This is great! Thank you so much!
This is great! Thank you so much!
Is there ANY way of getting the old LH format? Even though we can switch back to the "classic" view, I still find navigation rather unwieldy. The biggest issue (maybe someone can help) is the loss of related articles.
During the cold war, a bunker cost $100. I suppose the actual digging of the bunker is the biggest cost.
I need to listen to an audio clip, but to do that I need to install QuickTime. Are there any alternatives, I hate QuickTime and its autoupdate, leftovers, ...
Sow how long should we wait?
@unwallflower: Right now I have 1 for work, 1 for friends, 1 for accounts, and 1 for giving out to people that I don't really know. So it's similar to your's, I was wondering if there was a better system out there.
How many email accounts are necessary to maintain some type of separation between work, friends, accounts, etc. And how do you manage them?
What are some good resources for learning Java quickly?
This makes me kind of sad/nostalgic.
I use Outlook for my email needs, and have my passwords saved so I don't type them in for all my accounts. But I would like some kind of master password so not just anyone can go and open my mail. Is this possible?
@JustinC: That's it! Thanks!
I remember reading an article here about a kind of autocomplete program where you could type a phrase, and it would be expanded into a whole sentence/paragraph that you wrote before? It may have been for autohotkey, but I'm not sure.
Is there a way to have certain URL's open with a specific browser? Example: have lifehacker open with FFX, and io9 with IE.
What about TinEye.com reverse image search?
@drongch: It can't be too technical, this is for basically anyone to use.
The light show is fantastic, but oh my god is the music great!
I'm looking for a kind of bulletin board system online to keep a small group of people (~5) up to date on events and ideas. Any ideas?
I've analyzed my Hard Drive with Defraggler, Auslogics Disk Defrag, and Windows.
This sounds like "Terminal World" by Alastair Reynolds, where there are different "zones" where only a certain level of technology can exist.