I almost went through this whole process and switched over to MediaMonkey, until I realized that I need the Gold version in order to convert songs to a lower bitrate before syncing, as I do now with iTunes. Guess I'm stuck with iTunes for now.
I almost went through this whole process and switched over to MediaMonkey, until I realized that I need the Gold version in order to convert songs to a lower bitrate before syncing, as I do now with iTunes. Guess I'm stuck with iTunes for now.
Check out the Import/Export tab in Settings. You can at least download all your data.
When they're releasing on such a rapid development cycle (just like Chrome does), the version number becomes pretty meaningless anyways. The point is to just get the features out there ASAP.
Beware of all the extra components when installing. Installs a Miro start page by Bing, installs Bing toolbar, and sets default search engine to Bing.
Early adopters tend to be pretty geeky, though. I'd love one of these at around the $300 mark, give or take, but at almost $500, when it's really just a web browser completely locked down, forget it.
I've been loving the Cr-48, and it looks like the models from Acer and Samsung have better specs, but I'm still worried about the price. Almost $499 for the Wi-fi and 3G, and slightly cheaper for wi-fi only. Going to be hard to sell them to consumers over tablets or full-blown netbooks.
Looks like just Amazon and Best Buy for now.
I could turn that question around. If my music collection is saved on the internet, why do I need to store it on my iPod?
Agreed. If it's "The Last Password You'll Ever Need", why would you not be willing to do a little bit more memorization work? After you log in with that, all your other passwords are right there.
Agree about the ever-present bar. Chrome's new-style interface makes it so unnecessary, but on a Mac, it's unavoidable.
Check out Subsonic. [subsonic.org]
I only have two active gmail accounts. One is an apps account with my domain, and the other is just a vanilla gmail account.
VOTE: Indeed.com
It is kind of ironic, given that at least in the past, Editors and readers at Lifehacker have always been Google fans.
The line between computer and mobile device is definitely very gray.
If you go under about:flags in Chrome, there is an option to enable "Side Tabs". Might not be as featured filled as the extension on Firefox, but worth a try, maybe?
I've been filtering all of my facebook notification emails for a while now. More simple than this, though.
@acepelon: Very unique, that's for sure. I'm hoping you don't fill the tub with water, though?
@Gerardo Zamudio: Well, you can stream them. Check out this week's Hive Five: [lifehacker.com]
Did they stop sending out invites? I never got mine.