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  • 01Jul
    Gmail's transition to labels-that-look-and-act-like-folders is finished: you can now use drag-and-drop to label messages. Labels no longer live in their own container and they're displayed below the built-in labels: inbox, spam, trash, etc.

    To make room for other features, Gmail only displays the most frequently used labels and hides the other labels behind a "more" dropdown. The list of labels is now customizable: you can hide built-in labels and some of your labels, while changing their order. If you rarely check the "spam" label or you don't save drafts, you can hide the system labels from the settings page.

    "You now have control over which of your labels show. We've done our best to get you started by automatically showing the labels you use most and hiding the rest. Label hiding is my favorite new feature, since it saves me from having to look through labels I rarely use. If I ever need to reach any of my old labels, I just click the "more" link," says Damian Gajda, from Google.


    I don't see the new features in my Gmail accounts, but Google promises that the changes are rolled out today.

    Update: Google wants to make labels more visible. If you didn't create labels, Gmail will add four labels for you: Personal, Receipts, Travel and Work. "When I joined the Gmail team, I was surprised to learn that only 29% of Gmail users had created any labels. We realized that if you didn't know about labels, it would be easy to assume Gmail had no way to organize your mail. Not only were "labels" unfamiliar, they were kind of hidden," explains Michael Leggett.


    { Thanks, Niranjan. }


  • 01Jul
    Dion Almaer
    "Can you imagine working in a place where you had no chairs and alarms go off when you don't walk fast enough?" http://www.dannychoo.com/detail...
  • 01Jul
    Dion Almaer
    RT @monkchips: "Republicans are the party that says government doesn't work & then they get elected & prove it" O'Rourke http://online.wsj.com/article...
  • 01Jul
    Dion Almaer
    RT @codepo8 "GeoMaker: Enter URL or text and convert to map or microformats to copy and paste." http://icant.co.uk/geomake...
  • 01Jul
    Dion Almaer
    PragPub is a new online magazine from the Prags and Michael Swaine! http://media.pragprog.com/newslet...
  • 01Jul

    Thirty years ago, Sony began selling a device which would not be an easy sell today. It was a portable music player with a battery life of around three hours, with which you had to choose the music you wanted to listen to before setting off on your journey, could only play tracks in a set order, and ran a good risk of literally chewing up your media.

    At the time, though, the launch of Sony’s Walkman was revolutionary: the portable cassette player allowed people to listen to music on the move without having to carry a boombox on their shoulder. Or, in the case of my family, it kept my sister occupied on car journeys without the rest of the family having to sit through Enid Blyton audiobooks for the thousandth time.

    The BBC marked the anniversary by asking a 13-year-old boy to replace his mp3 player with a Walkman for a week. There’s some interesting insight to how the device has aged but, at the ripe old age of 32, I must admit the article exposed cultural differences beyond technology.

    The boy complained that “the weight of the unit is enough to haul down a low-slung pair of combats”, which only made me wonder why he didn’t invest in a belt. He also noted the nostalgic response of a teacher, but revealed the incident came about because “In some classes in school they let me listen to music.”

    Among the other problems the child encountered, which are of course hilarious to anyone who’s ever operated a Walkman, and perfectly understandable to anyone else, was that he took several days to realize the tape could be turned over, and that he mistook the ‘Metal’ switch for a genre-specific form of a graphic equalizer. Still, youthful ingenuity isn’t dead yet: the child created his own shuffle function by holding down the rewind button and releasing it at a random point.

    Sadly one person who won’t be cashing in on the anniversary is John Young, the designer of the Retropod. It’s pictured above and if you thought it was simply a Walkman, take another closer look. It’s actually a customized carrying case for the iPod:

    Unfortunately Young had to stop selling the product after Sony’s lawyers complained that consumers “will be misled into thinking that Sony is backward in its design of products and is going away from miniaturization, as the size of the tape player housing is quite large by today’s standards.”

    For British users, the anniversary also brings back memories of one of the most unlikely tributes to consumer electronics, Cliff Richard’s Wired For Sound:

    After 30 years, one question does remain unanswered about the device. How come when my sister and I got identical Walkmans one Christmas, hers lasted for a decade and mine was defunct within months?

    Related posts:

    1. A Sugar Powered Walkman?
    2. My First Gadget: Crayola MP3 Player
    3. New Microsoft media player coming Zune


  • 01Jul

    By Casey Lynn
    Contributing Writer, [GAS]

    game_dr_2Some of the gadget blogs were reporting on the “game doctor” before it was released in June, but now that the mainstream media has picked up the story, you can be sure that more moms will be hearing about this device and thinking, “Oh, that’s brilliant!”

    This isn’t the first video game timer out there (and of course there’s even one built into the Xbox 360), but it seems to be getting a lot of attention. The 79-year-old retired businessman who invented it “figures there’s large, pent-up demand for his inexpensive and easy-to-use device.”

    So what does the GameDr do besides having a confusing and rather silly name? It’s just a clamp-on lock for the power cord to a game console, equipped with at timer. It’s locked with a four-digit combination, and without that combination, the power shuts off when time is up. To its credit, it at least give a 10-minute and 1-minute beeping warning so that the kids in theory have a chance to save their game before the system goes black.

    Wired Gadgets, who gave the device Gadget Lab “Fail” award, pointed out that even if the device is “tamper proof” as advertised (i.e., you’d have to break it to get the cord out without the combination), you could just buy a new cord for $20 bucks. After all, for most game systems, you could easily just replace the locked-up cord with another one and put it back when you’re done, and assuming that mom’s not around (which I guess she wouldn’t be, because why else would she need a timer as opposed to just telling the kid to stop playing games?), she’d never know. I foresee secret stashes of power cords underneath mattresses along with dirty magazines.

