Archive for June, 2008

Jun 30 2008

Lessons in Productivity from Ralph Waldo Emerson

Published by under Uncategorized

Editor’s note: This is a guest post from Brett McKay, editor of The Art of Manliness

Before there was Steven Covey, or GTD, or Zen Habits, before simplicity was hip, and even before the advent of a crushing load of modern technology from which people would long to be freed, there were the American Transcendentalists. The OG of simplicity. Foremost among these was Ralph Waldo Emerson, one of the finest American minds, and a man who espoused principles that resonate even today.

1. Write everything down

Men are born to write… Whatever he beholds or experiences, comes to him as a model and sits for its picture. He counts it all nonsense that they say, that some things are undescribable. He believes that all that can be thought can be written, first or last; and he would report the Holy Ghost, or attempt it. Nothing so broad, so subtle, or so dear, but comes therefore commended to his pen, and he will write. In his eyes, a man is the faculty of reporting, and the universe is the possibility of being reported.

A problem that Emerson faced his entire life was the possession of an unmanageable mind. His thoughts leaped quickly from one idea to another. He had moments in life where insights sprang from his mind like water from a broken dam. During these times, Emerson had trouble organizing his thoughts effectively. Yet these deluges were gone in a flash and he was then beset with an intellectual dry spell. He compared the challenge of managing his mind to that of harnessing thunderbolts.

In order to manage these fluctuations, Emerson kept a journal. Every day he collected even the smallest thought, idea, or dream that crossed his mind. This enabled Emerson to better organize his thoughts when they flowed freely and to spur new ideas when he hit a dry spell. Writing helped Emerson make sense of the world. He would revisit the ideas he had recorded and add to them as he gained new insights. Thanks to Emerson’s journaling habit, we are blessed today with his great essays on simplicity and self-reliance.

How to apply Emerson’s lesson in your life
Take the 30 day challenge and focus completely on collecting your thoughts in a journal. Anytime a thought flits across your mind, record it. Make capturing your thoughts ubiquitous by carrying a small notebook with you everywhere. Personally, I carry around a pocket Moleskine. They’re wonderful to write in and are small enough to fit in your back pocket.

2. Eliminate Distractions

The one prudence in life is concentration; the one evil is dissipation: and it makes no difference whether our dissipations are coarse or fine; property and its cares, friends, and a social habit, or politics, or music, or feasting. . . Friends, books, pictures, lower duties, talents, flatteries, hopes, - all are distractions which cause oscillations in our giddy balloon, and make a good poise and a straight course impossible. You must elect your work; you shall take what your brain can, and drop all the rest. Only so, can that amount of vital force accumulate, which can make the step from knowing to doing.

Emerson understood early on his career as a writer that if he was to succeed, complete focus had to be given to the task at hand. By eliminating distractions in his life, Emerson created an environment in which he could completely focus on his most important work. This is not to say that Emerson was a hermit who lived only for work. He loved to engage in pithy conversations with friends in his home and visit them at home and abroad. But he did not let such things take away from his passion for writing and lecturing.

How to apply Emerson’s lesson in your life
Emerson eliminated distractions by limiting the amount of books he read, streamlining “lower duties” like household chores, and avoiding relationships with people whose nervous temperaments upset his focus. While today there are many more distractions than in Emerson’s day, we too can reduce our information consumption. Put Haiku Productivity in practice by limiting the amount of stuff you own, RSS feeds you read, and times you check email. By doing so, you’ll create an environment conducive to getting things done.

3. Keep moving

“Ah!” said a brave painter to me, thinking on these things, “if a man has failed, you will find he has dreamed instead of working. There is no way to success in our art, but to take off your coat, grind paint, and work like a digger on the railroad, all day and every day.”

Emerson understood that it is human nature to “lapse . . . quickly into flesh and sleep.” Nature is constantly pulling us toward the path of least resistance. To battle this natural tendency for laziness, Emerson stressed that we must “use all the exalters that will bring us into . . . a productive state.” For Emerson, the most effective tonic for laziness was work.

