saffyre9-old
saffyre9
saffyre9-old

When the "internet goes down" here, its usually the network, not our ISP. While most of my work is offline, it is on the network - we store ALL our files on a file server so everyone has access to them. With no network, I can't access anything and productivity screams to a halt.

@jackquack: You don't need to be subsribed to the Globe to read the article online.

I prefer a desktop at both work and home for ergonomics. I'd rather have a seperate monitor that I can set at a height that is comfortable to me. I also hate how cramped laptop keyboards always feel when typing.

@Falconfire: Because cabbage is gross, and McDonald's is tastier.

Whenever I borrow books from the library, I always find cheezie crumbs between the pages. Gross. If this service could guarantee cheezie-free pages for me, I'd be in.

At work, my sig is short and sweet; my full name, company name, main phone line and direct phone line.

Align all article titles to the left on the homepage, with their images below to make scanning the articles easier.

Does anyone know if it actually uses the same rendering engine as Safari for Mac? If so, then this could be indispensable for us web developers. If not...gawd, I have no many windows browsers to test on already, I can't handle another one...

I'm not fond of the iGoogle name either, but I'm SO excited that my [google.ca] homepage finally gets to use themes now too. I've been waiting for that since it was first mentioned oh LH.

@kassiano: awesome! thanks :)

What's that To Do List you've got in your screenshot?

At work, my homepage is our intranet/account managment site. Its the site I need to access the most often in my day, and usually quite quickly, so having it as my homepage means I get to it much faster.

It's not available on [google.ca] homepages yet :(

I use to try to categorize my bookmarks into some sort of hierarchy, but it got too messy, and I could never find out which of the million CSS articles I'd bookmarked was that one particular one I was looking for.

I use old-school folders as well, and name them like yyyy-mm-dd event, and within those I have other folders for RAW, web optimized, print, etc. I use ACDSee to preview my RAW photos and batch re-name them (same format as my folder names). When I create a new shoot in Lightroom, I also use the same format for naming

I'm not really into DIY home improvement, but I do enjoy watching a little of Eric Stromer now and then!

It was actually a really good tutorial, and I will be needing this effect in a design in the near future. Unfortunately, the Transform > Warp tool is only in Photoshop CS2, and I only have Photoshop CS.

Since I use my home computer as a media center and work computer, it looks like I'm going with Ultimate. Home Premium would be fine, if I didn't require IIS.