December 14, 2010
Just installed Google Cloud Print on my PC. Installation was easier than even plugging in a USB printer.
By connecting your printer with the Google Cloud you will be able to print to your printer from any computer or smart phone, regardless of where you are. Just activate the Google Cloud Print connector in Google Chrome and your printer will automatically be available to you from Google Cloud Print enabled web and mobile apps.
Tags: chrome, cloud, print, printer, remote
Categories: Browsers, Internet, Mac, PC, Web-Based •
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December 14, 2010
Over the years I used FlashFXP, CuteFTP, SmartFTP… most recently FileZilla, and now about to try out Cyberduck (Open source FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, Cloud Files, Google Docs & Amazon S3 Browser for Mac & Windows). Looks promising and available for both Mac and PC.
Tags: cuteftp, cyberduck, filezilla, ftp, Mac, PC, sftp, smartftp
Categories: Apps, Comparison, Internet, Mac, PC •
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May 3, 2010
I found a tiny, basic and very practical bandwidth meter that just sits in the menu bar: MenuMeters. Can also display CPU, memory and drive use. Free.

A fancier and more comprehensive alternative which monitors many more system functions is iStat Menu, but it’s $10.
Tags: bandwidth, istat menu, mac osx, meter, monitor, snow leopard
Categories: Apps, Internet, Mac, System •
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April 18, 2010
Most definitely the easiest way to install all your basic apps after a fresh install of Windows is using Ninite. You simply go to the website, select some popular apps you would install anyways (like Winamp, iTunes, Firefox, Adobe Acrobat Reader, uTorrent, WinRar) and the site checks for the latests version of those apps and then gives you a package to download of all of those apps, and then runs all their default installations disabling all the annoying installation options like ad-ware, toolbars, etc. And done!

Tags: Apps, format, fresh install, installation, popular, windows
Categories: Apps, Browsers, Internet, PC, Security, System, Web-Based •
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April 18, 2010
Great topic over at reddit.com asking “What’s your favorite software that no one has heard of“. I’m discovering and discovering a lot of gems as we speak.
Tags: best, favorite, obscure, software
Categories: Apps, Fun, Internet, Mac, PC, Productivity, Security, System, Web Design, Web-Based, windows •
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February 18, 2010
For years I’ve been using Bandwidth Monitor Pro but for whatever reason it became buggy when I upgraded to Windows 7. It wasn’t correctly detecting my network cards and interfaces and rather than troubleshooting I decided to look for a free alternative and finally chose NetWorx (free, PC-only). Somehow, I had overlooked this particular bandwidth monitor in my searches the last couple years. And all the other apps that were coming up in my searches were inferior
NetWorx actually has more features than Bandwidth Monitor Pro, but most important to me is it’s simple and straightforward graph. I almost always keep this graph up because it helps me avoid getting frustrated over browsing and downloading slowdowns or videos buffering. This way, if I see no obvious drops in the visual graph of my connection, I get to more accurately place the blame on YouTube’s slow servers or slow torrent seeders.
Screenshots below of how I like my graph and of one of the settings tabs.


Tags: bandwith monitor, free, networx, PC
Categories: Apps, Internet, PC, System •
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January 21, 2010
My first choice for remote controlling my main home desktop/server (running Windows 7) is Windows Remote Desktop Connection. As a backup I also have that computer running LogMeIn for when firewalls block RDC or if I want to log in via a browser. And while those two have replaced VNC which I used exclusively years ago, I still use VNC for when I want to log in and remotely control a computer as is… without it having changing resolutions or desktop settings the way it would to accommodate LogMeIn or RDC. For example, I use it when I am watching a movie or playing music from on the main computer and want to change something in the media player without interrupting whatever is playing.
In those cases, my preferred choices are UltraVNC as the PC server, and Chicken of the VNC as my VNC viewer from my Mac notebook.
Tags: logmein, rdc, remote, ultravnc, vnc
Categories: Apps, Internet, Mac, PC •
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