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Monday
Feb112008

6 Telephone Tricks

Excerpts from: Top 10 6 Telephone Tricks

phone-header.png
When getting things done involves making phone calls, you want to spend the least amount of time and money on the horn as possible—and several tricks and services can help you do just that. With the right tones, keypresses, phone numbers, and know-how, you can skip through or cut off long-winded automated voice systems and humans, access web services by voice, and smartly screen incoming calls. Check out our pick of the 10 best telephony techniques for getting more done in less time over the phone.

10. Avoid the cost of calling 411 with GOOG 411.
Instead of calling regular 411 to get information (and an extra charge on your phone bill), Google by voice by calling 1-800-GOOG-411 to get a street address or phone number. Some Lifehacker readers say GOOG 411 works better than others.
6. Avoid annoying calls with a custom silent ringtone.
If your cell phone supports per-caller ringtones, reader Jim suggests selectively silencing the low-priority incoming calls with a dead air ringtone. Here's how to make a ringtone from any MP3 on your mobile.
5. Ring all your phones from one number with GrandCentral.
grandcentralonenumber.png Sick of missing calls to the office while you're home or vice versa? Set up a free GrandCentral number that can ring all your phones at once from one number, or selective phones based on the caller—like your cell phone, office phone, and home phone. GrandCentral's got scads of neat customized phone features; see Adam's tour of how to consolidate your phones with GrandCentral.
4. Skip the greeting and get right to the beep with one keypress.
Long voicemail greetings are tedious to sit through, but on many services, specific keypresses can skip you right to the beep. Hit 7 or # to bypass that long greeting, and save time and money on your cell phone bill.
2. Swear like a sailor to skip directly to a human operator.
When that Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system's making you navigate an endless menu of options, put your potty mouth to good use. Some IVR's are programmed to listen for naughty words and speed you along to human help when they hear them. Adam gave this trick a try and dropping the F bomb did indeed zap him right through to a human. We suggest using this trick when you're not within earshot of your co-workers.
1. Trick automated phone bots into thinking your line's dead.
If you've got automated phone marketers or political campaigns or debt collectors ringing your phone at all hours, trick the system into thinking your phone's dead. Add the U.S. Special Information Tone signal for "vacant circuit" to the beginning of your voicemail greeting to automatically unsubscribe your phone number from bot call lists.

Lifehacker Top 10: Top 10 Telephone Tricks

Saturday
Feb092008

My Safe Florida Home Program

My Safe Florida Home

To help Floridians identify how they can strengthen their homes against hurricanes and to reduce hurricane damage exposure in our state, the My Safe Florida Home program is offering free wind inspections by qualified hurricane mitigation inspectors to eligible homeowners.

This is not an entitlement program. You must apply and obtain approval in order to receive the free inspection. Requesting or obtaining an inspection does not guarantee or automatically qualify you for a grant. Floridians whose homes have undergone wind certification and hurricane mitigation inspections approved by the Department of Financial Services may be eligible to apply for matching grants up to $5,000.

The My Safe Florida Home program is working with local governments and the Volunteer Florida Foundation to offer low-income homeowners an opportunity to strengthen their homes against natural disasters.
Properties not eligible for free wind inspections include mobile homes and manufactured homes, apartments, condominiums, multi-family dwellings and businesses.

My Safe Florida Home

Thursday
Feb072008

Namexif™ (Rename EXIF Photos)

Namexif™ is a tool to automatically rename photos with the date they were shot.
Digital cameras have their own clock and record the date to each photos with a precision of a second. Since the date and time is recorded for each photos (provided it is an EXIF compliant digital camera), Namexif™ is able to rename these photos according to the date.
Doing so will:

  • make chronological order same as alphabetical one,
  • set a unique name to your photos

    BEFORE                                                                        AFTER



    Namexif™ let you rename according to different possible format:

  • Namexif™ (Rename EXIF Photos)

    Monday
    Feb042008

    Fixing common photography problems with Picasa

     Fixing common photography problems

    Posted by Chris Mysen, Software Engineer
    One of the best things about digital photography is that it's cheap and easy to learn from your mistakes. With a high-capacity memory card, you can shoot photos for days on end, and big LCD screens make it easy to review snapshots as you go. But all the photography practice in the world doesn't guarantee you a great picture every time. After many years of photography under my belt, I still tend to misfire on a few shots, and sadly, don't always get the opportunity to try again. Capturing the right scene remains one of the most important things you can do as a photographer. If you manage that, a tool like Picasa can help recover 'problem photos.' Here I'll show you a few techniques for fixing some of the most regular problems digital photographers encounter.

