Monday, May 10, 2010

Five Best Personal Landing Pages [Hive Five]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5534456/five-best-personal-landing-pages

Five Best Personal Landing PagesNot everyone has the time or inclination to build and maintain a full-fledged web site. If you're just looking for a simple way to unify all your online profiles, these personal landing pages are a perfect fit.

Earlier this week, we asked you to share your favorite personal landing page. A personal landing page is a small-scale web site that directs visitors towards your other profiles on the web, a central page you can direct people to, instead of writing and linking a laundry list of your online presences—your Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, Last.fm, and other profiles.

If you're looking to set up a personal landing page to unify your online presence without the work of setting up and maintaining your own web site, the following services can help. Read on to see the most popular personal landing pages.

Note: For the screenshots below, we took snapshots of real profiles from all of the services, as discovered by Google searches or provided as examples on the main site of each service. Since the services are customizable, don't assume that all personal landing pages from that particular service look exactly like the sample screenshot. Visit the service web site for more information and to see how you can customize your own site.

Unhub (Free)

Five Best Personal Landing Pages
The Unhub service isn't as much a personal landing page as a personal landing bar. When you give people your Unhub profile URL, what they see is an Unhub bar across the top of the browser pane and your featured site below it. Unlike most personal landing page services which limit you to well known social networks and services, Unhub lets you link to anything you want. If you want the bar to have your Amazon wish list, your YouTube profile, a link to your Wikipedia page, and then links to a couple virtual portfolios of various work you've done, you can do that. You select the site Unhub will bring the user's focus to and which sites will be displayed across the Unhub bar. Unhub includes a URL shortening tool and site analytics to help you see which links get clicked the most and which profiles interest your visitors. You always have to point Unhub at something, even if it's just your Facebook profile page. If you're looking for a service that serves as a one-stop information board for your visitors, you might consider some of the other personal landing pages in this week's Hive Five.

Card.ly (Free)

Five Best Personal Landing Pages
Card.ly, as the name would imply, is a business-card-styled personal landing page. You can tweak your Card.ly profile with all sorts of customizations, scaling it from a simple set of social network icons people can click to a full-fledged mini-portal, with a profile, personal quotes, and additional information about you. Card.ly has a demo account, available here, where you can play around with the themes and settings to get a feel for the service before you sign up.

Flavors.me (Free)

Five Best Personal Landing Pages
Flavors.me is a personal landing page that emphasizes style and presentation over an abundance of widgets. The Flavors.me layout is designed to showcase a photograph or piece of artwork with a small bio and a set of links layered over it. Although the design is simple, the creative variations user come up with are quite interesting. You can browse through a directory of profiles here to get ideas. Simple and punchy design aside, Flavors.me sports a user-friendly, drag-and-drop interface that makes it quick to get a site up and running. You can check out our review of Flavors.me here.

Chi.mp (Free)

Five Best Personal Landing Pages
Compared to other contenders in this week's Hive Five, Chi.mp takes customization to another level. Instead of merely allowing you to swap out pictures or select which links you want to include, Chi.mp lets you build multiple profiles and highlight what's important to you. You can make a professional profile to share with colleagues, a personal profile to share with friends, and as many variations as you need for different situations or projects. In addition, you can emphasize some of the content you share over other content. Say you want to emphasize, for example, your Twitter feed over other shared content like your Flickr photos, Chi.mp lets you promote the Twitter feed to appear more prominently.

ClaimID (Free)

Five Best Personal Landing Pages
ClaimID has the least splashy personal landing page offering in this week's Hive Five. The emphasis at Claim ID isn't about expressing your artistic side, or wildly differentiating yourself from the crowd, but instead on showcasing the services that are important to you. Customization is limited, but it's easy enough to create a long list of all the services and web sites you want to share. ClaimID is tied into the OpenID service, so if it's important to you to show people that you've actually been verified as the person you're claiming to be, and that your links actually point to the real profiles of John Q. Smith, then you may want to consider ClaimID's personal landing page, despite the lack of eye candy.