    It’s not that there’s anything wrong with wanting to make sure that a kid isn’t playing video games when they should be doing their homework, sleeping, eating, etc. After all, we don’t want kids collapsing from exhaustion. But it seems to me that a parent who cares enough to want to encourage healthy moderation wouldn’t need a device like this to do it. I suppose the exception might be for a teenage latchkey kid, though if you’re loosening the leash enough to let a kid stay home by himself, the GameDr could be a little insulting. It seems more likely to me that the GameDr will be popular among those who aren’t so much concerned about moderation, as control. “Sorry, your half hour a day of video game time is up! Don’t look at me, the game doctor says so. Now go update your color-coded wheel-of-chores.”

    gamedrOf course, as noted above, for kids unlucky enough to have a visit from the GameDr, the smart ones shouldn’t have much trouble getting around it. As Wired also pointed out, if your mom set the thing up, then you could probably just try your siblings’ birthdays and be able to crack the code pretty quickly.

    Though I have to say, I’m still dubious of that big smile on the kid’s face on the packaging.

    [Product Page]

    Related posts:

    1. 10 geeky movies to show your kids
    2. Does Video Game Immersion Turn Kids Into Zombies?
    3. Is video game addiction a plausible psychiatric disorder?


  • 01Jul

    Web Elements Kit is a set of 17 frequently used web design objects that comes in PSD format.

    It can be used for easier prototyping or updated easily to create completely unique outputs.

    PSD Web Design Elements

    There are 17 elements like:

    • tabbed content
    • sliders
    • newsletter form
    • buttons
    • & more

    which are well organized, labeled & comes with various color variations to choose from.

    Elements are offered in two ways: a single PSD file that contains all of them & PSD files for every object.

    Special Downloads:
    Free Admin Template For Web Applications
    jQuery Dynamic Drag’n Drop
    ScheduledTweets

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    Tags:

    Related posts

  • 01Jul
    Dion Almaer
    Alex MacCaw has created a P2P Browser Plus plugin called Machsend http://leadthinking.com/89-mach...
  • 01Jul

    Blame Canada

    Canadians are a funny lot.

    They use strange words and spell with a U. They kiss cod. They enjoy being frozen solid nearly 8 months a year, and they call their money Loonies and Toonies.

    Don’t get me wrong; they’re nice people just the same. They’re nature lovers and humanitarians and they like things simple and friendly.

    And contrary to popular belief, they’re actually pretty smart.

    But there’s just one problem. Your marketing strategies? You notice how they’ve been changing? That the old-school methods aren’t working anymore . . . at all?

    Well, I’ve figured out whose fault it is.

    Blame Canada

    You see, Canucks have a strange mindset. They’re gentle people, and mostly kind of quiet. If you drove up to the frozen tundra and started screaming, “Buy my stuff!” at the top of your lungs, you’d probably startle the wildlife and be ushered off (politely) by Mounties in red coats and really great hats.

    It’s happening all over. Those wily Canadians are causing a marketing revolution, and it’s spreading too fast to contain.

    Think about it for a minute. All of a sudden, your potential customers hate screaming and being pushed around, don’t they? It’s almost like they’ve been influenced by an evil foreign power.

    And no one wants to be told what to do anymore. They want to be persuaded, gently convinced that what you have to sell is really good for them.

    It’s those Canadians; I’m sure of it.

    If you were trying to persuade a Canadian, he’d listen — as long as you were making sense. In Canada, they know when you’re pulling the wool over their eyes. They like to hear good reasons they should trust you, and they observe you for a while to see whether you actually mean what you say.

    Now everyone’s picking up on that. Your potential customers are looking for good reasons to trust you, and they’re watching every move you make.

    They’re thinking more, too, damn them. And getting slower to make a decision to buy.

    They even want you to be a nice person.

    That whole “nice” thing

    I’m noticing the “nice” thing cropping up all over the place these days. And once again, I blame Canada.

    You see, Canadians have a reputation for being really, really nice. They take care of each other and they ask if anyone needs help.

    They actually like doing it, too. The whole “no man is an island” saying? They actually believe that in Canada. They’re all about caring and sharing and being kind to the animals. (Especially the moose. They’re kind of obsessed with moose.)

    Well, that do-good attitude is leaking all over. You might have noticed it yourself. Customers expect you to be nice to others and ethical in general and do the right thing. They want to know that you actually care about their well-being. Then they’ll think about buying from you.

    Tough stuff. Customers who want you to care before they buy.

    Yeah, I blame Canada.

    It gets worse

    The other thing about those Canucks? They like to help other people. All the time. It’s like a compulsion.

    If you need information, directions, help . . . You can’t go wrong up north. Everyone’s so nice and helpful that it would almost make you cry.

    So now everyone wants you to be helpful like that. They want you to give them valuable information and tell them directions and hold open doors for them. They need to know that you’re willing to give before you receive.

    No more me, myself and I. It’s all about asking what you can do for your customers today.

    Don’t forget to ask in their language, too. No fluff. No fancy words. No jargon.

    Canadians hate that. And now everybody tunes you out if you use fancy fluff and jargon. You have to learn to speak in words your target market understands. Yes, even words like “aboot” and “hoose.”

    So if you have to change how you’re reaching your customers, I say blame Canada.

    If you have to learn how to simplify your message and talk in the language of your target audience, blame Canada.

    If you have to become more convincing, quieter, and more ethical, blame Canada.

    Oh, and when you start reaching more people, gaining more readers, and making more sales?

    Beauty, eh?

    (Happy Canada Day, everybody.)

    About the Author: James Chartrand is an unrepentant Canuck who survives exclusively on maple syrup, poutine, and beer. He is unfailingly polite and helps entrepreneurs and freelancers earn a decent living online at Men with Pens (dot CA, of course).


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