Fresh From Facebook

Are Macs really cheaper to manage than PCs? | Mac IT | MacUser | Macworld

www.takepart.com

American Express Will Pay You $5 an Hour to Volunteer – thedailygreen.com

Using Computing Might, Google Improves Translation Tool – NYTimes.com

Reason.tv: Judge Jim Gray on The Six Groups That Benefit From Drug Prohibition

Use Dropbox to Sync Custom Dictionaries – spellcheck – Lifehacker

Defectors Say Church of Scientology Hides Abuse – NYTimes.com

Christianity Crucifying the Constitution | NEWS JUNKIE POST

Breakaway | Perfection in correction

New! Browse the Complete PopSci Archive | Popular Science

Keep Your Laws Off My Body

Former Book Designer Says Good Riddance to Print – Bits Blog – NYTimes.com

Why a VAT Tax Is Where It’s At – BusinessWeek

The last word: Why old dogs are the best dogs – THE WEEK

10.5: Remove the ‘downloaded file’ warning flag – Mac OS X Hints

Sync data with Macs, iPhones using Google | Business Center | Working Mac | Macworld

Cashmere Toilet Paper Cheaper Than Wiping With “Luxury Knitwear” – The Consumerist

Apple vs. GM: Ayn Rand knew the difference. Do you? – Yahoo! News

Run Your Own Free Proxy Through the Google App Engine – Google Apps – Lifehacker

Campus atheists offer free porn in exchange for Bibles – Boing Boing

Full Screen Weather : Weather Underground

Google Apps Now Disaster Proof

Run a Total Background Check on Yourself with Free Online Tools – Consumer Protection – Lifehacker

ESPN The Magazine – Rick Reilly: How about a little recognition for bowling champ Kelly Kulick? – ES

Can hand sanitizers like Purell really stop people from getting the flu? – By Darshak Sanghavi – Sla

Hey, Waiter! Just How Much Extra Do You Really Expect? – City Room Blog – NYTimes.com

blog.name.com

The Millions: In Our Parents’ Bookshelves

Daily Kos: Meet Carl

What Do You Buy Online vs. in Stores? – Shopping – Lifehacker

No Lie! Your Facebook Profile Is the Real You | Wired Science | Wired.com

Lorca My sister-in-law, who was laid off this month, is in Chile for her brothers funeral and then an 8.8 (?) earthquake happens! My brother has heard from a friend that she is fine, but I’m sure he wants to talk to her himself, alas, no phones yet…

blogs.suntimes.com

PHPBuilder.com, the best resource for PHP tutorials, templates, PHP manuals, content management syst

Christianist Watch, Ctd – The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

Top 5 Ways to Get the Most Out of LogMeIn – jkOnTheRun

Tumblr v. Posterous – Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily Report

Find my iPhone rescues two phones at Busch Gardens

Republicans v secular America | Dan Kennedy | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

Starship pilots: speed kills, especially warp speed – space – 16 February 2010 – New Scientist

Truphone SIM Card + $8 credit for free – dealnews.com

When schools spy on their students, bad things happen | Adventures in IT – InfoWorld

God Is No Excuse | NEWS JUNKIE POST

Althouse: “Who do you think made the first stone spear? That wasn’t the yakkity yaks sitting around.

Why Google Apps Users Miss Out on Regular Gmail Features—and Some Solutions – Google Apps – Lifehack

The Top Five PHP Content Management Systems

Powered by Fresh From

Fresh From Twitter

sweet, i lifted squeeze for mac totally free at http://macheist.com
Truphone Local Anywhere – Free SIM http://post.ly/PJsi lorca’s posterous
Freeware find: Smith Micro Photo A.K.A. bulk file renamer http://post.ly/PJk9 lorca’s posterous
USB to Micro USB Sync Blocker Cable Will Spare You Embarrassment – Usb sync blocker cable – Gizmodo http://post.ly/Oae2 lorca’s posterous

Truphone Local Anywhere – Free SIM


Truphone Local Anywhere SIM card
with $7.50 USD credit *

Free worldwide shipping

* UK and EEA residents will receive 5 euro, everyone else will get $7.50

Free, including shipping. Good rates for US calls to the US and Central Europe see also http://maxroam.com for nations further abroad…

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

Freeware find: Smith Micro Photo A.K.A. bulk file renamer

Filed under: Software, Freeware

Freeware find: Smith Micro Photo A.K.A. bulk file renamer

by Steven Sande (RSS feed) on Feb 23rd 2010 at 6:00PM

While I’m saving my pennies for a new 27″ i7 iMac, I’m finding that “free is good.” Software development house Smith Micro made my day this morning when I received an email telling me about their free Photo A.K.A. application for Mac (site registration required).

