Friday, December 17, 2010

iFan: Charges Your iPhone Using Pure Wind Power!


There have been many products that recharge your iPhone and mobile devices once they are out of power, and by the looks of things, the constant flood is not about to stop anytime soon. Of course some are nothing but ideas and concept designs, and some are even spoofs that are created to give us a daily smile and laugh. However, there are products out there that actually do have a purpose and are very real even though they come across as a virtual joke. We’ve long been harnessing the wind for power, and lately we’ve even started harnessing the waves, but the wind seems to be of constant interest to scientists all over the globe.
For Tjeerd Veenhoven it was a no brainer to choose wind a power as a source when he designed the iFan. It’s a portable device that you can just slip out of your bag and insert your iPhone into. The iFan is created out of rubber so it can withstand heavy jolts, and after your batteries have gone scuba diving, you can even use it to recharge them back to life. However, don’t expect it to be in a blink of an eye.
The mere fact that it takes about 6 hours to charge the battery from empty to full is a clear motivator to do something else other than constantly monitoring the baseball scores or that Twitter account you’re obsessively following. What should be noted here is that 6 hours is with the current fan blade configuration. Tjeerd makes a point to say that with some modifications, the time it takes to charge your phone can drastically be cut. But for now, if you’ve got a lot of time on your hands, and if you are in no need of your phone for half the day, the iFan is the right gimmick for you.

Author: Richard Darell

Known as a leader in social media, Richard shares his extensive knowledge of cutting edge design with designers and developers all over the world. Richard founded Bit Rebels in 2009, and currently the site welcomes over one million visitors each month. Minervity.com, another one of Richard’s very successful sites, is known as the go-to place for design tutorials and information on the latest techniques. Richard’s creativity has also led him to a very long and successful career in music as a song writer and producer for International artists. Richard hails from Stockholm, Sweden but also spends time in Los Angeles. Follow Richard on Twitter: @Minervity
from BitRebels

Fontularity: Most Popular Fonts by Operating System [Infographic]


Designers love fonts and a good thing for them is there are 1000′s to choose from. But what are the most popular fonts? In today’s Infographic we take a look a the most popular fonts by operating system. This will be a great resource for deciding on fall-back fonts in your CSS. Enjoy.

Posted by Andy Crofford on December 12, 2010 in Infographics
from TestKing

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

3 New Browser Tools You Should Know About: Embedly, Cortex, Readon.ly

The browser is a beautiful thing, but it can be made so much better with the right tools. In the screenshot posted here, you can see new two tools in action - both of which you should check out right away.

What you're looking at in that image is the page for a single Tweet, viewed using the brand new Chrome browser extension from Embed.ly, which displays embedded previews from 165 different publishing platforms and previews of any web link posted on Twitter. It's a must-have. Overlayed on top of that? The rapid sharing tool Cortex - probably the fastest way to post links to Twitter, Facebook, Instapaper and Tumblr. Click your mouse, hold for two seconds and that circle shows up. Move over one of the sections and you're on your way to sharing a link.

embedlypluscortex.jpg

Embedly makes beautiful use of web standards. Cortex is still a little rough around the edges; it could use a character count-down for Twitter, for example, and it takes some getting used to before it's easy to control. It's worth trying for a while, though.

What's the third? ReadOn.ly, a simple little bookmarklet that makes it easy to share links with fly-out quotes and tags that can be navigated to view all the most interesting quotes on a given topic found by other users. It's a really cool little service. There are others like it, see Sniply, for example, and each of them brings a different design element to the nascent field of content curation. There's clearly a whole lot of room for development in the field of curation and sharing.

readonlyscreen.jpg

from ReadWriteWeb

Garys Social Media Count

Living statistics – Many of us who have been following social media since the early 90s are very sensitive to today’s in usage of the sharing web. Inspired by other cool real time counters, Social Media Industry Head, Laurel Papworth, my own Rise & Rise of Social Media presentations and various ‘cool’ videos (you know the ones) I decided to put together this little Flash app (which is in constant development) showing how active & dynamic the Social Web, Mobile Industry and Game Business is. More after the embed.



If you want to embed this on your page just use the code in the box below. Drag select it all then copy/paste into any site. Use this code as I will be regularly updating it with latest stats.

