFontsView is available in several languages and works with all Windows version 2000 and higher.
Invisible Glove puts a protective coating on your hands so you can easily remove dirt, grease, paint, and the like from your hands with relative ease. It's sort of like regular gloves but without the loss of dexterity.
If you spend a lot of time working with your hands, gloves are great at keeping the grease from penetrating your skin, but they can also be kind of a pain depending on what you're doing. As useful-gear weblog Cool Tools points out:
It goes on like a hand lotion — just a bit greasier. It only makes your hands slippery if you put too much on. It works exactly like it says, though. Oil, grease, dirt, paint, solvents, and pretty much anything else just washes right off when you're done. No more greasy black fingernails and paint-stained hands.
Invisible Glove will set you back around $6 at Amazon and should last you several months.
Wolfram Alpha may be a data geek's dream, but if you're not all that interested in its more obscure uses, here's one thing we could all use a little help with: step-by-step math calculations.
Just enter in the equation you want solved (say, for example, Solve 2x3 - 6.543x = x2, then click the Show steps link to see how you could solve the problem yourself next time without the help of Wolfram Alpha. It'll then walk you through all the steps necessary to reach your answer. TI-85, eat your heart out.
Windows/Mac/Linux (with Adobe AIR): Note-taking application Scribbly lives in your system tray and lets you quickly write notes or reminders to yourself, and then will email them to you with a single click.
Once you've installed the application, you can simply click the system tray icon to bring up the single note-taking window, type in whatever note you'd like to send to yourself, and then send it off with the click of a button—you'll need to set your email address in the settings, of course. The notes persist even after you minimize the application to the tray, so you can use it to take little notes throughout the day, and then email them to yourself before you go home.
The application is very simple, but where it could be really useful is when you combine it with Gmail's plus-addressing feature—just add something like username+notes@gmail.com to your email address in the settings, and then setup a Gmail filter to automatically put those notes into a separate label for storage. It's a useful feature that makes it worth a look, at least. Scribbly is a free download for all platforms with Adobe AIR.
If email is too informal but you're too busy to make and send a holiday card on your own, Gmail is running a fun promotion allowing you to send one snazzy holiday postcard on their dime. Just head to the Happy holidays from Gmail page, enter your message, recipient's information, and pick the envelope style you want. The first postcard choice is a straight Gmail advertisement, but they're all pretty nice looking (we particularly like the snowflake twins above). [Happy holidays from Gmail]
Windows: If you want to mess around with reskinning your Windows 7 or Vista taskbar without having to muck around with patches, AeroWorks is a no-fuss method for skinning the taskbar without modification to your system.
AeroWorks swaps out the taskbar background and special effects with those of the seven included skins. You can combine your own images and special effects by clicking on the Choose Base and Choose FX buttons in the upper right hand corner.
It doesn't patch or modify your system beyond changing the appearance of the taskbar while the application is running. If you don't like the changes you can undo them within the program and try a new skin or simply close the application to revert the taskbar to its default state.
AeroWorks is freeware and requires Windows Vista or higher. Have a favorite tool for skinning Windows? Let's hear about it in the comments.
Mac OS X only: Universal application launcher and then some Quicksilver has a pretty shaky future, so we were both surprised and thrilled to find a new release of Quicksilver boasting, among other things, improved performance.
Rather than simply bringing Quicksilver up to spec with Snow Leopard (like the last maintenance release), Quicksilver 1.0 Beta 57 actually comes complete with some fixes and improvements. For whatever reason, the release isn't currently available on the Quicksilver homepage, but the changelog on software download site MacUpdate lists a ton of changes, including claims of performance boosts:
Default compiler changed to Clang, Apple's and the Open Source community's next gen compiler. By doing that a 20 to 40% increase in runtime speed was gained while managing a catalog library with approx. 13k items. Quicksilver also feels a lot snappier too.
Not bad for an application that's not really in active development anymore (and whose creator is busy working on Chrome OS). I'll venture to say that the new build does feel a touch faster, but speed is always a tough call, so let's hear how the new release feels to you in the comments.
Update: As some readers have pointed out, this build seems to have come from the active development of Quicksilver that's going on over at GitHub. It's great to see that users are actively developing the open-sourced app.
Quicksilver is a free, open-source download for Mac OS X only. If you're new to Quicksilver, check out our beginner's guide.
Craigslist is a great resource when you're searching for a deal on a vehicle, but it can also be time consuming. This Craigslist-centric Firefox extension displays consumer reviews, pricing info, and similar vehicles to make searching as painless as possible.
