MacHeist

| March 16th, 2009

For anyone who doesn’t know … MacHeist is incredible! You become an ‘agent’ and do some simple task like a puzzle or find something on the web. In return you get software. This is actually good software that you would want to buy too, not some place that gives away stuff nobody wants! Try it! I’m on the blue team. The current thing without having to even do an assignment is a license of Typinator – one thing I’ve been wanting to buy for a very long time.

▛▞▞▟ Proud Member of the BLUE Team™ ▙▚▚▜

Bandying Big Files

| November 14th, 2008

First, some background. I often used a service called sendyourfiles.com to move my own large art files to United Media (my syndicator), to my publisher (Andrews McMeel Publishing), and other business associates. I also used the service to send large photos and videos that e-mail couldn’t handle. Every person who received a large file from me in this convenient way said some version of “Hey, I could use this myself.”

via Scott Adams Blog: Dilbertfiles.com 11/11/2008.

This Dilbert blog entry reminded me of the problem of getting files too big for email out and about. I haven’t used sendyourfiles.com because, as the comments to the above post reflect, there are options available without having to resort to ftp servers and such that some are unable to grok. If you don’t mind paying for the simplicity (and the “cute” watch video/animation/comic strips while uploading factor in the case of DilbertFiles.com) more power to you.

It looks like the version of Pando lets you send files up to 1GB from mail and some chat clients to others, as well as posting to Blogger, WordPress, Facebook, Myspace and podcasts and rss feeds. It’s all graphicy and “exciting” looking.

Streamfile has a no-nosense (in a very good way) interface where you put in an email address (comma separated), pick a file (up to 2GB) and click “steam your file.” Nothing animated or distracting here.

The last and most interesting (and actually exciting) option is Dropbox, which is in beta. It professes to allow you to “store, sync, and share your files online.” It’s available for , linux, and windows. You download the client and it makes a … dropbox. It’s a regular folder that you can access anywhere that syncs up instantly everywhere (including web availability). To share with others you copy the URL for the file or folder you desire and paste it to mail or blog or whatever. You can invite others to share a folder with you and transfer back and forth just by sticking things in the folder. For a photo gallery, you do the same – put pictures in the photos folder and say who can see them. This thing even keeps track of versioning and does it’s syncs incrementally (only transferring the delta) so it’s wicked fast about the updates. It will maintain a version as well as a larger file size premium tier structure (currently for the beta the limit is 2GB.) Now this is what innovative thinking breeds!

Peggy Palin

| November 2nd, 2008

Has been quite decent of late. The recent one mentioned that he didn’t understand why everyone talks about how much Sarah Palin looks like that chick on Saturday Night Live …. geesh …. Nooooo, she looks like that chick from King of the Hill!

heheehhe.

Ahh, should also mention that Michael Moore was on and has released his latest film for on the net. It’s called Slacker Uprising.

Catering to Malaysians

| May 29th, 2007

And, to whet our appetite for holidaying and shopping even more, Malaysians will also be able to eat chilli crabs, the republic’s signature dish, for from June 29 till July 31. Link

JaJah

| July 10th, 2006

Geesh … I seem to be spouting product recommendations of late. I don’t have anything to do with these companies but just like the stuff. The latests coolness is JaJah which has phone calls between the following countries.

Zone 1
USA, Canada, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan
Zone 2
Argentinia, Australia, Austria, Belgium, CzechRepublic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea South, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, San Marino, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, UK, Venezuela

Not sure how they manage to do it, but it’s a great thing and I’ve personally tested it between Singapore and Japan and it really does work wonderfully!