For a 600 pixel wide site/pane

<object id="Garys Social Media Count" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="600" height="650" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="quality" value="high" /><param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /><param name="src" value="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" /><param name="name" value="myMovieName" /><embed id="Garys Social Media Count" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="600" height="650" src="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" name="myMovieName" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" quality="high"></embed></object>


For a more typical 450 pixel wide site/pane

<object id="Garys Social Media Count" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="450" height="488" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="quality" value="high" /><param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /><param name="src" value="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" /><param name="name" value="myMovieName" /><embed id="Garys Social Media Count" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="450" height="488" src="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" name="myMovieName" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" quality="high"></embed></object>


The text will be small but to fit a 260 wide sidebar

<object id="Garys Social Media Count" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="260" height="281" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="quality" value="high" /><param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /><param name="src" value="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" /><param name="name" value="myMovieName" /><embed id="Garys Social Media Count" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="260" height="281" src="http://www.personalizemedia.com/media/socmedcounter.swf" name="myMovieName" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" quality="high"></embed></object>


More about the Count - I quickly built and coded the app based on data culled from a range of social media sources & sites originally at the end of Sept 2009. The design has been finessed extra functionality  has been added such as week, month & year lookahead/backs plus some dynamic data input. Also mobile and games tabs were added. (A combined Film, TV and advertising tab in development Apr 2010).

The social web has exploded in the last year and below are some of the social media statistics based on key data points that the ‘Gary’s Social Media Count’  is based on (many will be updated!).

UPDATED Oct 20{10 – ONGOING SOCIAL MEDIA STATS PLUS NEW HERITAGE MEDIA ADDITION



  • 2 billion YouTube videos watched per day & over 24 hours per minute uploaded Source Google 2010

  • 17 million apps per day downloaded from the iPhone App Store Source Asymco Sep 2010

  • 90 million tweets sent per day on Twitter Source TechCrunch Sep 2010

  • 36.1 billion minutes of calls on Skype in last quarter of 2009 Source Gigaom Apr 2010

  • $11.03 billion made at US box office Source 2010

  • $20 bill Lost in US economy due to movie piracy Source 2010

  • Nearly 50 million read a newspaper in the US daily Source 2009

  • $341 bill in global TV revenue from ads, subscription & public funds Source

  • 1.4 billion single music tracks downloaded globally Source 2008

  • Around 20.9 million attend an orchestral concert in the US each year Source 2008

  • $134 bill is made from global print ads Source

  • US $336 mill US is the total spend making Australian films Source 2010

  • US $1.48 billion US is the total spend on making UK films Source 2010

  • US $140 bill ! wages for just the jobs component making US movies Source 2009

  • 82 million hardcover books sold worldwide each year Source 2010

  • 44 million kindle books sold by Amazon per year Source 2010

  • 236 million people a week in the US listen to the radio Source 2009

  • $11.4 billion is made from music concerts worldwide Source 2008

  • $8.73 billion made in US by DVD & Blu-ray of US made movies (big drop) Source 2009

  • $12 billion US lost in pirated music & movies in Spain every year Source 2009

  • $66.4 bill made from all music sold worldwide Source 2009

  • 30 hours of TV watched by UK viewers each week Source 2010

  • 2.8 billion movie tickets sold in the US, EU, China & Japan combined Source 2010

  • $27 bill spent on new TV sets in the US this year Source 2010

  • 70.6 billion printed press page views per month in the US Source


UPDATED – ONGOING SOCIAL MEDIA, MOBILE and GAME STATISTICS:











  • Social/mobile – 2 million iPads sold in first 2 months June 2010 Guardian

  • Social – One new member of LinkedIn every second June 2010 MktCharts

  • mobile – iPad shipments running at 9 million global shipments in the first 12 months. May 2010Morgan Stanley

  • 1.4 billion music tracks sold on iTunes between Sep 09 & Feb 10 Wikipedia iTunes tracking

  • 300 000 new twitter users per day Apr 2010 TechRadar

  • 247 billions emails per day and 18% growth in internet users (of 1.75bn) Jan 2010 Royal Pingdom‘Internet 2009 in Numbers’

  • 280 mill iPhone apps per month Jan 2010 GigaOm

  • 3.5 billion pieces of content shared on Facebook each week and 2.5 billion photo uploads to Facebook per month Feb 2010 eConsultancy

