Friday, January 30, 2009
Communicate
POP Peeper Monitors Multiple Email Accounts
11:30PM Jason Fitzpatrick | Windows only: POP Peeper is a system-tray application that keeps you updated on new emails in your POP3 and IMAP-based email accounts. For multiple inboxes, it could save a lot of hassle. POP Peeper not only notifies you of the new mail, but allows you to read the messages in HTML, plain text and rich text formats. And the alerts come in many flavors, including a skinnable desktop alert window, sounds, flashing keyboard lights, or an active tray icon. POP Peeper supports plug-ins including screensaver-based notification, voice notification that reads you email headers, and the ability to function as a basic RSS feed reader. While it isn’t the most practical tool for reading all your feeds, it could be handy for rare but important alerts, like new software releases. POP Peeper supports unlimited accounts, and can be installed as a portable application. It’s freeware, Windows only. POP Peeper [via What's On My PC] More »
Work
Google’s GDrive Will Allow Access To Files ‘Anywhere, Anytime’
11:00PM Kevin Purdy | The Google Operating System blog points to one blogger’s discovery of text inside the Google Pack software suite that basically lays out what GDrive will do: GDrive provides reliable storage for all of your files, including photos, music and documents. GDrive allows you to access your files from anywhere, anytime, and from any device – be it from your desktop, web browser or cellular phone. So GDrive is shaping up to be an any-file backup system that will roll out with a desktop client, web access. But with all the feature-rich competition GDrive’s facing, one would think tie-ins with other Google Apps, and raw data space, would be what Google truly wants to crow about. Are you intrigued by GDrive so far, or wondering what all the noise is about? First Official Description of GDrive [Google Operating System] More »
Work
Google Toolbar Adds Chrome’s New Tab Page To Firefox
9:30PM Kevin Purdy | Philipp Lenssen at the Google Blogoscoped blog points out that a small revision to Google Toolbar 5 for Firefox installs one of Chrome’s most unique features in Firefox: its unique “New Tab” page. The page shows a 3×3 grid of your most-visited pages and lists your most recent bookmarks. I couldn’t get the page to offer search boxes for the most recent toolbar or Firefox search bar searches I’d performed, but it might take some time to show up. As mentioned in our guide to enabling Chrome’s best features in Firefox, the Speed Dial extension gives you just the popular pages grid, but also lets you customise which pages show up there and access them with keyboard number shortcuts. How to Get Chrome’s “New Tab” Page in Firefox [Google Blogoscoped] More »
Communicate
Who Did Win That BRAVIA Z Series LCD TV?
5:08PM Kym Weathersten | Without further ado, congrats to Lyn, Paul, Matt, Dan, Georgina and Chris, whose extraordinary abilities to fill out a survey have landed them either a BRAVIA LCD TV (onya Chris) or $100 voucher to their choice of retailer. Of course, we all know the real reason you so generously gave your time to complete our site surveys had absolutely nothing to do with the $4k prize pool and everything to do with helping us grow our precious little blog. So for that, we thank you. More »
Organise
4:30PM Angus Kidman | For a large portion of the Australian population, plunging into an ice-cold pool is obviously the preferred option. But when you venture back inside and pray the air conditioning is still working, you can also try out these life-enhancing tech tips from the last week on Lifehacker:
See if offline Gmail has showed up in your account yet (no luck for me so far)
Find the perfect PC wallpaper with a sneaky Google trick
Check if you’re following Australia’s top Twitter users
Make sure your in-ear headphones are working properly
Find out if buying a movie ticket via your phone actually saves any time
More »
Five Things To Do This Weekend
4:30PM Angus Kidman | For a large portion of the Australian population, plunging into an ice-cold pool is obviously the preferred option. But when you venture back inside and pray the air conditioning is still working, you can also try out these life-enhancing tech tips from the last week on Lifehacker:
See if offline Gmail has showed up in your account yet (no luck for me so far)
Find the perfect PC wallpaper with a sneaky Google trick
Check if you’re following Australia’s top Twitter users
Make sure your in-ear headphones are working properly
Find out if buying a movie ticket via your phone actually saves any time
More »
Money
3:00PM Angus Kidman | Currently, if you look at the bidding history on an eBay Australia auction, the individual bidders will be listed as “Bidder 1″, “Bidder 2″ and so on. As of February 3, that will change: eBay will now use a random selection of two characters from each bidder’s name, an approach already used on other country-specific eBay sites. (Sellers, of course, will be able to access actual bidder details). While this will probably help “give members a sense of who is bidding, while still protecting the bidders’ identities”, as eBay argues, it won’t make it much easier to tell if you keep losing to the same rival collector.
