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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 favourite web site, or an MP3 file, into an MD5 hash generator.
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.
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 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.