  • Facebook 635mill in ad revenue & $75 mill in gifts Mar 2010 InsideFacebook

  • Facebook 25 million new members each month Feb 2010 Mashable

  • 50 million Tweets per day Feb 2010 eConsultancy

  • YouTube 1Billion watched per day Dec 2009 SMH


STATS USED IF NOT IN THE UPDATED LIST ABOVE

  • 20 hours of video uploaded every minute onto YouTube (source YouTube blog Aug 09)

  • Facebook 600k new members per day, and photos, videos per month, 700mill & 4 mill respectively (source Inside Facebook Feb 09)

  • Twitter 18 million new users per year & 4 million tweets sent daily (source TechCrunch Apr 09)

  • iPolicy UK – SMS messaging has a bright future (Aug 09)

  • 900 000 blogs posts put up every day (source Technorati State of the Blogosphere 2008)

  • YouTube daily, 96 million videos watched, $1mill bandwidth costs (source Comscore Jul 06 !)

  • Second Life 250k virtual goods made daily,  1250 per second (source Linden Lab release Sep 09)

  • Money – $5.5 billion on virtual goods (casual & game worlds) even Facebooks gifts make $70 million annually (source Viximo Aug 09)

  • Flickr has 73 million visitors a month who upload 700 million photos (source Yahoo Mar 09)

  • Mobile social network subscribers – 92.5 million at the end of 2008, by end of 2013 rising to between 641.6-873.1 million or 132 mill annually (source Informa PDF)

  • SMS – Over 2.3 trillion messages will be sent across major markets worldwide in 2008 (sourceEverysingleoneofus sms statistics)


from PersonalizeMedia

Monday, December 13, 2010

Webmaster Tutorials!

Quackit is an awesome webisite just like W3Schools for free tutorials on building websites. They teach using basics of coding using HTML and CSS. See and explore it for yourself.



What tweets do you want to visualise?

Visible Tweets is one cool website that visualizes in public spaces the twitter messages that you want to get updates on as they come in. Trust me, this really is one cool web app!





goto VisibleTweets

Index of Tips and Tricks

Below is an index of Tips and Tricks from this blog, listed by category.  This is just the beginning...more will be added soon!  Special thanks to Bashar Ewaida for creating the index!

Auditing

The Advantage of "sort" to View Passwords
Avoiding LANMAN False Positives
"chage" to Get/Set Password Security Parameters
Change a User's Password to Blank
Find Accounts With Superuser Privileges
Finding Duplicate User IDs
Finding Null Passwords
Lock Out Users Remotely While Preserving Session
Lock Screen With "tsdiscon"
"net use" and The Blank Passwords
Show Account Security Settings
Show Domain-Wide Settings For Accounts
Suspicious Password Entries
Why "wmic" Remote Lock Fails?
"wmic" to Display Users' SID
Workaround to View Windows Password Hashes


Forensics

Better "find" with touch
Determine where a USB device was plugged into
Display File Creation Time
Listing Files by Inode as a Proxy for Creation Time
Remotely Pull USB info
Show USB vendor/serial number
USB History
Watch File Count in a Directory

Network Troubleshooting

Hack to Pull Out a Specific Protocol From "netstat" Output (Linux)
Kill Process by TCP/UDP port number
Learn About Network Traffic
"netstat" vs "lsof"
Protocol Stats
"watch" vs "netstat -c"

Penetration Testing

The Broadcast Ping
Command-Line Ping Sweeper
Detecting when a scan reaches a given target
Firewall Chains
Look at Firewall Configs
Reverse DNS Records
See the Number of Times a Firewall Rule Was Triggered
Show Ports Allowed Through Firewall
Show Programs Allowed Through Firewall
Speed Up Ping


System Administration


Aborting a System Shutdown
Browsing the Registry with Powershell
Careful with iptables "INPUT"
Converting Unix timestamps to human-readable form
Disable The Guest Account
Dropping Firewall Dead
Execute a Command En Mass
"find ...| xargs ..." vs "find ... -exec ..."
"findstr /m" to Print Only File Name
Find Files That Only Contain Printable ASCII With "findstr /p" (But be Aware)
Finding Names of Files Matching a String
Having Fun with Firewall
The Importance of Putting Your System's Hostname
IPTables or The Simplified Firewall Configuration
Linking Files
Listing Files and Their Sizes
Listing the largest 100 files
Poke Holes Through The Firewall
Reboot in [N] Seconds
Remote Command Execution
Simplify Your Life With "ufw"
SSH: Using "user@host" vs "-l"
Symlink to an Entire Directory
What is hogging up the space?
WScript to Create Link For Files and Folders