More »
eBay Changes Approach To Displaying Bidder IDs
3:00PM Angus Kidman | Currently, if you look at the bidding history on an eBay Australia auction, the individual bidders will be listed as “Bidder 1″, “Bidder 2″ and so on. As of February 3, that will change: eBay will now use a random selection of two characters from each bidder’s name, an approach already used on other country-specific eBay sites. (Sellers, of course, will be able to access actual bidder details). While this will probably help “give members a sense of who is bidding, while still protecting the bidders’ identities”, as eBay argues, it won’t make it much easier to tell if you keep losing to the same rival collector.
More »
Fix
1:30PM Angus Kidman | As temperatures soar around the country, the last thing you need is a fat cat sleeping on your feet. IKEA Hacker details how Paola solved that problem on the cheap, by using the $39 Duktig doll bed and some quickly stitched-up covers to give her 9kg (!) cat a place to sleep. Convincing said cat to actually stay on the bed might be a whole other issue, but it’s an appealing concept nonetheless.
Bedtime for Titina [IKEA Hacker]
More »
DIY IKEA Cat Bed For Fat Felines
1:30PM Angus Kidman | As temperatures soar around the country, the last thing you need is a fat cat sleeping on your feet. IKEA Hacker details how Paola solved that problem on the cheap, by using the $39 Duktig doll bed and some quickly stitched-up covers to give her 9kg (!) cat a place to sleep. Convincing said cat to actually stay on the bed might be a whole other issue, but it’s an appealing concept nonetheless.
Bedtime for Titina [IKEA Hacker]
More »
Communicate
Google Chrome Accesses Hotmail By Pretending It’s Safari
12:20PM Adam Pash | According to weblog Google Blogoscoped, Google Chrome is spoofing its user agent at Hotmail, Microsoft’s popular but much-maligned webmail application. Why? The issue was that Hotmail barred the competitor’s browser from entering by checking the user agent. Some sites do so, often without merit and a lot of backfiring, because they think certain browsers can’t cope with their HTML/JavaScript/stylesheets. Not the case with Chrome here, apparently, which now pretends it’s a Safari browser when encountering *.mail.live.com. If we weren’t the types who give folks the benefit of the doubt, we might suggest that Microsoft’s playing a touch dirty to fend off Google’s competing browser. Then again, as one Microsoft employee says, Hotmail services millions of users—and Chrome is used by such a small percentage of those users—that the bug will be addressed. It’s just not a high priority. Regardless, the Google, Microsoft, and Apple power struggle via Chrome, Hotmail, and Safari is a saucy one. More »
Fix
QuickPWN 2.2.1 Jailbreaks Your Updated iPhone, iPod Touch
12:10PM Adam Pash | iPhone jailbreaking tool QuickPWN has been updated to jailbreak your iPhone/iPod touch running version 2.2.1, the latest software update from Apple. We haven’t had a chance to test the Windows-only jailbreaker yet, so if you give it a try, let’s hear how it worked for you in the comments. Thanks Dr. L33T! More »
Organise
12:00PM Angus Kidman | Google has announced the winners of the My Maps Australia competition it launched back in October. There’s some impressive map annotations among the winning entries, from the practical (RTA speed cameras in Sydney) to the frivolous (locations used on The Biggest Loser). Check out the Google blog post for the full list.
My Maps Australia Awards 2008 – And the winner is… [Official Google Australia Blog]
More »
Google My Maps Winners Cover Breadth Of Australia
12:00PM Angus Kidman | Google has announced the winners of the My Maps Australia competition it launched back in October. There’s some impressive map annotations among the winning entries, from the practical (RTA speed cameras in Sydney) to the frivolous (locations used on The Biggest Loser). Check out the Google blog post for the full list.
My Maps Australia Awards 2008 – And the winner is… [Official Google Australia Blog]
More »