Emerson knew that once motivation dies it is hard to resuscitate. He kept his motivation alive by constantly working. When times were difficult and ideas didn’t come to him, Emerson continued to work knowing that inspiration would come soon. In a letter to an acquaintance, Emerson compared the mind to a pear-tree that goes through a season of bareness only to suddenly burst forth in fruitful growth. However, the farmer must continue to prune and graft even during these moments of sterility in order to reap the harvest.

Applying Emerson’s lesson in your life

Keep working even if you’re tired, feel uninspired, or apathetic towards your goal. Use this list of 20 great motivation hacks to help you stay moving in the right direction. While these simple tips are not the cure to restoring your high powered motivation completely, they’re great for keeping working until your season of motivation returns.

Read more from Brett McKay on the excellent blog, The Art of Manliness.

Original post by Leo

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Jun 30 2008

The Best Foods You Aren’t Eating [Health]

Published by under Uncategorized

beets.pngThe New York Times Well blog asked nutritionist and author Jonny Bowden to round up the healthiest easy-to-find foods that rarely make their way into our shopping carts. The resulting 11 foods, ranging from beets and Swiss chard to pumpkin seeds and sardines, represent healthy options that you should be eating but probably aren’t. Be sure to check out the post for the lowdown on what makes each food stand out and advice on how to incorporate them into your diet. Got a favorite obscure-yet-healthy eat of your own that you love? Let’s hear about it in the comments.


Original post by Adam Pash

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Jun 30 2008

Start Using the New iGoogle Today [Screenshot Tour]

Published by under Uncategorized

new-igoogle4.pngLast week we told you about iGoogle’s new look, which they’ve rolled out to a few users in June and will continue to roll out to users through July. However, if you’re dying to start using the new iGoogle today you can head to the iGoogle Sandbox Sign Up page and enable the new iGoogle right now. The only catch: Google puts you on the honor system that you’re a developer. If you’re comfortable calling yourself a developer (there are no real checks in place), then go ahead and get started. Either way, hit the jump for a closer look at the new iGoogle.

new-igoogle-2.png
As you can see, all of the tabs that used to be on the top are now found in a sidebar on the left of iGoogle. When one tab is focused, you can see all of the individual gadgets by name beneath the tab name.

gmail-gadget-expanded.png

Clicking on one of the individual gadgets will show only that gadget. So far I haven’t seen anything special when focused on one gadget, but if gadgets were made to take advantage of the full view, the fullscreen focus has a lot of potential. For example, this little Gmail gadget—which doesn’t do much when it’s focused—could work more like a Gmail-replacement when it’s focused.

Luckily Google is, in fact, planning to take advantage of this expanded view. I’m not seeing it in the iGoogle Sandbox yet, but the experimental iGoogle features help page shows Google Reader-like views for RSS feeds you’ve subscribed to in iGoogle like the feed for The Onion in the screenshot below.

expanded-igoogle-gadget.png
Finally, as we reported last week, the new iGoogle integrates with Gmail chat, so you have access to the same IM in iGoogle as you do in Gmail.

igoogle-chat.png
If you give the new iGoogle a try and aren’t happy with the new interface, you can still switch back to the standard iGoogle by navigating back the the iGoogle Sandbox link below. It won’t be for long, though; even if you don’t enable it through the sandbox, the new iGoogle should be hitting your Google account sometime this month.


Original post by Adam Pash

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Jun 30 2008

ZDNet Clock Overclocks Your Mac Pro [Featured Mac Download]

Published by under 5627


Mac OS X only: Freeware application ZDNet Clock overclocks your Mac Pro’s processor for faster performance. As the name suggests, the application is made by the German branch of tech web site ZDNet, and according to the download page the latest generation Mac Pro (3.1) with a 2.8GHz processor can be overclocked to 3.24GHz without increasing voltage to the CPU and without losing stability (translation: faster computer, no major risk). Overclocking has never been as easy on Macs as PCs, but the ZDNet Clock tool aims to make it just that. ZDNet Clock only works on Intel Mac Pros and the Apple server Xserve, requires OS X 10.5. We don’t have a Mac Pro at Lifehacker HQ to test it on, so if you feel like being our canary in the coalmine, let’s hear how it worked for you in the comments.