Text Manipulation

Backup Before You Change With "sed"
Build Your Own "uniq" Command on Windows
Convert Multiple-Line Output into a Single Line Using "tr"
Convert Text Formats - Dos to Unix
Extra Little File to Help
"for" loops to parse text
Have "sed" Use Extended Regular Expressions
Replacing Strings in Multiple Files
Replacing Text Powershell Way
The Single Quote, The Double Quote, and The "FOR" Loop
When "sed" is better than "awk"


This index is based on the hard work of Bashar Ewaida, and is a work in progress.

from CommandLineKungFu

10 Web Browsers You Probably Haven’t Heard Of

Firefox. Internet Explorer. Chrome. Safari. Opera. We’ve pretty much all heard of them by now. They’ve been fighting for market share for the past few years (Internet Explorer has been fighting for it for a lot longer than that), and it’s unlikely any of them will ever come out the absolute winner. They try to be all things to all people. And that’s great.

Except…

What if you’re looking for a browser that does just the things you want to do online? What if you’re sick of all the browser-war hubub and want something that’s truly unique and different (and, maybe, works better than the mainstream options)? What then?

Well, there’s good news. There are more than a dozen excellent alternative browsers out there if you’re looking for something distinctive. Below are ten such web browsers, along with why you might want to consider using them.

1. Stainless


Stainless

Stainless is a browser created in response to Google Chrome. It utilizes multi-processing architecture like Chrome (which, at the time of inception, wasn’t available for OS X), but also has some excellent features not found in other browsers. One of the most interesting features is the ability to log into one website using two different accounts in separate tabs.

Why you should consider it: The ability to log into a site with different credentials in different tabs makes this an excellent option for many. It’s especially useful if you have, say, work-related Gmail accounts and personal Gmail accounts.

Current release version: 0.7.5

Operating systems supported: OS X Leopard and Snow Leopard.

2. Maxthon


Maxthon

Maxthon is a highly configurable browser that places an emphasis on security. It has a built-in Ad Hunter that blocks most ads, as well as security features to prevent spyware, malware, and viruses. It lets you fully customize your browsing experience (you can choose between using menus, hot keys, word aliases, toolbars, or mouse gestures, plus there are more than 1,400 plug-ins to add functionality). It has filters available to block irritating or offensive content.

Other Maxthon features include a built-in screen capture tool, URL aliases for faster surfing, a built-in feed reader, an online favorites service, advanced proxy rules, and an anti-freeze feature.

Why you should consider it: If you want a customizable browser, Maxthon might be what you’re looking for; it’s built specifically for power users. Between plugins, skins, filter packs, and other customizable features, it truly lets you personalize your browsing experience. For parents concerned about their children’s’ activities online, the filters for blocking content can be reassuring.

Current release version: 2.5.11 (the Classic Version is also available: 1.6.5)

Operating systems supported: Windows

3. Sleipnir


Sleipnir

Sleipnir is very popular in Japan with a majority share in the country. It’s a profoundly customizable browser that maintains speed and performance despite customizations. There are skins and plugins available for it, letting you change the design and settings of the browser to suit your needs. And as all good browsers should, it stresses on security and usability, and allows for tabbed browsing.

Why you should consider it: Sleipnir is an option if you want a highly customizable browsing experience.

Current release version: 2.9.2

Operating systems supported: Windows 98 and newer

4. Swiftfox


Swiftfox

Swiftfox is an optimized build of Firefox that’s faster and more cutting edge than the regular Firefox distribution. It works with Firefox plugins, making it remarkably extensible. The overall user interface is similar to Firefox, but is a bit more minimalist and clutter-free. Most other features are in line with what Firefox has to offer.

Why you should consider it: If you love Firefox but want something faster and lighter, then Swiftfox is your best bet.

Current release version: 3.5.6

Operating systems supported: Linux

5. Lunascape


Lunascape

Lunascape is the world’s first and only triple engine browser. That’s right: it’s a hybrid browser that runs on Gecko, Trident, and WebKit. It supports plugins and add-ons from Firefox, Internet Explorer, as well as their own plugin platform. It’s touted to be faster and lighter than many other browser options.

