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Monday
Apr252011

Cassette Mate converts tapes into MP3s

Red Ferret: Cassette Mate converts tapes into MP3s

 

You’ve got to love that retro style, but the cassette tapes that are stacked up to oblivion in the spare room need to go. You don’t want to lose all those precious tunes, but it’s a little difficult to find a simple way to transfer the cassette to a more manageable form. That’s where Thanko’s Cassette Mate is going to come in very handy.

This little device looks as though it’s a Walkman, but actually take the tapes that go into it and can convert them into MP3, WAV, or WMA files. If you really want to, you can use this as a Walkman, but that’s only for the sake of nostalgia. There’s also some bulky Windows software included that will automatically split tracks for you if you’d like. This whole deal costs about $34, but in all honesty, unless you’re dead-set on preserving those old mix tapes, you really should invest in buying digital copies of the tracks. It might cost a bit more, but the audio quality is going to be much better.

Cassette Mate converts tapes into MP3s - The Red Ferret Journal

Friday
Apr082011

Compare loans, cards and accounts

Google allows you to compare mortgages, refinance loans, credit cards, CDs, checking accounts, and savings accounts.  It gives a list of firms by location, with contact information and fees.  Click here.

Compare mortgages, credit cards, CDs, checking and savings

Wednesday
Apr062011

Lendle - share Kindle books

How to share your Kindle books with the others

by Sarah Watts

Sharing Kindle books

Using digital e-book services like Kindle are a great way to help the environment but a big drag is, unlike your conventional paper books you cannot share your Kindle books with your friends, relatives and colleagues. It was always so charming to share and lend your books.

When you purchase your Kindle books from Amazon they get sort of attached to your account and you cannot jointly own the books with the others just the way people can take home books from you or you can take home books from them. So how do you share and lend your Kindle books?

One way is to add devices to your Amazon account. You don’t necessarily need the Kindle e-book reading device in order to access your Kindle books and share them. Even if you have a device running iOS, Android or any other contemporary smart device operating system you can install the Kindle software and access all your Kindle books from there. This can also help the others who have devices that can run the Kindle application.

From wherever you can log into your Amazon/Kindle account you can access your books. So all the other person needs is your Amazon account e-mail ID and password. The moment that other person logs into your account from his or her devise he or she can access all your books. This is not a very secure way of sharing your Kindle books and lending it to others because it involves giving your password and the same password can be used to purchase items from your Amazon account especially when you have instructed Amazon to save your credit card information.

The other way you can share and lend your Kindle books is by using Lendle. This service lets you lend your Kindle books to others and share them with your colleagues and friends. A good thing about using Lendle for lending and sharing your Kindle books is you don’t need to share your Amazon password and you can share and lend Kindle books to even strangers. Both the one having the book and the one wanting to read it need to have a Lendle account. It is kind of Kindle-based social networking. You can make many good friends by lending your Kindle books to each other.

Once you have signed up or signed in you can search through their database and find books that you own. Then add all the books that you would like to share to your Lendle account. Afterwards you can yourself send a lend notification to another person or he or she can request a book lend from you.

There are some restrictions though: Right now there seem to be just 6739 (as on March 28, 2011) books in the Lendle database that can be shared. Another restriction is you can share a particular Kindle book only for 2 weeks and after that the book is unavailable to the person to whom you have lent your book. Nonetheless, it is a good way of sharing your Kindle books without sharing your Amazon password. You can also request other Lendle members to share their books with you in case you want to read a Kindle book without purchasing it.

How to share your Kindle books with the others

Monday
Apr042011

Lifehacker: Top 10 Uses for Twitter

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren’t Self-Indulgent)

Whitson Gordon

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Since Twitter's inception, it's been looked down upon as a place for self-centered technophiles to share the mundane details of their lives. We at Lifehacker know better than that, though—here are our favorite ways to turn Twitter into a useful tool, without becoming one yourself.

We've shared some of our non-breakfast related Twitter uses before, but over the past few years Twitter has evolved, grown more popular, and we've just discovered more clever and productive uses for it. Some of these you may recognize, but even the ones we've discussed before may have been updated, so be sure to check them all out if you're looking to upgrade your Twitter usage.

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Photo by kopp0041

10. Quickly Access Productivity Tools

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)We've mentioned before how easy it is to add tasks to Remember the Milk or send memos to Evernote using Twitter, which makes using our favorite productivity tools super quick and easy—almost like a productivity command line. Since then, we've discovered even faster ways to use this to our advantage, like performing those tasks straight from the address bar, or using Google Voice actions to just speak it to our phone. Twitter allows you far more than just one more access channel to your favorite productivity webapps. Since Twitter is everywhere these days, it opens up a ton of different options for super-quick access, so you can add a task to your to-do list and get on with your day.

9. Get Search Results for Timely News

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)As hard as news sites and blogs try to be up-to-the-second sources for news, the fact of the matter is that Twitter is just the best place to find out what just happened. Whether you want to keep up with this year's Oscar winners without sitting through the show, find out who got voted off American Idol, or finding out that Comcast's DNS went down (and how to get around it), all you need to do is hit up search.twitter.com. Within seconds you'll have all the information you need, even if it isn't up yet anywhere else on the internet.

