Thursday, March 5, 2009 - Page 2
Organise

Import And Export Your Gmail Filters

Another day, another Gmail Labs feature. You can now export and import your Gmail filters to and from a file, so you don’t have to remember a complicated setup to get some good filtering. Getting it set up is simple. Navigate to Gmail Labs in your account, enable the Filter import/export feature, and save your changes. Now, when you navigate to the Settings -> Filters page, you’ve got a new Export button and a new Import link. Sharing a handful of awesome filters with a friend has never been easier.

New in Labs: Filter import/export [Official Gmail Blog]

Work

Sync Your iPhone In Linux—Version 2.0

Apple’s 2.0 firmware update generally killed wireless syncing with Linux. Ubuntu users, hackers that they are, have posted a detailed walkthrough detailing a work-around or two that re-connect the two. Thanks Salvador!


Work

Avoid Distraction, Get More Done With A Tangents Log

Distractions are looming around every corner of the internet. Rather than succumb to the tempting quick Google search or blog refresh, writer Dan Koeppel suggests sticking the diversion in a Tangents Log and getting on with work.

I’m a writer who has constantly struggled with procrastination and distraction. I tend to go off on tangents, and lose many hours on those journeys. My routine is to keep a hand-written “Tangents Log.” Whenever I feel the urge to diverge from my current work, I write the tangent down instead of following it immediately. At the end of the day, or the week, I review the list. Some of the items are really silly, and I’m glad I never spent the time. But the big bonus is that a lot of those tangents turn out to be very useful—they’re ideas I can work into my current project, or even better, future ideas that I can use (and sell!) later. The result? My tangents have been triaged—the useless ones are gone, the productive ones are identified, and my daily productivity is saved.

It’s a simple idea, but it’s also a perfect solution to handling the ubiquitous distractions in the modern workplace. Like the idea? Maybe you’d also like Dan’s completely unrelated book: Banana: The Fate of the Fruit that Changed the World. Thanks Dan!


Organise

RSSFeed.me Puts Your RSS Feeds On A High Contrast Display

RSSFeed.me is a real-time, web-based monitor for the RSS feeds you really want to keep up on. Feed it your choices, and you get big, bold headlines scrolled and faded across a black backdrop. RSSFeed.me was created as a way to display what was currently going on in an RSS feed in a novel and highly visible way. You can import your roster of feeds via an OMPL file or add individual feeds one URL at a time. Once the feeds are added to RSSFeed.me, every new headline on the feed pushes onto on the top of the RSSFeed.me interface, while old headlines are slowly pushed off screen as new ones arrive. You can keep it all black and white, or customise the colour of your feeds and other display options. For a peek at how RSSFeed.me works, check out the video below:


Organise

Gmail Brings Back Search The Web Button

We heard a small but loud outcry from disappointed readers when Gmail tweaked its buttons and removed the Search the Web button. If you were one of the disappointed users, we’ve got good news! The Search the Web button is back. [via Google Operating System]


Fix

Windows 7 Lets You Finally Uninstall Internet Explorer (Kinda)

The AeroXperience weblog has uncovered a shocking change in the latest release candidate of Windows 7—Internet Explorer can be removed through the Windows Features dialog. Finally! Uninstalling Internet Explorer requires a couple of reboots and a few UAC prompt confirmations, but when you’re done IE will have been removed as an option in the Set Program Defaults window, and unlike removing IE using previously mentioned vLite, Windows 7 won’t give you errors about your missing IE. Since Internet Explorer’s rendering engine is also used throughout Windows and with third-party applications as an embeddable component, it won’t completely uninstall—only the executable is actually removed. Still, being able to finally banish IE proper from your system is a pretty good start for folks who really don’t like IE. Hit the link for the full screenshot walkthrough of the uninstallation process.

Internet Explorer 8 can be removed from Windows 7 [via Download Squad]

Organise

The Hipster PDA Keychain

Lifehacker reader kadavy drew inspiration from Merlin Mann’s Hipster PDA to create an on-the-go, pocket-friendly Hipster PDA Keychain. There’s not much you need to know about this one beyond the idea—as you can see, the execution is dead simple. Just attach a binder clip to your keychain, cut up some notecards, and you’re good to go. This picture was uploaded to Flickr years ago, but we had never seen or featured it. In fact, we just stumbled onto it by chance while doing a little Flickr searching yesterday. Still, we love it. Nice work, kadavy! While you’re enjoying some DIY keychain hacking, check out previously mentioned favourites like the keychain money clip, Leatherman keychain, and the DIY compact keychain.

The Hipster PDA Keychain [kadavy.net]The Hipster PDA Keychain [Flickr]

Work

WinPrint Enables Modern Printers For DOS Applications

Windows only: DOS isn’t the most popular operating system anymore, but you might have a legacy app or two that needs it. WinPrint links modern USB printers and older DOS applications for headache-free printing. You can tweak a host of settings in WinPrint to make sure your DOS print jobs end up arriving at your printer looking like they should. Page margins, default fonts, page orientation, and character conversion settings enable you to finely tweak data sent to the Windows-based printer. WinPrint supports any printer installed on your system, including virtual printers like PDF converters and sending text to Microsoft OneNote. If you’re looking for a way to get old records or obscure data out of an old-timey app and into your current workflow, or just to squeeze a few more years use out of a rock-solid DOS application, WinPrint can prevent you from having to scrap an application over printer incompatibility issues. WinPrint is freeware, Windows only. WinPrint [via Download Squad]


Work

Vista SP2 Release Candidate Now Available

Everything but the last few bug fixes on Service Pack 2 for Windows Vista is now available for your upgrading pleasure. Grab it if you want better search, Bluetooth, Blu-Ray, and all the system fixes. Like any release candidate, Microsoft doesn’t want you to risk putting this batch of upgrades, fixes, and feature tweaks on a system you couldn’t stand to see get buggy. (EDIT: And, as the How-To Geek wisely counsels, you’ll have to fully uninstall a release candidate beta/RC before you can install the official release later on). Most of us who know development, though, know that, for the most part, they’re pretty solid builds, and some may want to see their Wi-Fi resuming, application compatibility, and other nagging problems adressed in SP2 get fixed right quick. One big caveat of SP2 is that, unlike most service packs from Microsoft, you’ll have to have SP1 installed already to install it. Microsoft says that’s a package size consideration. The SP2 Release Candidate is a free download for systems running Windows Vista SP1 on 32-bit, 64-bit, or Itanium systems. It’s labelled Beta in the links below, but the build is the release candidate. Thanks, Emil! Windows Vista Service Pack 2 Beta (32-bit) 64-bit ISO image Patch to enable Windows Update upgrading [Microsoft via Ars Technica]


Communicate

Kindle For iPhones Puts Amazon’s Catalog In Reach Of Australians

The Kindle (and its successor the Kindle 2) remain a US-only prospect, but from what we can see, no such restriction applies to the new Kindle for iPhones app, which promises access to Kindle ebooks you’ve purchased even if you don’t own a Kindle. Quite possibly good news for Aussie buyers. Every book, magazine, and newspaper you can buy for the Kindle can now be read through the iPhone app, and many of the same features are included. You can bookmark any page, change text sizes on the fly, and note and highlight passages. You buy your books through Amazon’s web-based Kindle Store, either on a desktop/laptop system or through your iPhone Safari browser, and choose to send the purchases (or one-chapter samples) to your iPhone/touch or Kindle. I don’t have an iPhone to fully test Amazon’s claims, though it did let me right through all the buying screens for individual titles; if you’ve got it working, share your experiences in the comments Kindle for iPhone is a free download, requires an iPhone or iPod touch running at least the 2.0 software. Kindle for iPhone [iTunes Store via Gizmodo]