Why you should consider it: If you find yourself constantly switching back and forth between browsers (either for cross-browser testing of web designs or because of add-ons available only to Firefox or Internet Explorer), Lunascape is a perfect fit for you.

Current release version: 6.0.1

Operating systems supported: Windows

6. Konqueror


Konqueror

Konqueror combines web browsing, local and remote file management, and a universal viewing app that lets you view documents without having to launch other programs. It’s open source and HTML 4.01 compliant. It embraces Netscape plugins (like those for Flash or RealVideo). Konqueror also has a built-in FTP and WebDAV support.

Why you should consider it: If you’re a Linux user who wants a browser that can multitask, then Konqueror is definitely something to look into. It’s especially useful for those who want to be able to manage files right from within their browser.

Operating systems supported: Linux

7. SeaMonkey


SeaMonkey

SeaMonkey is developed by Mozilla and is an "all-in-one" internet suite of apps. While the browser within SeaMonkey is pretty standard (and not unlike Firefox), what sets it apart is that it has integrated email, newsgroups, an HTML editor, IRC Chat, and web development tools. The mail feature offers tabbed reading and supports tagging and alternate views for better email finding and reading. The HTML editor renders CSS and gives you dynamic image and table resizing. For web developers, you can take advantage of the JavaScript debugger and a DOM inspector.

Why you should consider it: For developers and designers, SeaMonkey has a plethora of useful built-in features. It’s also a great option for people who like to run the bare minimum number of apps.

Current release version: 2.0.1

Operating systems supported: Windows 2000 and newer, Mac OS X 10.4 and newer, and Linux.

8. OmniWeb


OmniWeb

OmniWeb is a WebKit browser created by the same people who created OmniGraffle and OmniOutliner. It aims to be fun and easy to use (like other Omni products) and shares a similar user interface. It has all the standard browser features we’ve come to expect (including tabbed browsing, bookmarks, and ad blocking), but also includes Workspaces, which lets you save browsing sessions to open later and includes an auto-save option and a built-in RSS reader.

Why you should consider it: For Mac users who want a browser that’s efficient and easy to use, OmniWeb might be just what you’re looking for. It’s appropriate for power users too, and the Workspaces feature is especially handy.

Current release version: 5.0.1

Operating systems supported: Mac OS X 10.4.8 or newer

9. Camino


Camino

Think of Camino as a Firefox build specifically for Macs, built on the Gecko 1.9 rendering engine. It includes phishing and malware protection, tabs (including a tab overview function that lets you see all your open tabs at once), "annoyance blocking" (which blocks ads, pop-ups, and Flash animations), Keychain support (to save your browsing credentials), and download notifications. It also includes AppleScript support, feed detection, session saving, recently closed tabs, and full keyboard access.

Why you should consider it: Camino is a great browser for Mac users who like Firefox but want something built specifically for the Mac.

Current release version: 2.0

Operating systems supported: Mac OS X 10.4 or newer

10. Flock


Flock

Flock is probably better known than many of the other browsers above, especially if you’re a social media addict. Flock was created specifically to make managing your social media activities easier from within your browser.

Flock focuses on staying connected through social media by making sharing and publishing things easier. It integrates directly with Facebook, Gmail, Digg, YouTube, MySpace, Flickr, Twitter, WordPress, Blogger, Delicious, Bebo, TypePad, Picasa, and more. Special features include a People sidebar, a Media bar (to browse photos and videos from your favorite sites), a built-in feed reader, a photo uploader, a blog editor, and more. There are also extensions and custom themes available for download.

Why you should consider it: Flock is a great choice for social media power users who want to be able to connect with all their social media accounts from one place.

Current release version: 2.5

Operating systems supported: Windows, Linux, Mac OS X

by Cameron Chapman

from SixRevisions

20 Gorgeous Web Application Interfaces

The advancement of web technology has led to some incredibly impressive improvements in online application interface design. Below we’ll look at 20 web apps that aren’t only extremely useful, but indisputably attractive as well. I’ve subdivided the applications into four categories: Design, Business, Productivity and Miscellaneous.

Design


280 Slides


screenshot

280 slides is an absolutely amazing free alternative to Powerpoint and Keynote for making professional or personal presentations. The interface is beautifully streamlined and feels as nearly as good as those from Apple and Microsoft.