(Click above to enlarge)
We've purchased vehicles from Craigslist several times in the past, and there's always a certain amount of extra internet searching that goes on. When you find what seems like a deal, you're sure to look up Blue Book pricing, consumer reviews, and check up on safety information. The new "Craigslist Car Buy Research Firefox Extension" (longest name ever) is a simple install that provides all of that available information at the top of each page so you can quickly determine whether sifting through the posted ad is worth your time.
We road tested it on several different ads in our area and it did its duty when it came to notifying us of cars that had been in accidents before we got our hopes up on finding a real deal; it also alerted us to pricing that was likely too good to be true, suggesting inquiries to make about its condition. In all, the extension aims to round up the following information on each car classified:
- Gives estimated price from multiple sources. Also provides links for further research.
- Factory car recalls for the car model.
- Consumer reviews, this is the real gem.
- Car reliability information. It shows the msn autos page focused at reliability section. This shows what kinda engine problems occur in that particular car. Other info is also there but reliability info is most useful on that page. Takes like 2 sec to get idea of how reliable that car model is.
- Scans the posting and shows a highlighted message on top informing about:- accident car, rebuilt car, moving sale, one owner, suggests buyer to ask if the car was involved in an accident.
- Lists similar (year/make/model) ads from craigslist on top. This gives the idea of going price and the supply/demand.
- If there is a phone number in the post then it makes it easy to do a search of the phone number on Craigslist to find out if the ad poster has posted any other ads. This sometimes help in determining if its moving sale or [an] ad by a reseller etc.
Give it a go to see how else this add-on can make your Craigslist searching a little easier. Craigslist Car Buy Research is a free download, works wherever Firefox does.
The New York Times' Gadgetwise Blog dives into the subject of email misfires, discussing what you should do when someone mistakenly sends you an email meant for someone else. We're wondering what you would do—whether you're the sender or receiver.
For her part, Gadgetwise's Jenna Wortham suggests the following when you've received an email by error:
It's hard enough to field the deluge of daily e-mail messages from colleagues, significant others and friends without the added headache of dealing with a surplus of correspondence from strangers passing along chain e-letters or inquiring about their bacon-of-the-month order status. But your level of obligation depends on both the nature of the note and where it was sent.
"If the message is 'I am in a life threatening situation….' it's one thing," said [founder of Cc:Betty's Michael] Cerda. "If it's 'what's the best basketball to buy' it's another."
Basically, Wortham suggests that it's okay to ignore email mis-fires as long as you're not ignoring something serious. Seems fair enough, right? I'm not sure I know one person who hasn't received the occasional email from that friend, coworker, or family member who has an email address off by one initial. I'd ignored mine until two days ago when my email alter-ego's mother wrote an email asking if he was all right. At that point, a quick and simple, "Hi, I believe you've got the wrong email. I hope everything's all right," should suffice.
Your thoughts? How do you deal with email misfires (whether you did the firing or you just received the misfire)? Share your suggestions in the comments.
Don't let a lack of subtitles detract from your enjoyment of a movie or television show. Visit AnySubs and grab a set of subtitles.
The most obvious reason for using subtitles is understanding a movie or show filmed in a language you don't speak. Another great use is for understanding soft spoken dialogue without having to crank up the volume—I discovered the value of this while trying to watch LOST without the shifts from soft whispering to giant explosions waking up the entire house.
Anysubs catalogs subtitles in multiple languages for popular movies and television shows. You can use the service for free without registration—which is only required for uploading subtitles, not downloading them.
If you'd like to permanently embed subtitles into a movie you can use previously reviewed DivXLand Media Subtitler to so do and for more information about subtitles and applications you can use to work with subtitles, check out how to add subtitles to any movie or television show.
Have a favorite subtitle search engine or tool? Let's hear about it in the comments below.
Two weeks ago Google released the source code of their upcoming Chrome OS operating system, and thanks to some fast and hard-working developers, you don't have to be a coder to try it out.
While Google's official word is that you have to build Chromium OS from source to try it out on your computer, several developers have released installable builds that save you the trouble. Let's take a look at how to take Chromium OS out for a spin without typing make or build.
Setting Expectations: Meet Your New Bicycle
Before you get started, you should know that Chrome OS (or in this early development stage, Chromium OS) is an operating system that essentially consists ONLY of a browser. You can't install applications or twiddle with settings—Chromium OS feels like it's just Google Chrome with no layer between it and your computer. It's a neat idea, but kind of disappointing for software geeks who like lots of settings. It acts just like a regular old browser with not too many innovations, except that it's lightning fast. For more on Chrome OS's backstory, see our first glimpse at Google Chrome OS.
Mac-lover John Gruber predicts that Chrome OS will be the operating system on your secondary computer; he says that Google's betting that instead of two cars, you just need a car and a bicycle. Meet what might someday become your new bicycle.