Now that you've had a chance to look over the top five contenders for best personal landing page it's time to cast your vote in the poll below:



Which Personal Landing Page Is Best?survey software

Have a favorite personal landing page that wasn't featured? Let's hear about it in the comments. Have a tip or trick for making the most of a personal landing page? We want to hear about that too. If you have an idea for a future Hive Five send us an email at tips@lifehacker.com with Hive Five in the subject line.

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The Computer Cabinet Office Rebooted [Featured Workspace]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5534527/the-computer-cabinet-office-rebooted

The Computer Cabinet Office RebootedLast year we featured the Computer Cabinet Office and now we're back to highlight the updated version with a tighter configuration of monitors and a brand new desk.

The issues Steve Price was dealing with last year—inability to find a desk that fit his needs, lots of computer noise and heat—that led to him building a custom computer desk were again factored into his most recent build. His new desk drops a few monitors, angles them more effectively, and includes a under-desk shelf to keep the power strips and cables off the ground and tucked out of site. Check out the gallery before for a closer look.

If you have a workspace of your own to show off throw the pictures on your Flickr account and add it to the Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell Pool. Include some details about your setup and why it works for you, and you just might see it featured on the front page of Lifehacker.

The Computer Cabinet Office Rebooted [Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell Pool]

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DocTranslator Translates Office Documents with Google and Keeps Formatting [Translation]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5535005/doctranslator-translates-office-documents-with-google-and-keeps-formatting

DocTranslator Translates Office Documents with Google and Keeps FormattingGoogle's webapps can translate uploaded Microsoft Office documents, but with many caveats involving file sizes and HTML formatting. DocTranslator, a Java-powered webapp, runs your Office and text documents through Google Translate and sends them back with the same formatting.

DocTranslator runs entirely in your browser, and uses Java mainly to accept file uploads and send back downloads, so it's not quite as heavy as your cynical experience might indicate. It accepts Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files in both the standard formats and the 2007 variations (.docx, .xlsx, etc.), along with text documents. After picking your file, DocTranslator guesses at the language, then offers more than 50 languages to translate the document to. The languages and services come from Google Translate, so the offerings are likely to grow in the future. That's about all there is to the app—no file size limits, no sign-up or download needed, and it works as well as Google does, which is about the best free option around right now.

If you know of another, better free document translator, though, we're open to suggestions in the comments.

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Grab Free Vector Art Images at Love Vector Free [Design]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5535149/grab-free-vector-art-images-at-love-vector-free

Grab Free Vector Art Images at Love Vector FreeNext time you're hunting for icons, buttons, or other images to mock up or finish off a design, give Love Vector Free a look. It's a decent collection of free images that scale to whatever size image you're working with.

It's nowhere near the scale of the previously mentioned repository Open Clip Art Library, but Love Vector Free is pitched more toward web designs, buttons, and other functional pieces that designers and dabblers might be looking to use or draw from. Got a favorite source for free vector art elsewhere on the web? Pitch in a link in the comments.

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South Korea First Country To Broadcast 3DTV On Terrestrial Channels [3dTv]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5534935/south-korea-first-country-to-broadcast-3dtv-on-terrestrial-channels

South Korea First Country To Broadcast 3DTV On Terrestrial ChannelsSouth Korea was first to market with a 3DTV, but on May 19th the country will begin the world's first terrestrial broadcasts in 3D.

The Korea Communications Commission made the announcement that all four of the channels, KBS, MBC, SBS and EBS will start trialing it in a little over a week, with the first thing to broadcast in 3D being the 2010 Colorful Daegu Pre-Championships Meeting, on the KBS channel. Following that, SBS will show the FIFA World Cup in June, with 25 of the matches being shown in 3D. [Korea Times via Akihabara News]

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