Pixlr


screenshot

On one hand I can’t help but think that the Pixlr interface is a near straight ripoff of Photoshop. On the other hand the resemblance to Photoshop is everything I like about it. Though by no means a suitable alternative for professionals, it’s definitely a fun, simpler image editor for beginners.

Aviary: Phoenix


screenshot

Aviary’s Phoenix is another well-designed online image editor. Again we see some strong Photoshop similarities with a bit more unique creativity thrown in. All of Aviary’s tools are simply top-notch and are built with an amazing richness of features and power.

Kuler


screenshot

Kuler is my preferred way to build color schemes. The interface is incredibly simple to use, yet powerful and attractive.

Clover


screenshot

Clover provides prefab websites for churches and ministries. Each site comes with a built-in editor called “The Greenhouse” that makes it a breeze to customize a site on the fly. If you stop by the site you can demo The Greenhouse on various site templates without even signing up!

Krop


screenshot

Krop provides creatives with an incredibly easy way to build a beautiful online portfolio and resume. Simply choose from one of the pre-built templates, upload some images, drop in some text and you’re well on your way to impressing potential clients and employers.

Businesss


Subernova


screenshot

Subernova is task management on visual steroids. Similar in concept to Basecamp, but a whole lot prettier. The key here is contrast. There are lots of light gray gradients offset by black and blue for objects that the designers want to call your attention to.

Freckle


screenshot

Freckle is a serious time tracking professional suite with a light hearted interface. The bright colors and easy to read charts swap out boring for beautiful in the normally mundane task of tracking your hours.

CoTweet


screenshot

CoTweet is targeted at businesses using Twitter to reach their customer base. The intuitive and attractive interface makes it a breeze to collaborate on and schedule your professional tweets.

InvoiceMachine


screenshot

The InvoiceMachine opts for a dead simple but very attractive interface heavy on dark/light contrast like Subernnova above.

Outright


screenshot

An entrepreneur’s dream, Outright is a way to track expenses and perform automatic bookkeeping operations for self-employed individuals and small businesses. The interface uses simple zebra striping and minimalist icons to make it easy to sort and navigate through lots of information.

Ballpark


screenshot

Ballpark is another app that makes it easy to build and track invoices online. Quality icon design and bright colors are the key to this excellent interface from Metalab.

Productivity


Scraplr


screenshot

Scraplr is an impressive online productivity tool that boasts an interface as rich in features as you’d expect from a pricey desktop todo app like Things or The Hit List. It’s still in private beta but you can get a sneak peek of the features and graphics at their site.

FocusBooster


screenshot

FocusBooster is a simple web timer meant to help you stay on task for specified periods of time. The idea is that while the timer is going, you should strive for distraction free productivity (sorry Facebook, you get a turn after the timer ends.) The timer is a beautiful piece of art that features a simple start and stop button and a progress meter.

TodoTweet


screenshot

TodoTweet is an interesting concept that lets you use Twitter to create todo lists. I honestly don’t think Twitter is the best medium at all for this task but the interface is nice enough to make me consider changing my mind.

TeuxDeux


screenshot

TeuxDeux features one of the most wonderfully simple interfaces of any ToDo app I’ve come across. Simply type your todo under a weekday header. This allows you to spend most of your time performing tasks, not creating and managing lists.

Miscellaneous


Cadmus


screenshot

Cadmus is a social media aggregator that combines your Twitter, FriendFeed and RSS feeds into one nice muted gray interface.

Daytum


screenshot

Daytum is a handy tool that lets you track absolutely anything you want with absolutely beautiful minimalist graphics and colorful charts.

Penzu


screenshot

Penzu is a simple journaling app for keeping your private thoughts organized online. The interface features a simple notebook paper theme that cuts out all distractions while looking familiar and friendly.

GrooveShark


screenshot

Grooveshark is one of my favorite ways to listen to music online. The main reason for this is that the rich interface feels more like a full-scale desktop music application than a webapp. Searching for songs, making playlists and browsing your library is nearly as easy as in iTunes!

Conclusion


The stellar examples of web application design above can be great inspiration for your next web project, application or not. Consider the usability strengths and weaknesses in each of these apps and how you can apply these principals in your own UI design.