Testing Method 1: Run Chromium OS as a Virtual Machine
The easiest, surefire way to try out Chromium OS without even rebooting your computer is running it as a virtual machine. If you've got a Mac or an incompatible PC and you just want to see what Chromium looks like without having to restart or worry whether or not your internet connection or keyboard will work, this is the way to go.
What you'll need: First you'll need software that can run virtual machine images; I'd recommend you go with the free, cross-platform VirtualBox. Secondly, you'll need to download the prefab Chromium OS virtual disk image. For the price of a free site registration, you can download a working virtual machine from gdgt.com.
How to boot it: If you've used VirtualBox before, firing up Chromium OS in it isn't much different than any other operating system. When you create the new image, set the OS Type to Linux/Ubuntu as shown.
Then, use the vmdk file you downloaded from gdgt as the virtual boot disk.
For a detailed step-by-step screenshot tour, check out The How-To Geek's guide on how to run Chrome OS in VirtualBox.
The disadvantage of this method is that Chromium OS won't be as fast as the operating system is designed to be, because it's running in a virtual machine—in other words, you won't get to see Chrome OS's amazing boot time or snappy responsiveness. The advantage of this method, however, is that your internet connection, keyboard, and mouse will work whether or not they're on Google's list of approved hardware.
Testing Method 2: Boot Chromium OS from a USB Drive
A virtual machine is just that—virtual—and you want to see the real thing. You can run Chromium OS natively on your computer from a USB stick if you've got the right hardware.
What you'll need: To boot Chromium OS natively, you'll need a netbook or laptop known to work with Chromium OS (note: that list isn't exactly complete, so your mileage may vary if you try gear that's not listed), a 1 gigabyte USB drive, and the bootable USB image. Download the "Diet" Chromium OS for a 1 gigabyte USB drive here. (Thanks to Hexxeh for offering these!)
Note that the USB stick method does NOT work on Macs. (See below.) Also, a Chromium live CD is not available because it needs to write to the disk; therefore, a writable USB stick is the way to go.
How to boot it: The USB build developer Hexxeh describes how to prepare your USB drive for booting on Windows:
Download Image Writer for Windows and extract the program. Launch the program, and select the image (
chromiumos.img) and your USB drive letter from the drop down box. Click "Write". The install image will then be copied to the drive. Once it's done, close the program and you can then boot from the USB drive.
Mac users can prepare the USB drive as well, but remember, Macs cannot boot into Chromium OS from the USB drive. Linux users, here's how you can install the image to the USB drive.
Now that your USB drive is bootable, shut down your computer, insert the drive, and start your computer. As it's booting, hit the boot menu key and set your computer to boot from the USB drive. (The boot menu key and method for setting the boot drive to the USB stick varies from computer to computer; check your user manual or Google your model to see how to do it.)
When your computer starts up for the first time, if you're using Hexxeh's build, the username and password are both facepunch. Normally these login details will be your Google account username and password, but if your machine is not yet connected to the internet, facepunch it is. If all goes well, your keyboard, mouse, and wireless or Ethernet adapter will work with Chromium OS and you'll be in the cloud in seconds. If not, check this hardware compatibility list for more info about what might or might not work with your computer.
For an alternative to Hexxeh's USB build, check out the handy torrent with instructions from MakeUseOf.com. (Note that the default login username and password is different than Hexxeh's build in the MakeUseOf.com build.)
If you've got an ASUS Eee PC and you've already downloaded the virtual image in the first method, you can turn that into a bootable USB stick as well. Here's how to create a USB stick from the virtual image and boot up your Eee from it.
If you're already running Ubuntu Linux (Karmic Koala) on your laptop and you can't get Chromium OS to work with your Wi-Fi card, Linux user Lee Briggs explains how you can patch the USB build with your current drivers.
The main advantage to testing Chromium OS using a bootable drive is you'll get the native experience with the speed and responsiveness of a real computer. The disadvantage is that your current hardware might not work with Chromium OS.
What's your favorite method for test-driving Chromium OS? Was it worth the time? Are you using it regularly? Let us know what you think in the comments.
Gina Trapani, Lifehacker's founding editor, looks forward to Chrome OS's official release. Her weekly feature, Smarterware, appears every Wednesday on Lifehacker. Subscribe to the Smarterware tag feed to get new installments in your newsreader.
It's easy to forget things grocery shopping once you're bumping elbows with the masses. GroceryWiz is an easy to use, fully customizable webapp that keeps your weekly grocery needs in check.
(Click the image above for a closer look.)
GroceryWiz is a quick and easy tool for adding grocery items to a virtual and printable list to make your trips to the grocery store easier and more productive. It keeps track of your weekly purchases and saves your lists from week to week to help identify frequent purchases you may have left off before you hit the print button. You can add notes for each ingredient, in case you need a reminder as to why you need it—or what dish it's destined for. The whole thing prints out in an easy to read list that's divided by category to ensure you don't leave something behind, before leaving a certain section of the store.
