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Top 10 Web Tools for Election Season [Lifehacker Top 10]
1 day ago
More Threaded Comments Options Now Available [Reader Guide To Lifehacker]
13 days ago
Lifehacker Is Looking for AutoHotkey Coders [Call For Contributors]
17 days ago
Threaded Comments Now Chronological [Reader Guide To Lifehacker]
19 days ago
Threaded Comments Now at Lifehacker [Reader Guide To Lifehacker]
20 days ago
Power Users Guide to Google Chrome: Lifehacker
34 days ago

Source: lifehacker.com --- 4 hours ago
As smartphones get cheaper and more featureful than their stripped-down siblings, more folks are walking around with full-on operating systems in their pocket—but which is the best? Our brother site Gizmodo shows off its promiscuous use of every smartphone on the block in an informative explainer about the current roster of mobile operating systems out there , from Windows Mobile, iPhone 2.0, and Android to Symbian, BlackBerry, and Palm. In the wake of the iPhone 3G and on the eve of Android's launch, we want to know: which flavor of smartphone OS is your favorite? Cast your vote below. Best smartphone operating system you've used? ( polls ) A word about Lifehacker's smartphone coverage: We've gotten some (possibly justified) complaints about how we've hit iPhone 2.0 coverage harder than other operating systems, like Symbian or BlackBerry. As software reviewers (versus gadget reviewers), we write about what we know—and in the case of smartphones, what we have, and right now that's a few iPhones and Windows Mobile devices. But, we're pretty excited about the upcoming Android launch, so expect at least few posts on it in the coming months. Polls like this help us gauge interest levels in non-desktop software, so thanks for indulging us with your vote. Hit up the Giz link below for their full expert rundown of the state of your smartphone OS choices. Giz Explains: Illustrated Guide to Smartphone OSes [Gizmodo] ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 3 days ago
Lifehacker's on the hunt for a couple of dedicated and passionate interns to help us out behind the scenes. Are you a total rockstar? Do you want hands-on experience working backstage at a leading online tech publication? If you want to work with the Lifehacker editorial team to keep the gears turning here every day, you're in the right place. A candidate for a Lifehacker internship: Is available for 12 hours a week for the next 3-5 months Is an established Lifehacker commenter with a solid history of comment contributions to the site Can be available on instant messenger to the Lifehacker editors Is proficient using Google search and an RSS reader, and has basic HTML and image editing skills Is at least 18 years old and located in the United States As a Lifehacker intern, your job responsibilities would include approving incoming comment applications and helping with other comment moderation tasks; hunting down possible stories for posting on-site; closely watching news feeds for breaking stories and new launches; and assisting editors with research projects, like counting Hive Five votes. To apply to be a Lifehacker intern, send an email to jobs at Lifehacker.com containing the following information in the body of the email (no attachments!): A link to your commenter profile here on site. (Hint: we'll only look at applicants with a solid comment history; if you've got a filled-out profile including a friends list, web site URL, ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 4 days ago
Firefox with Greasemonkey only: Unlike most other email clients, when you reply to a message in Gmail, the subject line doesn't automatically become editable—you have to click the "Edit Subject" link in order to change it. If you edit your email subject in reply to messages frequently, but hate to have to reach for the mouse to start in Gmail, there's now a Greasemonkey user script for you. Download the Show Editable Subject user script for Gmail and give it a spin. If it seems to work for you (like my initial tests work here), then we'll include it as a new feature in Better Gmail 2 's next release. The Show Editable Subject user script is a free (exclusive!) download right here, and works with Firefox and the Greasemonkey extension. Thanks for the suggestion, Andy! Show Editable Subject User Script v. 0.1 ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 3 days ago
Ever since we started the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell group on Flickr, readers have been contributing and explaining their computer desktop settings in droves. A few times a week we pick out one... ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 2 days ago
