We’re all for sleeping in and/or heading outdoors, but if you get a spare minute this weekend, here’s some tech idea to follow up from the past week:
Check out the airport power wiki and add any useful information you have Check to see if your old Hotmail account has been upgraded to incorporate new features Update your copy of Google Chrome so the bookmarks actually work properly (Firefox should manage its own update without much help) Protect yourself from RickRolling Check your phone bill for unexpected premium SMS chargesMicrosoft’s Outlook Blog runs down how to set up and access templates in Outlook. Templates are one of those often-neglected options in email programs, but they can be really handy; much email communication is repetitive, and having information set and ready to send makes the task easier. With that said, the options for using templates are pretty deeply buried. Given that email editing is one of the few parts of Outlook 2007 that actually uses the Ribbon, it’s somewhat amazing that there’s no way of accessing templates from there. For a similar (and automated) approach online, check out how to send canned responses in Gmail.
[Microsoft Office Outlook Team Blog]It’s hardly surprising: as world economies continue to teeter, Australian enthusiasm for buying online is declining. A poll of 500 adults commissioned by customer service software company RightNow found that 35% have already decreased their spending both online and in physical stores, and a similar percentage expect to do so in the next 12 months. Our most popular Christmas saving strategy? Not trimming the list of recipients (favoured by 27%), but spending a little less on each person (36%). To save hassles, I’m planning to do most of my Christmas shopping online — if that also proves to be a money-saving option, all the better. How have your online spending habits changed?
Notebooks with cases that aren’t some variation on grey/black have become more prevalent in recent years, but most still sport fundamentally the same materials on the outside. Asus’ Bamboo series is a definite exception, using bamboo for a design approach that also claims a greater level of environmental friendliness than your typical hard-case machine.
The laptops are covered in “artisan-grade Moso bamboo panelling”, a light, and durable, non-flammable and petrochemical-free material. Apparently, the design “is a cutting edge creation that incorporates innate, ornate aesthetics, each Bamboo Series notebook is organically unique and radiates a divine spirituality” — those are Asus’ words, not mine, obviously.
The notebook range actually looks better than the hyperbole makes it sound. Bear in mind that the machines are only partially degradable, with much debate about whether bamboo really is greener than plastic, and you’ll still want a PC-friendly recycling centre at the end of its life. But anything that improves the green quotient for what’s still a fairly toxic industry is a good step. The laptops — which come in 11.1in and 12.1in models, sporting Core 2 Duo processors and Windows Vista — should hit stores in December, with pricing starting at $3,499.
One of the lessons I’ve learned at Lifehacker is that things which are seemingly obvious still come as news to many people. A case in point: Victorian Matthew Ward, who lost his job after demonstrating unsafe ways to drive a forklift and then posting the results on YouTube, as the Herald Sun reports. There’s a lot of online chatter about how expectations of privacy have changed in a largely online world, but the rule “don’t put evidence of workplace stupidity online” remains much the same — and, it seems, is still sometimes ignored.
Worker down the YouTube [Herald Sun/AustralianIT]You can tell that summer’s rapidly approaching when accessories vendors start pushing “chill mats” — laptop stands with built-in USB-powered fans designed to help air circulate and stop your machine overheating (the pictured one is a new Mac-specific model from Targus). While overheating can definitely be an issue, I’ve always found chill mats more hassle than they’re worth. For one thing, they put the keyboard at the wrong angle for my liking; for another, they’re too bulky to throw in my laptop carry bag. So my preferred methodology has been just keeping the home office as cool as feasible, but it’s entirely possible that I’m missing out. If you’re a chill mat fan — or have another strategy for ensuring your laptop doesn’t go into meltdown — share your experiences in the comments.
All platforms with Firefox: Just uploaded a freshly-baked new version of the Better Gmail 2 Firefox extension, which includes several fixes and new user scripts. First, if you Redesigned skin lovers were bogged down by slowness, that’s been fixed. If the Gmail Labs’ Agenda gadget just isn’t enough for your calendar-in-Gmail needs, now you’ll find Michael Balazs’ excellent collapsible Calendar and Reader user script in the extension, as well as the Show Editable Subject script I whipped up last month. Hit the changelog at the extension homepage for a full rundown of what got fixed and updated, and download the new version there. (Note: I’ve submitted the new version to Mozilla Add-ons and await approval now.) Also: Better Gmail 2 turned one year old earlier this month! Thanks for all your support and help making the extension one of Mozilla’s official Recommended Add-ons with over half a million daily users from Mozilla Add-ons alone, but special thanks to the user script developers whose hard work amazes me more with every version.
Better Gmail 2 Firefox Extension for New GmailNow that you know how to find higher quality videos on YouTube (and save them), you can also embed the video elsewhere in higher quality. Add &ap=%2526fmt%3D18 to the “value” of the object’s movie parameter and the embed “src” paramater. You may have to adjust the final number 18 up or down to find the best value — originally format 6 was the way to go, though apparently 22 is now the best possible format. Why watch gameplay videos from the new World of Warcraft expansion any other way? High quality YouTube video hack
Search engine OneRiot uses data from the PulseChecker Firefox browser extension to gauge how hot a particular result is at the moment. I tried it yesterday, and a search for “puppy webcam” highlighted the link to everyone’s favourite Ustream.tv feed of Shiba Inu puppies. At the time, it was “emerging.” Now? “Raging.” On Google, however, it’s still only the second result (and the top results has no live puppy cams currently). The landing page offers a quick glance at what’s leading in the latest OneRiot rankings. A Google replacement? No. But if you’re interested in keeping tabs on the web search zeitgeist, it’s an interesting cross-reference for Google Trends.
OneRiot [via ReadWriteWeb]It might only run two flights a day out of Australia, but British Airway’s launch of a mobile phone check-in option is still a welcome harbinger for more airlines eventually making it possible to check-in ahead of time without a PC and a printer. Given that BA’s destinations are all overseas, this won’t save you queuing at the airport (unless you’re already in the UK and taking a British domestic flight), but it should guarantee you a better seat for a long trip. As I don’t have any pending BA bookings, I wasn’t able to check how well the feature works, or if you can use it for the domestic flights which BA codeshares with Qantas, though my guess would be not. If you’ve tried it out, share your experience in the comments. BA Mobile