Saturday, May 17, 2008 - Page 2
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Mint Tracks Your Investment Portfolio

Mint, the web-based financial management application that took us by storm a few months back, is adding investment tracking to their already impressive feature set. Mint’s investments, currently in beta, tracks everything from the performance of your Roth IRA to the value of your 401k, all from its attractive, easy-to-understand interface. As with Mint in general, you’ll need to be comfortable trusting your data in their hands (if you’re curious, you can read more about their security measures here). Mint investments is currently in private beta, but if you follow the link, they’ve set up a page for Lifehacker readers to sign up. You should get access to Mint’s investments sometime next week, and we’ve been assured that there’s no limits on signups. In the meantime, hit the jump for a closer look at Mint’s investments interface.


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Email Address Extract Grabs Addresses from Any File

Windows only: Need to pull an email address from a file you can’t open, or a message folder from an ancient mail client? Point Email Address Extract, a free Windows utility, at the folder or specific files, and let it do its text-parsing thing. The old-school-looking app comes with some basic file filters enabled (like HTML pages and .dat files), but you can direct it to pull any type of file you’d like from any folder. The app dumps any found addresses into an ordered text file, which makes exporting them elsewhere a bit easier. It’s the kind of tool you’re glad to find, but hope you don’t have to use too often. Email Address Extract is a free download for Windows systems only. Email Address Extract [A1 Soft via gHacks]


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MobileTraffic Brings Live Traffic Shots to Your Phone

Visiting New York and wondering whether a crosstown cab is any faster than the subway? Mobile|Traffic, a free web service for mobile phones (and standard browsers as well) offers updates from more than 4,600 traffic cameras in seven countries, including the U.S., U.K., and Australia. Simply navigate from country to state/province to city, and you’ll get a recent shot of the intersection. Using Mobile|Traffic from a phone requires a data plan, as you’d imagine, and, as MakeUseOf points out, it’s in serious need of map and search functions. But it’s simple, free, and pretty useful if you don’t always trust vague traffic reports of “moving steadily” and the like. Mobile|Traffic [via MakeUseOf.com]


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Get Twitter Notifications From a Motion-Detecting Webcam

Linux only: One intrepid Ubuntu user has written up a nifty tutorial on using a webcam tool available in the standard repositories, motion, to turn a standard webcam into a motion-detecting security system. Once the camera sees something large enough move as to be suspicious, a custom script written by the blogger sends a notification to you through your Twitter account. It might not be the most reliable theft or home invasion prevention tool, but it could offer insight into when your roommates are invading your space or whether someone’s using your laptop when they shouldn’t be. The tutorial requires some command line work, but it’s spelled out and explained pretty thoroughly. Photo by MShades. Keep Tab On Home Security With A Webcam And Twitter [My Technophilic Musings]


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Eliminate XP’s Unread Mail Count

If you’re a veteran Windows XP user, you’re familiar with the “helpful” count of your unread email messages you’ll find at the login screen—which is usually wrong or overstated (my screenshot came from a fresh install of Thunderbird). The Online Tech Tips blog shows how to eliminate this stress-inducing reminder through a registry hack. Readers comfortable tweaking in regedit can find the values and instructions at the link below; those who don’t mind installing a free (and very handy) power-user program can accomplish the same thing using TweakUI (here’s where to look once you’ve busted out this power tool). How to get rid of Unread Mail Count in Windows XP [Online Tech Tips]


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The Beta Beatdown

A steady stream of preview releases have kept our typing fingers especially busy covering the beta beat the last several weeks. From Mac virtualization software to Microsoft Office add-ons to iTunes sharing apps, there are lots of new features for eager testers to preview and try out. Beyond the most obvious best public preview out there right now—Firefox 3—which beta has your heart? Cast your vote, after the jump. Photo by arriba.


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Kwiry Offers Picture-Based Reminders for Your Phone

Kwiry, the text-yourself-a-reminder service, has added a potentially neat feature for shoppers, urban adventurers, and anyone who wants a visual element to their memory-activators. Snap a picture on your smart phone or standard set, email or text it to Kwiry with some explaining text (i.e. “Must check out this restaurant soon”), and it’ll come up with your reminder when you head to Kwiry’s renovated mobile site to dig through reminders. There’s a lot of uses here if you buy into Kwiry’s system of forget-me-nots, and it’s a free place to store phone pics for any reason. Send Kwiry a photo … [ via WebWare]