Friday, September 03, 2010

Unhearit Gets that Song Out of Your Head with a Catchy New One [Annoyances]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5627456/unhearit-gets-that-song-out-of-your-head-with-a-catchy-new-one

Unhearit Gets that Song Out of Your Head with a Catchy New OneUnhearit uses a fight-fire-with-fire approach to getting annoying songs out of your head by barraging you with new and catchy tunes.

Visit Unhearit, click the New Song button, and Unhearit kicks out a catchy tune. We were dubious about its ability to crank out catchy song after catchy song but after repeatedly clicking the New Song button we realized that each new song was catchy enough to make us forget about the prior tune. The repertoire of the tool is impressive too, in the course of our testing we heard the Super Mario Bros theme song, got Rick Rolled, and heard some excellent music from a 40 year span.

On top of just spinning up new songs for you Unhearit includes quick sharing via popular social networks and the ability to download the new songs you discover via the service. Have a favorite tool for getting a pesky song out of your head? Let's hear about it in the comments.

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From the Tips Box: International Gmail Calls, Standing Desks, and Dropbox Drives [From The Tips Box]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5627949/from-the-tips-box-international-gmail-calls-standing-desks-and-dropbox-drives/gallery/

Readers offer their best tips for calling from Gmail overseas, making easy standing desks, and mounting Dropbox as a virtual drive.

Don't like the gallery layout? Click here to view everything on one page.

About the Tips Box: Every day we receive boatloads of great reader tips in our inbox, but for various reasons—maybe they're a bit too niche, maybe we couldn't find a good way to present it, or maybe we just couldn't fit it in—the tip didn't make the front page. From the Tips Box is where we round up some of our favorites for your buffet-style consumption. Got a tip of your own to share? Add it in the comments, share it here, or email it to tips at lifehacker.com.

From the Tips Box: International Gmail Calls, Standing Desks, and Dropbox Drives

Make Calls from Gmail Outside the U.S. with a VPN

Abhijeet writes a blog post on how to make calls from outside the U.S. in Gmail:

Like many others outside the United States, I too was wondering how to get my hands on the cool call phone feature which Gmail introduced recently for its US users. There were reports that if you set your Gmail language settings to English(US), it should work. And yes, it did for many. But not for me (and for many others).

So, while hunting for a workaround, I thought why not try one of the free VPN clients we mentioned in our hide IP and browse securely article, and see if getting a US based IP address is all that's needed. And guess what, it worked like a charm!

Here's what I did.

1. Signed out of Gmail.

2. Fired up my favorite VPN client and got myself a US IP address.

3. Signed back into Gmail, and found a nice "Call Phone" option in the chat column.

It worked for me so I am assuming it should work for many others out there. Try it out and let me know if it does.

Also, it should be noted that as soon as I disconnected from the VPN and came back to my original connection, the call phone option was gone. So this isn't a permanent thing and would require you to stay connected using the VPN.


From the Tips Box: International Gmail Calls, Standing Desks, and Dropbox Drives

Turn Any Desk into a Standing Desk for $5

Chelsea Otakan tells us how she made a cheap standing desk:

Use $5 bed risers from Target or Walmart for an easy DIY standing desk. They'll lift a desk with normal legs around 5 inches off the floor.

I'm 4' 11" using a Blu Dot Paperclip desk with 5' risers and it works great for me. Taller (read: normal height) people will probably need stackable or adjustable risers.

They sell adjustable bed risers that will add up to 8 inches, and stackable wooden risers that are 4' per unit, but more expensive.


From the Tips Box: International Gmail Calls, Standing Desks, and Dropbox Drives

Manage Dropbox as a Virtual Drive

X3geek shows us a neat Windows Explorer trick for Dropbox users:

There is subst.exe utility in windows which creates virtual drives of paths associated with them. So I use it to manage Dropbox folder. You need to make a cmd or bat file with the these 2 lines:

subst /d X:
subst X: "C:\Users\[user]\Documents\My Dropbox"

and put the file in your startup folder ("Start"- type "shell:startup" in the search field) as the command file mounts the folder into a virtual drive. The first line deletes a substituted virtual drive. You'll see a drive (X: in this case) in My Computer which has Dropbox folders. Thanks to this thread.

Note: the command shown will work on Windows 7, for Windows XP the command has to be "C:\Documents and Settings\[user]\My Documents\My Dropbox"

Note that you can do this with any folder in Windows, but it may be particularly helpful for some Dropbox users to visualize their Dropbox folder as a network drive.

From the Tips Box: International Gmail Calls, Standing Desks, and Dropbox Drives

Use an Old CD Spindle to Coil Wire

Jared Pavan shares another use for old CD spindles:

Use an old CD spindle to distribute wire from a loose spool. There's room in there for at least 2 more spools. Combine this with the under-the-desk CD spindle, and you'd be set!


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KoHive is a Shared Virtual Workspace for Brainstorming, Filesharing, and More [Collaboration]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5628836/kohive-is-a-shared-virtual-workspace-for-brainstorming-filesharing-and-more

KoHive is a virtual workspace you access through your web browser. It's easy to create multiple "hives" for different projects, share files, communicate in real time, and aggregate content from across the web.

The biggest thing KoHive has going for it is a butter-smooth interface. It's easy to navigate within and between multiple hives, talk to other hive members, and share files. KoHive has a modular app system for plugging in the tools you need to get the projects you're working on organized and completed. You can manage tasks, share files and notes, upload images or import them from Flickr, message, and import videos from YouTube and Vimeo. KoHive also sports shared bookmarking, social network-style status updates, and a group drawing application.

Check out the video above to see it in action or visit KoHive at the link below to sign up for a free account. Thanks Sobert!

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Use Google Storage as a One-Time Cost, Lifetime Backup Solution [Online Storage]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5628993/use-google-storage-as-a-one+time-cost-lifetime-backup-solution

Use Google Storage as a One-Time Cost, Lifetime Backup SolutionYou can get extra Gmail storage pretty cheaply from Google, but eagle-eyed reader gthing lets us know that you have read access to that storage even after you cancel your subscription.

You have read and write access to your storage for an entire year after paying, but if you choose not to renew, you still have access to your data for as long as you want—you just can't add more stuff. From Google's policy:

No matter when you cancel your storage subscription, your extra storage will be available for the entire year you've purchased. After your plan expires, your storage will be limited to each individual product's free storage quota. Under our current policy, any content over the free storage quota will still be accessible, however you will not be able to add new content until your storage balance falls below the free storage limit.

It won't work as a continuous backup solution, but it works great as a one-time data dump. So, while you wouldn't want to necessarily store important data there (since most important data gets outdated quickly), I could see it being useful for, say, TV seasons that you bought on iTunes but already watched, or other similar space hogs—essentially, things that you don't want to delete but don't have the hard drive space to let them sit around and collect dust.

[via #tips]

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Canon's Omnidirectional Camera Is a 50 Megapixel Eye That Looks Everywhere at Once [Canon]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5628723/canons-omnidirectional-camera-is-a-50-megapixel-eye-that-looks-everywhere-at-once

Canon's Omnidirectional Camera Is a 50 Megapixel Eye That Looks Everywhere at OncePanoramic photography can be tricky. What's better? Canon's camera that shoots a single, 360° image. The tech uses a giant, 50 megapixel CMOS sensor and aspheric mirror to capture a sharp, sweeping photo, exceeding the human eye's measly 120° view.

Canon's Omnidirectional Camera Is a 50 Megapixel Eye That Looks Everywhere at Once

The resulting high-detail imagery can fluidly viewed and navigated without the seams and perspectival glitches sometimes found in panoramic scenes.

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