The app is a single-tasker — it is a bulk file renamer, much like Dare to be Creative’s Renamer (US$29). Like its more expensive competitor, you can rename any batch of files, not just photos. While I don’t think that the user interface for Photo A.K.A. is as well-designed as Renamer, the former application does have several features that can’t be found in the latter.

For example, Photo A.K.A. can rename files, stuff them into an archive file, and then email the information to someone. There’s also a handy built-in function to directly upload your renamed photos to Flickr or Picasa.

But wait, there’s more! Photo A.K.A. can also burn your renamed files to a CD or DVD, or create a disk image file containing the files. It can also do batch resizing of photo files, display the renamed images as a slide show, and even batch print the files. Finally, there’s a sandbox mode for trying your renaming scheme without actually renaming the files.

While Photo A.K.A. might not fulfill all of your file renaming requirements, it is free, and it has many features you may find useful.

Cool little freeware app. note that SmithMicro’s Shopping Cart will try to sneak in a paid option for “extended delivery” be sure and remove that if you don’t need it…

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

USB to Micro USB Sync Blocker Cable Will Spare You Embarrassment – Usb sync blocker cable – Gizmodo

USB to Micro USB Sync Blocker Cable Will Spare You Embarrassment

Ever plugged your gadget into someone else’s computer for a quick charge and helplessly watched as your data started to sync? It’s an annoyance and wastes time, but with the Sync Blocker cable it’s optional.

The Sync Blocker cable is a USB to Micro USB cable with a small switch that allows you to choose whether you want to sync data or just charge your gadget. It goes for ten bucks which is about equal to regular cables which force syncing. [USB Fever via CrunchGear]

Send an email to Rosa Golijan, the author of this post, at rgolijan@gizmodo.com.

track‘); jQuery.cookie(_cn, _cn_d, { path: ‘/’, expires: 365 } ); track

Your version of Internet Explorer is not supported. Please upgrade to the most recent version in order to view comments.

First you post about your ganja addiction and now about all your sexy pics and sexy texts that you don’t want syncing Rosa. I must say, I’m disappointed with you. Why haven’t I been invited over to share a bowl? Reply
Edited by Nathan Obbards at 02/18/10 11:10 PM

$0.01 $2.98 shipping on Amazon Reply

I was going to complain about it being a $1 dollar USB cable with a $0.10 switch placed on the data wire. Then I saw it was ten bucks. Not too shabby really. Reply

To answer their question… no, i’ve never had that happen. Serious question though, what automatically syncs things ? hard drives or something? Reply
Nathan Obbards promoted this comment

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

20 Percent Of TechCrunch Readers Are Already Browsing With Chrome

Google’s Chrome browser is quickly gaining market share, with one estimate putting it at about 5 percent of total usage, while Microsoft’s Internet Explorer is seeing a drop in overall share. But among TechCrunch readers Chrome is already beating every browser except for Firefox.

A look at our Google Analytics numbers for the past 30 days shows that 20 percent of TechCrunch visitors are using the Chrome browser. Just on TechCrunch, we’ve seen Chrome’s share almost double since October. Firefox is still the most popular browser among readers, with 38.6 percent share, and Safari is a close third with 19.5 percent. Internet Explorer comes in fourth with 17.3 percent.

TechCrunch readers are definitely early adopters, but if your Web surfing habits are an early indicator of how average users will browse the Web, Chrome could be in for some major market share gains. On the other hand, if it’s just a geek thing Chrome’s share might stay around 5 percent for the general population.

So which one is it: are one fifth of TechCrunch readers simply attracted to anything shiny and new, or are you the vanguard showing everyone else the way forward? That’s what I thought.

Count me amongst them. I use Chrome for most things these days.

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

Cyberduck 3.3 adds Snow Leopard, 64-bit support | MacNN

Developer David Kocher has introduced an update to his Mac FTP client, Cyberduck 3.3. The new version has been rebuilt using the Rococoa framework, in order to provide both Snow Leopard and 64-bit support. Other changes include a new application icon, restored PowerPC support, and an Octal input field for permissions.

Content distribution configurations have been added for Rackspace Cloud Files, and Amazon CloudFront. Several bugfixes meanwhile target SOCKS proxy support, excessive Growl notifications, and icons for downloaded files. The v3.3 update can be downloaded from within Cyberduck, or else the official program website; Mac OS X 10.5 is required. Although the software is free, donations are encouraged.

Whilst I have other FTP clients, I keep coming back to this one. (FREE/Mac)

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

Verizon: How Much Do You Charge Now? – Pogue’s Posts Blog

Starting next week, Verizon will double the early-termination fee for smartphones. That is, if you get a BlackBerry, Android or similar phone from Verizon, and you decide to switch phones before your two-year contract is up, you’ll be socked with a $350 penalty (it used to be $175).