Original post by Adam Pash

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Jun 30 2008

The Netgear Open Source Router [Stuff We Like]

Published by under 5631

netgears-open-source-router.pngThe Netgear Open Source Router is aimed specifically at running third-party, open-source firmwares like previously mentioned Tomato or DD-WRT. We’ve covered installing these firmwares on supported routers here and here, but Netgear’s Open Source Router is unique in that it’s designed specifically to support these open-source projects; Netgear has even created a community web site where enthusiasts can contribute guides and more. The Netgear Open Source Router costs $57 from Amazon.


Original post by Adam Pash

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Jun 30 2008

Set Your Chat Privacy on a Schedule [Instant Messaging]

Published by under Uncategorized

adium-privacy.png
All things Mac web site Macworld details how to set your instant message privacy status on a schedule to help you stay productive during your busy times. Unfortunately there are no IM clients that allow for privacy scheduling, so the article details how to adjust your privacy settings on a schedule using AppleScript. The script, which works with the popular Adium instant messaging client, focuses on the privacy settings, but you could just as easily tweak the script to change your status on a schedule as well. Whatever your preference, scheduling your visibility and status in your IM client could make a huge difference in your productivity and help cut down significantly on interruptions.


Original post by Adam Pash

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Jun 30 2008

The Power User’s Guide to This Web Site [Reader Guide To Lifehacker]

Published by under 5619


Whether you’re new to this site or you’re a star commenter, chances are there are lots of things you didn’t know you could do hidden in these pages. From comments to profiles to tags to feeds to embedding images and video clips into your posts here, a little know-how can go a long way. Find out everything you ever wanted to know about how to get things done around Lifehacker and its family of sites—including Gawker, Gizmodo, io9, Jezebel, and Valleywag—after the jump.

Sign Up

reg-thumb.png While we’d like to spare you hackneyed slogans about privileges and membership, it is true that Lifehacker and friends are a lot more interesting and useful when you’re actually signed in. Anyone can register for an account here and start “clipping” (or bookmarking) articles in their user profile, and following other commenters (more on that later). If you haven’t already, just go ahead and sign up and log in. Now we can get this party started.

Audition for Commenting Privileges

Just because you have a login to Lifehacker and the other Gawker sites doesn’t mean you automatically get commenting privileges. (There are too many spammer and jerks on the internet for us to let just anyone in that easy.) To earn yourself the privilege of posting comments here, we make you work for it—just a little bit.

To audition for commenting privileges, once you’re signed in, submit an on-topic, intelligent, funny and helpful comment or two or three on a few of our posts. We’ve got a small group of moderators who check out comment auditions and green light the users who have proved they’re humans with something good to say. Once your first comment is approved, you can post public comments from there on in. That approval process usually takes a few hours if not half a day, so if you’ve submitted a comment and you’re waiting, hang in there. We’re on it. (Hint: We don’t approve people who post things like “First!”, include their blog URL for no good reason in the signature of every comment, or don’t have anything of substance to say.) Get more info in our Comments Frequently Asked Questions.

commentviaemail1.pngComment via email. If you don’t want to go through the whole registration rigmarole but have a burning comment on a post here, you can send us a comment via email. Just click on the @ button on any post to get its individual address. But! Before you send your email! Make sure you’ve deleted your email signature, especially the one with your full name and address in it. We don’t approve comments with full names and addresses in them. Here’s more on posting a comment via email.

Become a Comment Master

Once you’ve earned yourself commenting privileges, the lights are off, the keg is tapped, and the music’s turned up. Seriously—the good stuff on this site? It happens in the comments. Here’s a list of stuff you can do in the comments (besides just type into the text box and press “submit”).