    Problem #1 -- Too dark
    If you shoot a lot of photographs, you've probably seen this. The electronics inside digital cameras work hard to find the right average tone for a photo. Sometimes, though, they miss the mark.

    Here's a typical example of a dark picture that wasn't caused by a lack of lighting, but rather by having too much white and light colors in a photograph -- something that can throw digital cameras for a loop. The background wall in this photo was a bright whiteboard with colorful sticky notes. The camera's processor returned colors that look washed out and a background that's a dull shade of gray. Without going into too much technical detail, finding a dull and resolutely 'average' shade of gray for the picture is exactly what the camera processor is aiming to do... but that's not what we really want, in a case like this.

    image

     

    I found that clicking the 'I'm Feeling Lucky' button, which automatically adjusts a number of settings, corrected the problem nicely. 'I'm feeling lucky' won't always work, but it's generally a good place to start. You'll notice how effective the procedure was in the photo below:

    image

    Problem Photo #2 -- Dark And Not Straight

    The next photo we're going to cover actually has two big problems. And too bad for me, 'I'm Feeling Lucky' isn't quite lucky enough this time. For starters, this photo is too dark. It would be nice if we could pull out more details of the tree and the scooter from the dark parts of the photograph. And not to mention, the photo isn't quite straight. That's not uncommon -- it's hard to spend the time to make sure every photo is perfectly horizontal, and a lot of scenic photographs wind up marred by sloping horizons.

    image

    The 'Straighten' and 'Fill Light' buttons are just what we need in this case. When you click on the 'Straighten' button, a series of grid lines appear on the screen, which you can use to help you know when straight lines in the photograph are properly horizontal. Drag the slider at the bottom until everything lines up, then click 'Apply.' Looks like we just fixed our leaning tower of Subway!

    image

    Next, we need to brighten up the photo a little bit. You can do this with the 'Fill Light' slider on the left side of the screen. Drag it to the right until you feel that the photo is bright enough.

    image

    Problem #3 -- a flat-looking photo

    Flat-looking photos come up for a number of reasons. Often, you'll find that areas with weak lighting cause a photograph to lose color and contrast. If you're shooting in the shade, you may even find that your photographs take on a bluish tone. Here's an example photo that came from an alley without a lot of sunlight.

    image

    Fixing this photo requires clicking on the 'Tuning' tab, which is where Picasa's power tools live. Here you can selectively darken shadows and lighten the highlights, both of which we'll need to tweak in order to save this photograph. Additionally, the color is a little bit gray and should be made 'warmer' (meaning a bit more yellow). To fix all these issues, we'll use the 'Highlights,' 'Shadows,' and 'Color Temperature' sliders. Look at the position of the sliders below -- I brought the highlights up a little bit, and darkened the shadows significantly. This brings out the contrast between the light/colorful wall and the dark restaurant below. It also does a nice job of making the white car look white. Bringing up the "Color Temperature" added a nice bit of punch, as well. You can see that the green plants are more vivid and the wall colors look more lively.

    image

    It may not be as simple as pressing the 'I'm feeling lucky' button, but the five tools in the 'Tuning' tab can work wonders. All you really need is a careful eye, and a willingness to experiment, and you'll be surprised at what you can do.

    Google Photos Blog: Fixing common photography problems

    Saturday
    Feb022008

    Fifteen Foods that Burn More Calories than They Contain

    Fifteen Foods that Burn More Calories than They Contain

    image We need to scarf down plenty of calories in a day, but if you've got a nasty snack habit that's tipping the scales to heavy, weblog Bootstrapper's list of 15 foods that burn more calories than they contain might be the perfect addition to your grocery list. Called negative calorie foods, the following 15 treats actual burn more calories in their digestion than they offer, so you can fulfill your snack craving without the guilt of a bag of potato chips. From apples to zucchini, these foods make the perfect snacks. Hit the jump for the full list.

    • Celery
    • Oranges
    • Strawberries
    • Tangerines
    • Grapefruit
    • Carrots
    • Apricots
    • Lettuce
    • Tomatoes
    • Cucumbers
    • Watermelon
    • Cauliflower
    • Apples
    • Hot Chili Peppers
    • Zucchini

    Keep in mind that a diet limited to only these foods could lead to malnutrition (according to Wikipedia), so don't go getting all unhealthy on us. But when snack time hits, these healthy, negative calorie foods sound like winners. For more opitons, check Wikipedia's longer list of negative calorie foods, and for a glimpse at other low-calorie snacks, check out the 200-calorie gallery.

    Negative Calorie Foods: 15 Foods That Actually Burn More Calories Than They Contain [Bootstrapper]

    Food: Fifteen Foods that Burn More Calories than They Contain