Use the comments below to let us know which app is your favorite, both for functionality and design.

WRITTEN BY JOSHUA JOHNSON, PUBLISHED ON 14TH MARCH 2010.
FILED IN GRAPHICSINSPIRATIONLAYOUTS.

from DesignShack

Writing Exploits?

This one here is pretty much  a very topnotch tutorial on how learning to write exploits and I believe you'd find it interesting too. But, remember this is put on here for learning purposes only...

This is a set of pretty hard core articles on exploit writing:

I don't know if this is with his permission or not, but you can also get the tutorials in PDF form over at http://www.exploit-db.com/ - Links straight to each PDF below:

from Room362

Send Fax Online – Free and Cheap!!!

Online Fax services to send free and cheap faxes


– Fax may be an outdated technology but there are still many organizations that depend on this mode of communication! However, there are not many publicly available fax machines these days, except for the few in corporate houses and government organizations!

If you still find a need to send a fax to organzations that still depend on this mode of communication, then here are a few online fax services, free and cheap! Some of these fax services are not only free but they also let you fax to far off countries!

1. GotFreeFax.com


This is one cool free online fax service that lets you send free fax online to the U.S. and Canada! What is even better is this free service lets you send an ad-free fax cover page! But the free service is limited to 3 pages per fax and 2 faxes per day. It is still a very useful service to shoot out those occasional faxes to U.S and canada, whenever you find the need.

The Premium Pay-Per-Fax Service offered by them is also dirt cheap! This is the deal – You can fax 1 document up to 30 pages! The document can be a pdf or a microsoft word doc file! While sending a fax of 10 pages would cost you 0.98 dollars, faxing 20 pages would cost you 1.98 dollars and 30 pages would cost you 2.98 dollars!

2. Faxzero.com


This is another service that lets you send free fax to anywhere in the U.S. and Canada! They also let you make 2 free faxes per day and a document to fax can be a max of 3 pages in size! But they do place an ad on the fax cover page.The premium service will let you fax a document of max. 15 pages at 1.99 dollars per fax.You can fax a pdf, microsoft word doc or docx file!

Here are a few more online fax services that offer you a free trial for a maximum period of 30 days!

3. efax.com


efax.com

4. popfax.com


popfax.com

5. myfax.com


myfax.com

6. ringcentral.com


ringcentral.com

7. nextivafax.com


8. trustfax.com


Enjoy the online fax services to send free and cheap faxes!

from TechBlissOnline

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Slurpr: WiFi aggregator, with a (big) catch

Slurpr may sound like another “Web 2.0″ site, but it’s actually a piece of networking hardware. The beastly device, designed by Dutch hacker Mark Hoekstra, is designed to aggregate a bunch of Wi-Fi access points into one big fat high speed connection.

Slurpr



Cool right?

The device automatically seeks out the six strongest open Wi-Fi channels, connects to all of them, and combines the signals into a massively fast ‘net connection.

Of course, we all know that using open wireless access points is against the law in many countries, so you and I would never use such a device. However, for those of your into defying authority, you can read more about the Slurpr here.

from Technabob

How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

Kids today have no clue what technology looked like back in the day. They just log on to their favorite websites and share pictures or chat away and not a care in the world what it was like dealing with those prehistoric, snail-slow loading webpages . Well, take a look back in time...

Google


This snapshot was taken on December 20, 1998.

4054663535 ea7e1bf10d o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

Yahoo


This snapshot was taken on October 20, 1996.

4055404824 f91bbe91a6 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

4055404220 8b21fc6068 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

Hotmail


This snapshot was taken on December 10, 1997.

4055404574 6766bcbe32 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

YouTube


This snapshot was taken on July 1, 2005.

4055405286 14725acf4d o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

MSN


This snapshot was taken on October 22, 1996.

4055404676 4084bdca28 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

Twitter


This snapshot was taken on October 6, 2006.

4055404940 4325c02f74 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

The fully functional old interface can be found on a link here.

Wikipedia


This snapshot was taken on March 31, 2001.

4054664235 5ee407667d o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

Flickr

This snapshot was taken on May 22, 2004.

4055404388 f4c50e92b0 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

ebay


This snapshot was taken on March 1, 2000.

4054663151 d9af096493 o How Top webpages of the world looked when they were first launched?

fully functional old interface can be found here.

from Techified