The Digital Inspiration blog points out that combining Gmail’s filters, easy email (or mailto:) links, and the mass familiarity with email makes it easy to conduct your own polls amongst contact groups. Simply set up question responses with answers that match temporary + addresses, and you’ll get quick counts and individual data on your questions. Hit the link below for a complete walk-through. Yes, No, Maybe? Conduct Opinion Polls Over Email using Gmail [Digital Inspiration]
iPhone/iPod touch only: Free application 1Password makes logging into secure sites much easier on the iPhone’s mobile Safari browser by creating a double-protected mini-database of your passwords. The app won’t auto-fill login forms in Safari, but provides its own mini-browser that plugs in your credentials into any site’s login form. Great for checking your bank accounts or secure work data, but the big drawback is lack of a keyboard inside the mini-browser—so no further typing once you’re in. Of course, you can just use 1Password as a memory-booster for your user/password combos, for which it works just fine. Users of 1Password’s Mac version can sync their passwords between versions with the $US35 upgrade. 1Password is a free download for iPhones and iPod touch devices only. 1Password [iTunes App Store]
Research shows that classic career advice—”find a way to get paid to do what you love”—may be way off the mark. The Washington Post’s Shankar Vedantam reports that paychecks and pink slips aren’t good long-term motivators: Beliefs about the utility of rewards and punishments in motivating human behaviour are deeply ingrained, and most people don’t know that more than 100 research studies have shown that motivating people in this manner can have the unintentional effect of undermining their internal drives.
Once you replace someone’s internal motivation to do something with an external reward or punishment, their inner drive reduces, these studies show. I’ve turned a hobby into a job and vice versa, and my internal truth-o-meter hit a high note reading this.
Hasbro’s decision to sue the developers of popular Facebook Scrabble clone Scrabulous has resulted in US users being blocked from playing the game. That’s potentially bad news for players everywhere: if you’re in the middle of a game with a Stateside friend, you’re effectively in lexical limbo. Fortunately, there’s a workaround. Quite appropriately, a Facebook group has been set up which shows how to evade the block, by using Firefox and the FoxyProxy extension to route all Scrabulous games through a proxy server. Follow the link for full instructions. [Easy to follow instructions for playing Scrabulous in the US or Canada]
3′s petition to be an official iPhone reseller seems to have fallen on deaf ears at Apple so far (nothing new there, frankly). Its latest move in the iPhone market is arguably more appealing, however: plans for customers who’ve bought a 3G iPhone from another carrier (Optus remains the best deal in that regard) and want better rates.If you do have a functioning iPhone and don’t mind the upfront costs, the starter kit plans are the best value we’ve seen in data terms, outstripping Optus’ improved Timeless plans. On a $49 cap, you get 1GB of data a month; on a $69 cap, that goes up to 2GB. There are some caveats: you need to sign up for 24 months, the usual warnings about avoiding 3 outside metropolitan areas apply, and we haven’t yet managed to confirm the call rates (though we suspect With Telstra also lowering its data prices today, the mobile data scene for iPhone users is looking rather more competitive than it did at launch. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: early adoption has its perils. (The 3 plans go on sale on August 4.)
Google is starting to more actively promote a feature it’s had for quite a while: customising its search results based on a best guess at where you’re located and your recent search history. A search customisation message will appear at the top right of the results page, pointing out the assumptions Google has made about what you’re looking for. As a posting on the company blog notes: This new feature doesn’t change anything at all about how you search on Google and the results you get; it just gives you more of a behind-the-scenes look at how we customise your search experience.
The feature hasn’t appeared universally yet, and it may be a while before we see it in Australia, given that visitors from Australian IP addresses are already redirected to the google.com.au domain. Do you prefer your search results customised, or do you want to control the process yourself? Share your thoughts in the comments. [The Official Google Blog]
Banks offering security software is not exactly a new development, but Westpac’s arrangement has an interesting twist: customers can download a free copy of PC Tools’ anti-malware, firewall and privacy protection packages. There doesn’t seem to be any validation process to confirm if you’re a Westpac customer or not, so in effect anyone can get a free copy of these programs. If you’re looking for other free security software options, check out our five top antivirus packages.[Westpac via OzBargain]
After making a few small tweaks to its interface yesterday, Google Maps also updated the options for printed directions. The new version lets you toggle between text only, map view, or street view for each step of your directions, giving you more details when you need them and fewer when you don’t. Granted, using Google Maps mobile on your mobile phone can save a lot of paper, but printing maps is still very common for people without data plans. Either way, the added control—like having the option to embed a street view of your destination—is a welcome update to what used to be a frustrating feature. Google Maps [via Google Operating System]