Sign up is free, and the site also offers freebie offers and coupons, though those features require a bit more of your time than a few off the cuff edits to stay on top of your daily or weekly shopping list. If this seems a little over the top for your needs, you can always try using a basic template to streamline your own handwritten lists, or try shopping every two weeks to save money and make things a little more routine.
As with cars, TVs, and anything else, Consumer Reports does some pretty extensive testing on U.S. cellular service before ranking it, city by city. Their results are out, and you can peek at some results before buying the issue.
The issue with wireless service rankings is on newsstands now, but Matt Winer's Droidie blog, and the New York Times' Bits, have pulled out some of the results. Actually, they've mostly pulled out the results that vindicates AT&T customers who feel they must have the worst voice service.
From Droidie:
1. In overall ratings Verizon was the best in every category. AT&T was the worst in every category but one (whether or not an issue was resolved, for that only Sprint was worse). The order was: Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint and AT&T.
And Bits:
The unscientific but widely followed survey, which spanned more than 50,000 Consumer Reports readers in 26 cities, found that AT&T's main weak spot is voice connectivity, but the carrier got panned in everything except Web access and texting.
Agree with those (thumbnail) findings? Waiting on your next phone purchase to see which service actually wins out in your area? Share your take on wireless coverage in the comments.
The CyberNet News blog posts an interesting take on creating secure passwords you can actually remember, or at least remember how to retrieve—by posting a favorite web site, or an MP3 file, into an MD5 hash generator.
CyberNet splits up the method into two different takes, both utilizing the MD5 codes normally used to verify a downloaded file's integrity. Entering a favorite, or, more securely, strange and unique web site into an online MD5 hash generator gives you a seriously long string of characters, uniquely linked to that URL. Grab the first eight characters from the string, and you've got a fairly unique password to use. Using this method for every site isn't advisable, though, as anyone who figures out your methodology can grab all your passwords. Combine it with Gina's method of a secure password plus a unique suffix, though, and you've got a system that only mind-readers could really crack.
A second technique uses the same MD5 hash characters, but uses an MP3 file as its unique generator. Assuming very few people know of your secret love for Starship, it's also a fairly safe way to get a secure password, but also have a backup means of retrieving it. Hit the link for details and step-by-step tips on both methods.
Firefox: If you need a simple screen recording tool but don't want to install an extra application just for the task, the CaptureFox extension brings screen recording to Firefox.
Once you install the extension, a small icon is placed in the right hand side of your status bar—for those of you who have banished your status bars for extra screen space, you can hit CTRL+SHIFT+U or open it from the Tools menu instead—clicking on it pulls up the menu you see in the screenshot above.
After you select the settings you want, you can begin capturing. The capture can be limited to the Firefox windows or cover the whole screen and you can select your video quality, frame rate, codec, and filename. Check out the video below to see it in action.
If you're looking for a stand-alone or web-based screencasting tool, check out our recent Hive Five on best screencasting tools. Have a tool for screencasting you couldn't live without? Let's hear about it in the comments.
You can visit the CaptureFox site at the link below for additional information or jump right to the Mozilla Add-on page for CaptureFox here. CaptureFox is free and works wherever Firefox does.
It's not a hugely new release, but Thunderbird has put out a second release candidate of its 3.0 edition. The new release fixes one very notable bug related to CPU usage and IMAP connections shutting down. If you're already running a pre-release copy of Thunderbird 3, you should be able to check for an update from the Help menu and upgrade to the latest edition. [Mozilla Messaging via gHacks]
If you use Zoho for its customer relationship platform, Zoho Mail, or as a secondary document space, but keep some files in Google Docs, the web suite has made it very easy to upload and attach documents from Google's service.
It's not officially announced yet, but a wiki page and Zoho Show presentation show off the new Google Docs uploading powers that many Zoho products have added. We'd say that "nearly every" Zoho product has added Google Docs uploading, but there are so many tools at Zoho's platform that we'd be remiss to even try and cover them all.
Here's how Zoho shows off its Google Docs integration:
Are you a Zoho user who also digs Google Docs, or vice-versa? Tell us how you use Zoho and Google to get things done.
If you wanted to change the font, size, or color of your messages in Gmail, you normally have to do so on a mail-by-mail basis. Not so anymore, if you enable a new default text styling option from the Labs.
After enabling the new feature in the Labs menu from Gmail's settings, head back to the "General" tab and look for the new text box. Set your font, size, color, and other options there, and they'll stick from message to message. Most of us probably don't need 18-point purple Garamond text, but, then again, a few subtle changes might help your own missives stand out in your message view.
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