Archive forNovember 8, 2006

Mac App A Day- free apps in December

FREE!!!

Mac App A Day: One free app every day in December. Mac App A Day is a bunch of developers who have gotten together and agreed to give away one app for download every single day in December plus one on New Years Day, totaling up at 32 free apps. What’s the catch? Well, it seems… nothing. One app will be free for download from the website every day, up to 5,000 downloads a day…

MacVolPlace – News

Don’t miss out!

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slideshare

slideshare is a you tube for slideshows. Upload your powerpoint or open office slides, tag them, share, link from your blog, and more!!!!

Here’s the Top Ten Reasons Libraries Are Still Important

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Ideas for Blogging

Additional blogging FYI:

10 + 9 Ways to Find Great Post Ideas for Your Blog

Randfish has a useful post over at SEOmoz with 10 Web Tools to Help Generate Blog Content Ideas. In it he lists a variety of tools including Google Groups, Technorati, Craigslist, Del.icio.us, StumbleUpon, Google/Yahoo News, Keyword Tools, Wikipedia, Digg/Reddit and Yahoo! Answers.

I’d add to the list Topix.net (which offers some similar tools to the above) as well as Bloglines ’search’ feature which lets you set keywords that will show blogs talking about those words in a folder.

Having said that – the majority of posts that I write these days come from other sources. Here are 9 more idea sources to add to randfish’s 10:

  1. Conversations – it’s amazing how many ideas come from the chats I have with other bloggers, co-workers, readers, friends and family both in real life and via IM or email.
  2. Reader Questions – related to this is responding to questions asked by readers
  3. Reader Comments – similarly, the comments left on your blog can be a treasure trove of ideas for future posts
  4. Other Blogs - like this post, I find the writing of others often stimulates posts that build on, extend or bounce off their ideas. Don’t forget to dig around in other people’s archives also as it isn’t only current posts that are places where you’ll get ideas. Of course always give credit to the source of your ideas.
  5. Books, Newspapers, Magazines – I’m increasingly finding inspiration in offline sources of information
  6. Mad Ideas – ever been laying in bed at night and get a crazy idea! I don’t just chuckle to myself when they come – I get up and write them down. It’s amazing how many of them end up being key posts for me later.
  7. Experience – a fairly large proportion of my post ideas come directly out of an experience that I’m having on the topic. Problems, achievements, challenges and mistakes are often the best source of useful posts as you’ll find readers relate well to them.
  8. Brainstorming – I take time out each week to specifically come up with ideas to post about. While most of my posts ‘just come to me’ through my day to day rhythm – I’m a big believer in working hard on story ideas also and have a folder permanently on my desktop filled with text documents that have little else in them except for a topic idea and perhaps a few jotted down notes – all to work on later.
  9. Archives – dig around in your own blog’s archives and you’ll be amazed at the opportunities that you’ll find. Look for half finished ideas, opportunities to update your ideas or even topics that your newer readers wouldn’t have seen before.

Where do your ideas for posts come from?

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-Thanks to ProBlogger for the post.

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State of the Blogosphere, october 2006

A little FYI for those of you blogging.  This is said to be a quarterly ‘report’ on the world of blogging.

State of the Blogosphere, October, 2006

Check it out!

Thanks to ProBlogger for the info.

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Abraham Lincoln email etiquette

Abraham Lincoln on email

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Telecom expert Tom Wheeler says that Abraham Lincoln, the first U.S. president with access to the telegraph, developed a personal code of electronic communications that modern-day netizens would do well to adopt in their email habits.

Wheeler describes Lincoln’s “T-mail” etiquette and the lessons we can learn from it, like:

Less is More – Whereas many saw the blank telegraph form as an invitation to an essay, Lincoln’s telegrams were short and to the point. “Your long despatch of yesterday just received,” Lincoln chided General George McClellan about a 10-page telegram sent in May 1863. Then the president required only three additional sentences to reply to the general’s endless essay.

Responding to a long-winded message with only a few words is indeed a great way to train others how to use email. Glad that Honest Abe agrees. Thanks, Steve!

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Backup to Gmail (windows)

Download of the Day: Backup to Email (Windows)

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Windows only: Quickly create a backup of any file by e-mailing it to yourself. That’s the idea behind Backup to Email, which makes it a simple two-step process. Just right-click any file, then choose Backup to Email; the software instantly ferries the file to your Gmail account. (It should really be called Backup to Gmail.) It even splits files larger than 10MB.

This is one of those head-smacking, why-didn’t-anyone-think-of-this-sooner utilities. I’ve long advocated the idea of backing up important files by e-mailing them to yourself. I’ll often do that after working hours on a feature–just in case my hard drive chooses that moment to die.

Backup to Email works like a charm and saves me having to create and address a new e-mail every time I want to make an on-the-fly backup. It’s free and Windows-compatible.

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