It's hard these days to imagine how elections happened before the web grew to popularity. With all the instant-access news, video, data, and social networking available in a few seconds' time, election season is a prime time to dig in and find out where the candidates are getting and spending money, what's being by and about them and which of it is true, and how to make sure you get your vote in on Nov. 4. Read on for a roundup of ten tools to get politically savvy this this election season and beyond. Photo by ldcross . 10. Compare the candidates. Unless you're working on a campaign, chances are you don't know where each candidate stands on every issue. McCain's take on net neutrality? Barack's stance on school vouchers? SelectSmart's 2008 Presidential Candidate Selector gives you the skinny on the major-topic stances of every candidate, including most of the third-party contenders. Those are the five-minute takes; for a multitude of quotes straight from the candidates' mouths on the issues, try OnTheIssues.org . 9. Go poll-crazy at FiveThirtyEight.com . Nate Silver is a total data geek, but he knows how to apply it to interesting topics. He proved that with Baseball Prospectus , which projects performance by players and teams, and he's striking out to do the same for election results. Silver's FiveThirtyEight grabs all the polls it can find, weighs them based on methodologies and past accuracy, projects data for regions where ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 2 days ago
Reading Lifehacker can inspire you to reboot your computer habits, your workflow, your workspace, and even your home life. Believe me, I should know. About a year ago, I was a messy-desked, easily-distracted reporter who relished his lunch-break reading of Lifehacker's RSS feed. I asked to write a few posts, lucked into a real gig, and can now tell the story of becoming a task-minded guru who gets things done with the right software. That's not a true story, though. Inspired by an appearance by PostSecret founder Frank Warren here in Buffalo last night, I've decided to skip the authoritative "we" voice this afternoon and share my semi-secret Lifehacker failings and confessions. Read on to see what I'm not exactly getting done the right way, and offer up your own productivity penance. Photo by allaboutgeorge . I've (mostly) forsaken Firefox for Google Chrome It's easy to confess that every member of the Lifehacker team uses , and geeks out about, the open-source, infinitely extensible browser Firefox . It's harder to admit that, despite all the amazing ways it can help a blogger copy links, download pictures and files, customize webapps, and do so much more, I'm primarily using the no-add-ons-available Google Chrome to surf and write. I'm hooked because it's snappy fast, it lets individual pages crash without bringing down the house (no small thing when you're testing new web services in the wee hours), it auto-converts Google re ...
Source: blog.shoeboxed.com --- 2 days ago
I wanted to jump in quickly again here to mention that Lifehacker wrote about us this morning. Read more at http://Lifehacker.com/5061076/shoeboxed-now-auto+tags-your-submitted-receipts We were on Lifehacker about a year ago, and hopefully more people will come now and see our Receipt Mail-In program, which we did not offer when the previous post was written. Receipt Mail-In, after [...] ...
Source: keithdevens.com --- 4 days ago
Featured Windows Download: WakeUpOnStandBy Runs Tasks from Suspend and Hibernate Modes . Maybe I can use this as an alarm clock when my computer is sleeping too ...
Source: www.lifehacker.com.au --- 4 days ago
I'm going to be on a plane for a fair chunk of the day, so comments might take longer to get approved than normal. Normal service will resume late Thursday! ...
Source: keithdevens.com --- 7 days ago
Lifehacker: Five Best Media Converters . ...
Source: www.topix.com --- 5 days ago
Accidental music mogul Dave Brown helped launch the careers of Death Cab for Cutie, Bright Eyes and The Album Leaf, among others. ...
Source: xfruits.com --- 2 days ago
Reading Lifehacker can inspire you to reboot your computer habits, your workflow, your workspace, and even your home life. Believe me, I should know. About a year ago, I was a messy-desked, easily-distracted reporter who relished his lunch-break reading of Lifehacker's RSS feed. I asked to write a few posts, lucked into a real gig, and can now tell the story of becoming a task-minded guru who gets things done with the right software. That's not a true story, though. Inspired by an appearance by PostSecret founder Frank Warren here in Buffalo last night, I've decided to skip the authoritative "we" voice this afternoon and share my semi-secret Lifehacker failings and confessions. Read on to see what I'm not exactly getting done the right way, and offer up your own productivity penance. Photo by allaboutgeorge . I've (mostly) forsaken Firefox for Google Chrome It's easy to confess that every member of the Lifehacker team uses , and geeks out about, the open-source, infinitely extensible browser Firefox . It's harder to admit that, despite all the amazing ways it can help a blogger copy links, download pictures and files, customize webapps, and do so much more, I'm primarily using the no-add-ons-available Google Chrome to surf and write. I'm hooked because it's snappy fast, it lets individual pages crash without bringing down the house (no small thing when you're testing new web services in the wee hours), it auto-converts Google results ...