8. Find a Job

Full size

We already know the internet is a great tool for the unemployed (or just unhappy at their current job), but you can actually find a good number of listings on Twitter. We've talked about how to do this with free service TweetMyJobs, which lets you pick the field your interested in and get real-time Twitter updates of job listings you might be interested in. Furthermore, reader AlphaGeek notes that you can just search Twitter for the hashtag #jobs, and perhaps a hashtag for your industry or city. You'd be surprised at what you can find. Again, it certainly won't be your only resource, but its another good one to add to your arsenal. Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent) Photo remixed from an original by Janet McKnight

7. Get Up to the Minute Updates on Your Favorite Software

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)One of my favorite Twitter uses is following my favorite software developers and finding out immediately when they update. Whether it's big programs like Firefox and XBMC or smaller ventures like Adium for the Mac, I've never gotten a faster notification than on Twitter. Not only will you find out as soon as a new update is ready, but you'll find out about the cool stuff coming up in future versions, nightly builds, and sometimes even handy tips you didn't know about.

6. Use it as a Quick-Access Cloud Notebook

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)If you aren't using something like Evernote, that doesn't mean you can't still use Twitter's quick-post nature as a notebook—reader Epell says its a great place to jot down ideas as soon as you think of them. Just protect your tweets, disallow discovery of your account by email address, and use it as your own personal notebook. If you're the more introspective type, you can use it as a short-post journal, too—whether public or private.

5. Discover News and Articles You Otherwise Wouldn't Have

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Using Twitter for news is hardly a new idea—following accounts like @cnnbrk are Twitter 101 (plus, if any news starts breaking, the other folks you follow will probably be quick to talk about it). What I find especially cool about Twitter is that I find news and articles I otherwise wouldn't have discovered. Since you can follow anyone with just a click, you probably end up following more people (and a more diverse group of people) than you would on, say, Google Reader. As they tweet out interesting links (or retweet others you don't follow), you might find articles or blog posts that weren't hugely popular, but still useful or interesting. Sure, at a certain point this can get more "noisy" than helpful, but this is why you should routinely unfollow people to keep your feeds clutter-free.

4. Get Alerts and Inspiration on Pretty Much Anything

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Aren't sure what you want to make for dinner tonight? @cookbook can give you a bit of inspiration with her 140-character recipes. Not sure what's good on TV tonight? @TVGuide can give you some ideas. There are a ton of Twitter accounts out there that send out useful alerts or inspiration for things in your daily life. Other examples include previously mentioned @queuenoodle, which alerts you to expiring movies on Netflix Instant, or @amazonmp3, which keeps you alerted to the best deals (and all the free tracks of the day) on Amazon MP3. Your local businesses might also have some cool accounts, too—a few of the local bars where I'm from will tweet out special drafts that aren't publicized anywhere else, so only their followers know to come in and ask for it specifically.

3. Control DIY Home Automation Projects

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent) Whether you need to send a quick command or get alerts for something happening at home, Twitter has become a very popular tool for home automation projects. You can do something simple like control your PC from afar with TweetMyPC, or do a more complicated project like tell your coffee pot to start brewing, water your plants, or even dispense Halloween candy. With the Twitter API and an Arduino, there are pretty much no limits to what you can control.

2. Get Instant Customer Support

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Lots of companies have taken to providing support on Twitter, and it's more than just a way to get in on the fad. @JetBlue and @ComcastCares are two accounts that have made the format popular, and with good reason—some people are getting faster responses via Twitter than they are the customer service phone line. Other companies using Twitter this way include Microsoft for the Xbox, Time Warner Cable, and Dell, though with a bit of searching you'll find a ton more.

1. Get Specific Answers and Advice from a Knowledgeable Pool

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)Those that follow us on Twitter know that one of our favorite uses is asking questions from you guys, and getting specific advice. Whether you're looking for the best app for a particular job, the best coffee in New York, or just advice on a good new band to listen to, the Twitterverse has opinions and they aren't afraid to share them. The more followers you have, the more answers you'll get, obviously—but if you can get a few more popular followers, you can often get your question retweeted and get a lot of good advice back.

Top 10 Uses for Twitter (That Aren't Self-Indulgent)

Monday
Mar212011

Pick up where you left off in Microsoft Word (SHIFT-F5)

Pick up where you left off in Microsoft Word with “Go Back”

by The Guru

Post image for Pick up where you left off in Microsoft Word with “Go Back”

Here’s a quick tip for Word 2002, 2003 and 2010: Ever open up your Microsoft Word document first thing in the morning, after having worked on it all day yesterday, and have trouble finding where you left off last time?

Don’t worry — you won’t have to wait for your morning caffeine to kick in.  As soon as you open up your document, press SHIFT-F5.  Word’s “Go Back” feature will take you back to your last edit.  (In fact, if you press Shift-F5 repeatedly, it’ll take you through your last four edits.)

That’s it!  (Don’t you love it when something’s that simple?)

(Photo credit: Aprilzosia at Flickr)

Pick up where you left off in Microsoft Word with