Vote: Clip2Print Prints directly the contents of the clipboard
Vote: Clip2Print Prints directly the contents of the clipboard
Neat trick, but I learned a way to do it in my head.
Things I am still waiting for...
vote: 4x6 brag book with removeable, plastic-protected pages.
Leftovers. No presentation. reusable containers, and a goodwill plate, bowl, and cutlery so I don't nuke plastic.
I have trouble with suction cups on windows, but two magnets, one outside and the other inside holding the hook does wonders (note: often you need a second person on the other side to initially put it in place—not good for high-rises)
You can see the colour from RGB in Paint or anything that has a Colour chooser.
i keep a thin duffle bag (squish-packs to nothing on the way out), and put laundry during my trip. souvenirs go into this bag, which itself gois into my suitcase for extra protection.
My first computer editor was Edlin (still exists in XP—try it), and I did amazing things with it then. (sigh...)
The city horticulturist here remarks that coffee grounds have a nitrogen-phosphate-potash ratio that is very close to proper lawn fertilizers. I just throw each basket-worth onto the lawn each day.
MemPad. {F6} to give a new date.
The concept is good, but I simply use the portable PStart ([www.pegtop.net]) app to do the same thing, and assign shortcut keys to apps as I want them, in a much cleaner interface.
I have looked for something like this for a long time. Most other 'hotkey' utilities only look at shortcuts, and not at the keys. This tells me very quickly which keys are free when my apps are open for choosing other keycombos, either in AutoHotkey or elsewhere.
This is the basic principle of retailers and cell phone companies, etc.
Still waiting for the Canadian release....
My personal solution. One major credit card, and an agreement with my credit union to pay off the balance each month, even if I have to go into line of credit to do so. The benefit? I see the line of credit every time I check my accounts online, staring me in the face, and it is easier to move monies into the LOC…
Posters rip after awhile because of the pinholes you put them in to pin them up, or worse if you tape them to the wall. To get over it,
You spend $1,000 for a decent laptop because you need that level to do the work well. You spend $20 on a wirerack, or $5.00 for scrap wood, because that is the level you need to do the work. It doesn't matter what it looks like or what it costs—as long as it does the job.
Vote: Picpick ([picpick.wiziple.net])
on NotePad: stuck with default colour background and font colours (often hard on eyes). always aware of the taskbar or other things going on.