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Monday
Mar262007

Create a living will online

Create a living will online

living%20will.png

Legaldocs.com offers web-based living wills for all 50 states. Just fill in your name and few other particulars, and the site generates the document for you to print and sign.

In case you’re unfamiliar with them, a living will provides specific instructions pertaining to your health care. It tells caregivers what to do in the event that you’re incapacitated, and designates an individual to direct health care decisions. If you don’t already have such a document in your files, here’s a fast, free and easy way to get one. Don’t wait until it’s too late. Thanks, Marsh! — Rick Broida

Legaldocs Living Wills

Source: Create a living will online - Lifehacker

Friday
Mar232007

DSLR Sensor Cleaning

Sensor Cleaning Tips from The-Digital-Picture

The-Digital-Picture has a detailed guide to that bane of the DSLR owner, cleaning the sensor.

“So how do we keep dust off of the sensor in the first place? Well, you may not be able to prevent it - DSLRs often have with dirty sensors right out of the box. But aside from that, a little care can minimally prolong a necessary sensor cleaning. I change lenses a great deal and generally need to clean my sensor every 5-10 weeks.”

Website: The-Digital-Picture - Sensor Cleaning

Source: PhotographyBLOG - Photography News, Reviews, Articles, Gallery, Forums, Film and Digital

Wednesday
Mar212007

Watch Live TV on your Google Homepage

 

Watch Live TV on your Google Homepage

I know that a ton of our readers are faithful Google Homepage enthusiasts. If you are one of them, you should enjoy this. You now have the ability to watch live TV on your Google Homepage.
Adding this gadget to your Google Homepage will allow you to watch News, Entertainment, Kids Programming, Movies, Educational, Sports, Music and Financial content.
Not bad. You can even place this exact widget on your own website or blog if you have one.

 

Source: Watch Live TV on your Google Homepage >> Dumb Little Man

Monday
Mar192007

» GotVoice

GotVoice makes voicemail fun and functional

Posted by Matthew Miller

You may have read my blog post title and said to yourself, "Yeah right, how can voicemail be fun?" Well, I met with the folks at GotVoice on Friday and learned all about the post-beta version of GotVoice that was just released a few hours ago and have to say that I think you will enjoy your voicemail with GotVoice. If you are like me, then you currently just plod away through your carriers voicemail system listening to each message one at a time and trying to remember which button is used for each carrier to delete a message. As a father of three daughters I also like to save some of their voice messages, but I have lost several of them with my carrier's system. GotVoice takes voice messaging to the next level with their cool Voice 2.0 technology that goes directly into the carrier voicemail system and navigates it automatically so you do not have to do anything differently to have a much richer voicemail experience. GotVoice is even free, although there is a premium option available if you want a bit more functionality from the system.

I signed up for the previous beta version of GotVoice, which allowed you to have your voicemail "pushed" to your device as detailed in Kevin Tofel's review. The release version of GotVoice shows how they took their Series A VC funding and put it to excellent use to extend voicemail way beyond your carrier's system. With GotVoice you can receive, create, and store voicemail with lots of custom options.


Image Gallery: There are major updates in functionality in the release version of the GotVoice voicemail service.
Image Gallery: Listening to a voicemail online

 

 

 


Voicemails that you receive appear in your "inbox" similar in appearance to an email inbox. GotVoice integrates a visual email functionality so that if your contact is in your GotVoice system then the contact name will appear in the From field. If a name is not associated with the number then the number or unknown will appear. You can simply click on the name or number to specify the name, number, and type (home, mobile, work) of the voicemail. Then the next time a voicemail is received from that number, the fields you assigned will be associated with the voicemail. Again, similar to an email inbox, you can reply to a voicemail, email the voicemail message to someone (free version sends a html link to the message and Premium version allows you to send a MP3 file), download and then archive the voicemail, or delete the voicemail. Inbox, Drafts, and Sent pages are part of the Messages tab.

After you listen to a voicemail and want to save it for future usage then it is a good idea to click on the subject field and add a subject associated with the voicemail. This will allow you to take advantage of a very powerful functionality associated with the system, which is the ability to quickly search for voicemails. As you enter letters in the GotVoice search box voicemail messages are automatically filtered using the From and Subject fields.

To help you assign or have contacts automatically assigned to your voicemail it is a good idea to create a contact list or import contacts. You can import contacts from Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, AOL, Outlook and Outlook Express. You can also manually add contacts one at a time and are allowed to enter three (3) phone numbers and two (2) email addresses for each contact. You can also create custom groups of your contacts that I'll discuss a bit more below since this is a feature that I cannot wait to try soon in real life usage.

The next function that I am very excited about since it should help me immensely is the voicemail composition functionality. There are three simple steps to go through to create and send an outgoing voice message. The first step is to address your voicemail. You can simply click the To: hyperlink and add contacts from your contact list or add groups from your contact list. Since I coach a girl's softball team and often have to call 13 people (plus sometimes both work and mobile numbers) if there is a rainout I setup a group for softball that includes all the players' parents numbers and email addresses. I can now send out on update with one simple outgoing voicemail and save myself a considerable amount of time and effort. After selecting the recipients you then select what number (home, mobile, work) you want your voicemail to be sent out from and you just use the quick drop-down selector for this. Then enter the subject of the voicemail. Step 1 is complete.

The next step is where you create your message and there are again a number of options to help you accomplish this step. You can record your message using the microphone attached to your PC using the simple record, stop, and play media buttons. If you do not happen to have a mic on your PC, then you can record with a phone. You designate a number to have GotVoice call then click the Call My Phone button. Simply follow the prompts on the selected phone and your message will be created. You can playback the message on your PC to check the message. The last option to create a message is to use text to speech and simply type in a message and then select a female or male voice. This may be a great option if you are in a meeting or presentation and can't speak on the phone, but have to get a message out to people. The voices sound fine, but you can tell they are computer generated. Another option available when you create a message is the ability to add a background. You can use the GotVoice audio library or your own MP3 and make it sound like you are on the streets of Tokyo or placing a call from the beach. Step 2 is now complete.

The last step in creating an outgoing voicemail is to send your message. You can choose to have the recipient's phone ring when the message is sent or to have it sent directly to the person's voicemail system (only supported by some carriers). If you want it to be sent silently, but do not know if the recipient's service supports this then the safe bet is to try silent and then ring the phone. You can then click to save a draft of the message or send the message. I may setup a draft message for rainouts and then only have to click send when a rainout occurs to make the process even easier at that time.

Another way that GotVoice makes voicemail a fun experience is by allowing you to create a custom voicemail greeting. While you can create a custom greeting on most mobile phones, the GotVoice system allows you to add a background using their audio library or by uploading a MP3 file. I am thinking of using The Office background to let people know when I am out of the office. You can select which phone you want to install the greeting to and then install the greeting. You can install up to three greetings with GotVoice. Celebrity greetings will be available soon and may have a small charge, depending on the provider.

There are a few settings you can control on your phone, including whether to save or delete messages and when you want your voicemail to be retrieved from the system. The free version of GotVoice allows you to receive voicemail 3 times per day and the Premium version allows you to receive voicemail 24 times per day.

GotVoice is available now for FREE and if you have voicemail on your phone I highly recommend you give it a try. There are some ads to the right of your voicemail message when you listen to it and a banner ad at the top of your main navigation page, but these are a small price to pay for all the functionality given to you for free. For a bit more functionality, you can purchase the Premium service for US$9.95 per month that gives you up to 24 scheduled voicemail retrievals per day, MP3 email attachments, and RSS feeds.

Source: ยป GotVoice makes voicemail fun and functional | The Mobile Gadgeteer | ZDNet.com

Friday
Mar162007

Losing All Formatting in a Document

From WordTips

Summary: Does Word keep changing all the text in your document to match the last change you made? Here's why, and how to fix it. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

Emily Baumbach wrote with a concern about how she keeps losing her document formatting in Word 2000. Every time she highlights a section of text and then changes the font or margin alignment, Word changes the whole document into that new font or margin.

Before explaining how to fix this, it is necessary to do a bit of a review about how formatting is handled in Word. In general, there are two types of formatting in Word: implicit and explicit. Implicit formatting, which is formatting done by "default," is implemented through the use of styles. Explicit formatting is done through the use of formatting commands, such as those found on the toolbars, in the menus, and in various dialog boxes.

All default formatting in Word begins with styles. You can't get away from them; they are always there, even if you try to ignore them. If you change what is within the definition of a style, then you've changed the formatting applied across all paragraphs or characters that use that style. If you create new styles, you are creating new "default" formatting that can be applied to various elements of your document. If you try to ignore styles, then most, if not all, of your paragraphs use the Normal style.

Any explicit formatting you do is always done as an overlay to the underlying style-based formatting. For instance, if you select a few words in a paragraph and then click the Bold tool, the selected text is formatted as bold, but you haven't removed the style that controlled how the text was originally formatted. You can't remove it; you can only override it.

Starting with Word 97, Microsoft made what many people consider to be an ill-advised change in how Word handles the relationship between implicit and explicit formatting. What they did was make it possible for explicit formatting to not just override the implicit formatting, but to become the implicit format. They did this by allowing Word to "absorb" explicit formatting changes into the underlying style. Once this was done, any other document elements that used that style would automatically change to reflect the newly applied format.

The reason that many people consider Microsoft's change ill-advised is that it muddies the water for those people just learning how Word handles formatting. All of a sudden, local formats can be propagated globally, and that results in what appears to be strange behavior on the part of Word. (It seems that regardless of how ill-advised some of us may think the change was, it is here to stay--the change has persisted in the last four versions of Word.)

How to solve the problem? Turn off the setting in Word that causes explicit formatting to be absorbed into the underlying styles. You do that by following these steps:

  1. Choose Style from the Format menu. Word displays the Style dialog box.
  2. Select the style you want to change, and then click Modify. Word displays the Modify Style dialog box.
  3. Clear the Automatically Update check box.
  4. If the style is stored in a template (it is not defined only for the current document), then I find it a good idea to choose the Add to Template check box.
  5. Click on OK.

If you are using Word 2002 or Word 2003, then the steps are slightly different:

  1. Choose Styles and Formatting from the Format menu. Word displays the Styles and Formatting task pane.
  2. Hover the mouse pointer over the style you want to change. A drop-down arrow should appear at the right of the style name.
  3. Click the drop-down arrow and choose Modify. Word displays the Modify Style dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  4. Clear the Automatically Update check box.
  5. If the style is stored in a template (it is not defined only for the current document), then I find it a good idea to choose the Add to Template check box.
  6. Click on OK.

That's it; that's how you stop Word from applying the explicit changes to the underlying style. Of course, if you've inadvertently changed styles earlier (because the Automatically Update check box was selected), then you'll need to go back and change the style definition so that text appears as you want it to. You'll also need to go through and perform these same steps on any other styles in the template or document.

Source: Losing All Formatting in a Document