  • Reply to individual commenters. reply.pngWhen you want to respond to a particular comment in a thread, click on the arrow, as shown. That will insert the users’ name into your comment with a link back to his or her comment. Right now there’s no easy way to see only replies to your comments without scrolling yourself, but it is something we’ve got on the to-do list.
  • Preview your comment as you type. There’s nothing worse than typing out a thoughtful comment, pressing submit, and seeing a typo publish to the site. Select the “preview comment” box to see exactly how your comment will look when it publishes as-you-type. (Hint: Firefox users, the Better Lifehacker extension will automatically check that box for you.)
  • Bold, italicize, and add links to your comment with HTML. We allow several HTML tags inside our comments, from <b></b> for bold, <i></i> for italics to <a></a> for links. Some crafty troublemakers even discovered that the <blink></blink> tag works. (More on how to turn that nonsense off later.) To see if an HTML tag works, select the “preview comment” checkbox and just enter it—you’ll know if it works if it displays correctly in the preview.
  • truncatedlinks.pngLinks to other web pages work no matter what. What, you don’t speak HTML? That’s fine. If you simply copy and paste a web site address into your comment, our system will pretty it up for you automatically, as shown.
  • youtubeembed.pngEmbed playable YouTube video clips. To share a video clip with other commenters, just copy and paste the URL to YouTube into the comments. Our system will automatically embed a thumbnail of the video. Other users can just click “Watch Video” to expand that thumbnail and play the clip.
  • Embed images. While we’re not sure if this is a bug or a feature, you can embed images that live out on the web into your comment—but the process is a little wonky. Use the <img src=”http://imageURLhere.com” HTML tag but don’t close it properly. Use the “preview comment” feature to try this out. Click on this image to see what embedded photo looks like in a comment thread. http://lifehacker.com/assets/resources/2008/06/imginthread1-thumb.png

Tweak Your User Profile

Now that you’re a badass commenter, it’s time to show off your stuff in your user profile. Go to your profile page by clicking your user name, then click on the “Edit Profile” link. There you can:

  • avatar.pngSet your avatar, homepage, and status. Show your face in your comments by adding an image to your profile. Let other users know who you are and what you’re up to by setting your web site address and status, too.
  • See what your friends have said. Anywhere on any web site, click on the + sign next to any other user to add that person to your friends list. That means their comment activity will show up on your profile, too.
  • Get a star. Highly-connected users—people who have lots of friends and lots of people following them—get a star next to their names in comment threads. Here’s more on how to become a star commenter.
  • Bookmark posts by marking them as a favorite. Save any post for viewing later before it falls off the front page by clicking the heart icon at the bottom. This will “clip” the post and save it to your profile’s Favorites page, as shown. favorites.png

Get Only the Posts You Care About

If we’re pumping out posts faster than you can keep on top of them, there are a few ways to filter, slice, and dice the content you see.

  • Get our weekly top stories via email. Pop your email address into the box on our sidebar to subscribe to a weekly newsletter that contains the most popular posts of the week. On rare, “holy cats you’ve got to see this” occasions, we’ll send you breaking news via this list, too.
  • Subscribe to only the stories you want in your feedreader. Get only our top stories, or just the topics you want to see by tweaking the URL you subscribe to in your newsreader. Here’s more on how to get only the posts you want from Lifehacker’s site feeds.

Advanced Nerdery

If you’ve read this far, you deserve a few advanced tricks to make life here a little better.

  • Turn off the blink tag. If the folks who insist on using the unfortunate <blink> tag in our comments are giving you a headache, here’s how to disable it in Firefox.
  • Set up Firefox search keywords. Quickly search Lifehacker’s archives, and navigate to tag pages and user profiles using Firefox keyword shortcuts.
  • Add Lifehacker to Firefox’s search box. Easily search our archives from Firefox’s search box with the Lifehacker search plug-in.
  • Adjust your time zone and more with Better Lifehacker. Add a few more helpful features to the Gawker sites with our newly-released Better Lifehacker Firefox extension.

Obviously there are dozens of more useful features that we could (and are working on) adding to the site. Got questions about the ones mentioned here? Did we forget something good? Let us know in the comments. We’ll update this post with any new developments as we go along.


Original post by Gina Trapani

No responses yet

Jun 30 2008

The Power User’s Guide to This Web Site [Feature]

Published by under Uncategorized


Whether you’re new to this site or you’re a star commenter, chances are there are lots of things you didn’t know you could do hidden in these pages. From comments to profiles to tags to feeds to embedding images and video clips into your posts here, a little know-how can go a long way. Find out everything you ever wanted to know about how to get things done around Lifehacker and its family of sites—including Gawker, Gizmodo, io9, Jezebel, and Valleywag—after the jump.

Sign Up

reg-thumb.png Sparing you hackneyed ad slogans about privileges and membership, it’s true that Lifehacker and friends are a lot more interesting and useful when you’re actually signed in. Anyone can register for an account here and start “clipping” (or bookmarking) articles in their user profile, and following other commenters (more on that later). If you haven’t already, just go ahead and sign up and log in. Now we can get this party started.

Audition for Commenting Privileges

Just because you have a login to Lifehacker and the other Gawker sites doesn’t mean you automatically get commenting privileges. (There are too many spammer and jerks on the internet for us to let just anyone in that easy.) To earn yourself the privilege of posting comments here, we make you work for it—just a little bit.

To audition for commenting privileges, once you’re signed in, submit an on-topic, intelligent, funny and helpful comment or two or three of our posts. We’ve got a small group of moderators who check out comment auditions and green light the users who have proved they’re humans with something good to say. Once your first comment is approved, you can post public comments from there on in. That approval process usually takes a few hours if not half a day, so if you’ve submitted a comment and you’re waiting, hang in there. We’re on it. (Hint: We don’t approve people who post things like “First!”, include their blog URL for no good reason in the signature of every comment, or don’t have anything of substance to say.) Get more info in our Comments Frequently Asked Questions.

commentviaemail1.pngComment via email. If you don’t want to go through the whole registration rigmarole but have a burning comment on a post here, you can send us a comment via email. Just click on the @ button on any post to get its individual address. But! Before you send your email! Make sure you’ve deleted your email signature, especially the one with your full name and address in it. We don’t approve comments with full names and addresses in them. Here’s more on posting a comment via email.

Become a Comment Master

Once you’ve earned yourself commenting privileges, the lights are off, the keg is tapped, and the music’s turned up. Seriously—the good stuff on this site? It happens in the comments. Here’s a list of stuff you can do in the comments (besides just type into the text box and press “submit”).

  • Reply to individual commenters. reply.pngWhen you want to respond to a particular comment in a thread, click on the arrow, as shown. That will insert the users’ name into your comment with a link back to his or her comment. Right now there’s no easy way to see only replies to your comments without scrolling yourself, but it is something we’ve got on the to-do list.
  • Preview your comment as you type. There’s nothing worse than typing out a thoughtful comment, pressing submit, and seeing a typo publish to the site. Select the “preview comment” box to preview exactly how your comment will look when it publishes as-you-type. (Hint: Firefox users, the Better Lifehacker extension will automatically check that box for you.)
  • Bold, italicize, and add links to your comment with HTML. We allow several HTML tags inside our comments, from <b></b> for bold, <i></i> for italics to <a></a> for links. Some crafty troublemakers even discovered that the <blink></blink> tag works. (More on how to turn that nonsense off later.) To see if an HTML tag works, select the “preview comment” checkbox and just enter it—you’ll know if it works if it displays correctly in the preview.
  • truncatedlinks.pngLinks to other web pages work no matter what. What, you don’t speak HTML? That’s fine. If you simply copy and paste a web site address into your comment, our system will pretty it up for you automatically, as shown.
  • youtubeembed.pngEmbed playable YouTube video clips. To share a video clip with other commenters, just copy and paste the URL to YouTube into the comments. Our system will automatically embed a thumbnail of the video. Other users can just click “Watch Video” to expand that thumbnail and play the clip.
  • Embed images. While we’re not sure if this is a bug or a feature, you can embed images that live out on the web into your comment—but the process is a little wonky. Use the <img src=”http://imageURLhere.com” HTML tag but don’t close it properly. Use the “preview comment” feature to try this out. Here’s what an embedded image looks like.imginthread.png

Tweak Your User Profile

Now that you’re a badass commenter, it’s time to show off your stuff in your user profile. Go to your profile page by clicking your user name, then click on the “Edit Profile” link. There you can:

  • avatar.pngSet your avatar, homepage, and status. Show your face in your comments by adding an image to your profile. Let other users know who you are and what you’re up to by setting your web site address and status, too.
  • Follow other users. Click on the + sign next to any other user to add that person to your friends list. That means their comment activity will show up on your profile, too.
  • Get a star. Highly-connected users—people who have lots of friends and lots of people following them—get a star next to their names in comment threads. Here’s more on how to become a star commenter.
  • Bookmark posts by marking them as a favorite. Save any post for viewing later before it falls off the front page by clicking the heart icon at the bottom. This will “clip” the post and save it to your profile’s Favorites page, as shown. favorites.png

Get Only the Posts You Care About

If we’re pumping out posts faster than you can keep on top of them, there are a few ways to filter, slice, and dice the content you see.

  • Get our weekly top stories via email. Pop your email address into the box on our sidebar to subscribe to a weekly newsletter that contains the most popular posts of the week. On rare, “holy cats you’ve got to see this” occasions, we’ll send you breaking news via this list, too.
  • Subscribe to only the stories you want in your feedreader. Get only our top stories, or just the topics you want to see by tweaking the URL you subscribe to in your newsreader. Here’s more on how to get only the posts you want from Lifehacker’s site feeds.

Advanced Nerdery

If you’ve read this far, you deserve a few advanced tricks to make life here a little better.

  • Turn off the blink tag. If the folks who insist on using the unfortunate <blink> tag in our comments are giving you a headache, here’s how to disable it in Firefox.
  • Set up Firefox search keywords. Quickly search Lifehacker’s archives, and navigate to tag pages and user profiles using Firefox keyword shortcuts.
  • Add Lifehacker to Firefox’s search box. Easily search our archives from Firefox’s search box with the Lifehacker search plug-in.
  • Adjust your time zone and more with Better Lifehacker. Add a few more helpful features to the Gawker sites with our newly-released Better Lifehacker Firefox extension.

Obviously there are dozens of more useful features that we could (and are working on) adding to the site. Got questions about the ones mentioned here? Did we forget something good? Let us know in the comments. We’ll update this post with any new developments as we go along.


Original post by Gina Trapani

No responses yet

Jun 30 2008

Locate32 Finds Files Quickly and Reliably [Featured Windows Download]

Published by under Uncategorized

locate32_scaled.jpgWindows only: Free search utility Locate32 uses Unix-style databases and locate commands to find files by name, size, creation dates, or any other system criteria. While it can’t search the insides of files like Google Desktop, Vista’s Search 4.0 Preview, or other full-featured tools, it runs fast, simple, and seriously light on system resources. You can set oft-searched presets, run the whole thing from a thumb drive, and perform any of your normal right-click context commands on the files Locate32 finds. No wonder it comes highly recommended by commenters. Locate32 is a free download for Windows 98 and later systems. Thanks, Chris!


Original post by Kevin Purdy

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Jun 30 2008

Rhapsody Goes DRM-Free with MP3 Downloads [Digital Music]

Published by under 5603

rhapsody_logo.jpgRhapsody, Real Networks’ music subscription service, has heeded the moves of Amazon and other restriction-free music sellers by opening up its own non-DRM MP3 store. The move also frees up MP3s bought over Verizon’s V Cast service. [via]


Original post by Kevin Purdy

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