This fee drops slowly over time ($10 a month), but after two years, it’s still $110. If the premise of the early-termination fee is to help Verizon recoup its original cost of the phone (see my analysis here http://bit.ly/pOkXz), shouldn’t the fee go down to zero at the end of your contract?

This move doesn’t help Verizon’s reputation for steep pricing and aggressive gouging.

What bothers me more, though, is another bit of greedy nastiness that readers both inside and outside Verizon have noticed.

Here’s one example, from a Verizon customer:

“David, I read your posts about how the cell carriers are eating up our airtime with those 15-second ‘To page this person, press 5? instructions, but I think Verizon has a bigger scam going on: charging for bogus data downloads.

“Virtually every bill I get has a couple of erroneous data charges at $1.99 each—yet we download no data.

“Here’s how it works. They configure the phones to have multiple easily hit keystrokes to launch ‘Get it now’ or ‘Mobile Web’—usually a single key like an arrow key. Often we have no idea what key we hit, but up pops one of these screens. The instant you call the function, they charge you the data fee. We cancel these unintended requests as fast as we can hit the End key, but it doesn’t matter; they’ve told me that ANY data–even one kilobyte–is billed as 1MB. The damage is done.

“Imagine: if my one account has 1 to 3 bogus $1.99 charges per month for data that I don’t download, how much are they making from their 87 million other customers? Not a bad scheme. All by simply writing your billing algorithm to bill a full MB when even a few bits have moved.”

As it turns out, my correspondent is quite correct. My last couple of Verizon phones did indeed have non-reprogrammable, dedicated keys for those ridiculously overpriced “Get it now”-type services that I would never use in a million years.

At about the same time, I got a note from a reader who says he actually works at Verizon, and he’s annoyed enough about the practice to blow the whistle:

“The phone is designed in such a way that you can almost never avoid getting $1.99 charge on the bill. Around the OK button on a typical flip phone are the up, down, left, right arrows. If you open the flip and accidentally press the up arrow key, you see that the phone starts to connect to the web. So you hit END right away. Well, too late. You will be charged $1.99 for that 0.02 kilobytes of data. NOT COOL. I’ve had phones for years, and I sometimes do that mistake to this day, as I’m sure you have. Legal, yes; ethical, NO.

“Every month, the 87 million customers will accidentally hit that key a few times a month! That’s over $300 million per month in data revenue off a simple mistake!

“Our marketing, billing, and technical departments are all aware of this. But they have failed to do anything about it—and why? Because if you get 87 million customers to pay $1.99, why stop this revenue? Customer Service might credit you if you call and complain, but this practice is just not right.

“Now, you can ask to have this feature blocked. But even then, if you one of those buttons by accident, your phone transmits data; you get a message that you cannot use the service because it’s blocked–BUT you just used 0.06 kilobytes of data to get that message, so you are now charged $1.99 again!

“They have started training us reps that too many data blocks are being put on accounts now; they’re actually making us take classes called Alternatives to Data Blocks. They do not want all the blocks, because 40% of Verizon’s revenue now comes from data use. I just know there are millions of people out there that don’t even notice this $1.99 on the bill.”

Well.

Look, it’s very simple.

The more Verizon gouges, the worse it looks. Every single day, I get e-mail from people saying they’re switching at the first opportunity, or would if they could. In time, the only people who will stay with Verizon are people who have no coverage with any other carrier.

Every company’s dream, right? A base of miserable customers who stick with you only because they have no choice.

I realize that it’s a business, that Verizon exists to make money. But the part I don’t get is, why doesn’t Verizon calculate the business cost of making customers unhappy? Surely some accountant can show that customer anger over these fees and dirty button tricks translate into negative corporate image, and therefore lost business.

Why wouldn’t it be a hugely profitable move to start pitching yourself as the GOOD cell company, the one that actually LIKES its customers?

Here are four baby steps: (1) Let us bypass the 15 seconds of pointless voice mail instructions (Verizon is the only carrier who never responded to my campaign; see http://bit.ly/nIgE2).

(2) Make your early-termination fee reflect your actual cost, rather than being a profit center in its own right.

(3) If a data connection is obviously an error—under 10 seconds, say—don’t bill for it.

(4) And for heaven’s sake, quit imposing your own profit-center buttons on our cellphone designs. If we want to go online for $2 a megabyte, we’ll find a way.

(UPDATE: A reader notes that his AT&T phone has exactly the same buttons and he gets charged exactly the same $2 for an accidental press. The $350 termination fee is a Verizon-only element, but the $2 accidental-data charges may actually be industry-wide. Readers: Can you confirm that it’s the same deal on Sprint and T-Mobile?)

Posted via web from lorca’s posterous

Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard

Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard