andrewmatteson111
mrziege
andrewmatteson111

I use something similar — I never write out dates by hand now. Whenever I save a file, I prepend it with the date, which helps for better sorting later:

The pasting one is excellent. Just added that to my list of "always" scripts.

"Resting your wrists" isn't good typing posture. It also can lead to wrist pain. Maybe this is the uber solution.

Great article. I appreciate the full facts, as most people approach the decision to buy organics with a gut reaction.

No, but it's a reality that needs to be considered. The more employers are comfortable with flexible work schedules, the more likely that we're going to see sub 40 hour positions develop.

I haven't seen the update come through yet and I purchased through the android marketplace — I'm hoping it will roll out to us all soon.

VOTE: Instacast.

Please be careful when saying "hazardous" ingredients. It sounds as if they've been proven dangerous to people. There has been no such conclusive proof; most of the evidence comes from single models on lab rats. My biggest concern is if an unjustified fear of ingredients keeps people from using sunscreen all

I'd recommend reading up on exposure to formaldehyde before signing up on the no-iron shirts bandwagon. There is limited information on the impact of long term exposure, so it might be worth continuing the use of an iron for a few years.

I would absolutely like to see fewer spam results, but honestly when I run a search and see results like the ones posted in this article, I assume the product is crap. I happily move on and don't purchase it because I assume there would be more reputable search results for a more reputable product.

Always double. I learned double and would have to train myself out of it. I also think it helps add pause to what would otherwise be a blob of text.

Usually nothing other than my name. Only something very professional like an interview thank you email would warrant anything else.

My uneducated guess:

After playing with it a bit, I say it's excellent. I'm already scrolling through the results using the keyboard commands, now I get to see which websites would be worthless for me to click on beforehand.

This article perked my interest into AudioPress, but unfortunately it's a streaming only service. I often download big video podcasts, or get a lot of video/audible for a long car ride — streaming is not an option, so I'll be sticking with clunky iTunes :(

agreed with vinylrake — if i can't carry my big tripod for some reason, why on earth would i carry a big bag of rice or beans instead of carrying a couple ounce mini tripod that costs nearly nothing. Mini-tripods also don't attract rat infestations.

Doesn't appear to work on beta - about:labs shows only Side Tabs trash. Going to switch over to dev for the goodness!

EA's Game lab looks like a four year old's playroom.

I used the chrome omnibar, and found things pretty quickly with chrome shortcuts, so when I first heard about instant search I was not excited. That stayed until Lifehacker posted the article about the shortcuts — I find it now to be an excellent merge between auto suggest, i'm feeling lucky, and normal search.

Perfect. I hope they continue improving this because even though I like the new tab start page, I've been using an extension to redirect to google.com so I wouldn't miss out on the new instant functionality. It saves much more time than using the omni-bar for seraches.