Source: efficient.feedables.com --- 7 days ago
In a perfect world, it wouldn't matter what a genius JavaScript programmer or top-flight professional looked like. In this world, though, coming across as an unkempt schlub won't do anything good for your career, your social life, or your luck with that cute guy or gal from marketing. Luckily, it doesn't take a lifetime of primping practice to get good at looking decent. A few clever grooming hacks can give you a new and improved look, or help you prep when you've got almost no time before a meeting. Read on for our list of 10 low-fuss ways to upgrade your appearance. Photo by Jaako . 10. Get rid of pet hair and sweater fuzz. It should be your choice to talk about your adorable pet Mittens, rather than have it be obvious you two are close. If you lack a lint roller (or an over-priced refill for one), you can use the palm of your hand , or a document mailing package laying around the office. For non-mammalian trappings on your most stylish sweater, try using a disposable razor . 9. Track the time between haircuts with automatic reminders. Nobody's going to up and tell you that your hair's in need of a trim, and it's hard to make it a priority when you've got a packed schedule. If you're Googler Matt Cutts, you still manage to keep up appearances by using a Google Calendar hack to track your between-cut time . Geeky? Yes. Easier to listen to than your boyfriend/girlfriend's gentle nagging? For sure. 8. Fix your clothing choices with han ...
Source: hmorrell.jaiku.com --- 3 days ago
hmorrell: @debgpi I remember reading that they can but I can't remember if it was on Lifehacker or not Fetched from Twitter / Harvey Morrell 3 hours, 20 minutes ago. ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 14 hours ago
Freelance animator Janne needed a cheap way to do a whole lot of CPU-intensive 3D rendering, so he built a Linux cluster into an Ikea filing cabinet to get the job done. The Helmer was a whole lot cheaper than what CPU cases would cost for the servers he built, and it saved a lot of space, too. Check out the Helmer Linux cluster site to get the details of how Janne mounted the motherboards and fans inside the cabinet to create a home-friendly, energy-efficient, six-server cluster. Building home Linux render cluster [via Lifehacker.AU ] ...
Source: www.crunchgear.com --- 18 hours ago
Linux games. Curious? Why not download this live DVD to see what the hubbub’s all about? You’ll get 15 of the most popular Linux games – sports, real-time strategy, action, adventure – all with the convenience of a self-loading bootable DVD. Just download, burn, and boot. The DVD’s been made available by Linux-Gamers.net. [via Lifehacker] ...
Source: www.adaptivepath.com --- 13 hours ago
This is an interesting take and explanation on America’s current financial crisis. Read about when to use which user experience research method on USEIT Fontifier lets you use your own handwriting for the text you write on your computer. Here is an accompanying tutorial by Lifehacker This animated calculator was constructed using more than 1600 parts in [...] ...
Source: www.lifehacker.com.au --- 10 hours ago
Mobile broadband services -- using 3G spectrum to deliver the Internet to your PC or notebook -- are getting more popular, with almost a million Australians already using them . Whether you want to use them at home, in a hotel room or even in a train , there's a wide range of plans to choose from, and recent price changes from Optus , Telstra , 3 and Vodafone have further muddied the waters. Read on for Lifehacker's guide to the best current deals in the mobile broadband space. ...
Source: lifehacker.com --- 12 hours ago
Freelance animator Janne needed a cheap way to do a whole lot of CPU-intensive 3D rendering, so he built a Linux cluster into an Ikea filing cabinet to get the job done. The Helmer was a whole lot cheaper than what CPU cases would cost for the servers he built, and it saved a lot of space, too. Check out the Helmer Linux cluster site to get the details of how Janne mounted the motherboards and fans inside the cabinet to create a home-friendly, energy-efficient, six-server cluster. Building home Linux render cluster [via Lifehacker.AU ] ...
Source: www.thebestcasescenario.com --- 4 hours ago
Saw this at Lifehacker.com. Thought it was cool. http://helmer.sfe.se/ 6 PC Linux cluster server for around 2000 Euro. Each is a Quad Core with 8 Gb of DDR2-800. Not bad at all for rendering. ...

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