ten mov.es

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how to do technology in ten moves. (or less.) A Loose Wire production

How to Give Visitors Your Location

However good your directions may be, there’s nothing like a map to show people where you are. But it’s fiddly, and usually they’ve already left home by the time they realise they don’t actually know where you live.

Here’s a great and simple way to include a map of your location with your directions and address, in the form of a simple link which can be emailed, sent by instant message or SMS. The resulting page looks good online and in a phone browser.

Go to Schmap.me and type in the name you want to have as your address — www.schmap.me/loosewire, for example:

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If it’s available the box will turn green.

Enter the address on the next page and the Google Map on the left of the address will immediately jump to that location:

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There’s a room for notes, where you can include driving directions:

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(There are more fields available if you want them.)

The resulting page will look like this:

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It also looks good on a phone:

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Include the link at the bottom of your email signatures or in your contact address book. It’s easy enough to then send it to friends by email, SMS or instant message.

Update: Be wary of what you put up there: the information is not visible to search engines, but the page could be stumbled upon(since there’s no password). So, in the words of the company, best not use it for sensitive information.

Filed under: easy, , , ,

How to Send Big Files to Others

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Here’s probably the simplest and most effective way to share files from your computer with others—without clogging up other people’s email inboxes or having them ask you to resend it because they deleted the email by mistake.

And without having to sign up for an account or anything fiddly. Promise.

First off, go to drop.io (pronounced dropeeoh, apparently).

You have the option of customizing the link your file(s) will be stored at: Type in your preferred name until drop.io finds one that hasn’t been taken already. Your URL will then be something like drop.io/loosewire.

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Click on the green button below it to add files.

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Select the file from the list (to select more than one file hold down the Control/Command key as you select the files).

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Click OK and you’ll see the fuel-gauge-type bar to the right of the green button partly fill. You’re allowed up to 100 megabytes of space.

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The next window lets you set a password for other people to enter if they want to view the files. (You don’t have to include a password if you don’t want to.)

You can also choose how long the files will be available for  (from one day to one year.) And you can choose whether others just view the files, can add to them, and whether they can delete them.

Once you’re done with these settings (or have skipped over them) click on the red Drop it button.

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The button will change briefly to grey and then to a message indicating your files are uploading.

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You’ll see the fuel-gauge bar above change to indicate how far your files have to go before they’re done uploading.

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Once the files are ready, you’ll be asked if you want to add another password—this one’s for you, so you can change settings later or delete the files. It’s also optional.

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You’re done uploading. The only thing left to do is to let your colleagues/friends/family know the link you’ve sent these files to. (Select the link, right click the mouse and copy it to the clipboard. Paste the link into an email or your chat program, or however you intend to alert others to the files’ existence.)

 

Free tip(s)

You can easily leave notes for others on the page of files you’ve uploaded—a neat feature that could be helpful. Just click on the Notes link at the top of the page and type your note:

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If you use the latest version of the Firefox browser (and if not, why not?) there’s an even easier way to do this (for both Mac and Windows users.) (You can see a screencast of this here.)

Install the drop.io Firefox extension (a small piece of code that plugs in to Firefox) and you’ll see a little red dot at the right hand corner of your screen. Drag and drop a file from your desktop or a Windows Explorer/Finder window. You won’t get any pop-up messages, only a moving graphic to indicate the file is being uploaded:

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Filed under: easy

How To Save Google News Searches as RSS

Sometimes you’ll find that Google News searches can only be saved as News Alerts—emailed to your inbox. But you want to save them as RSS feeds. Here’s how.

If you see the left hand side of your browser looks like this:

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Try changing the country domain of your search. Type news.google.com into the address bar:

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and then hit enter.

Re-enter your search, and you should see the RSS/Atom feed option appear below:

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I have no idea why it’s like this. I guess some country domains don’t yet have the RSS option. Go figure.

Filed under: easy

Adding or Editing Contacts on Your Phone From a Computer

Connect your phone to the computer and install Nokia PC Suite if you haven’t already.

In the Nokia PC Suite, click on Contacts:

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The Nokia Phone Browser will launch. It’ll look like this:

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Click on the Create New Contact icon:  

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Enter a contact’s details in the fields:

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(This is useful when you’re having to enter a complicated or long email for posting from your mobile phone.)

Click save:

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The contact should now have been saved to your phone:

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Click OK and then Close:

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That’s it.

Filed under: easy

How to Connect Your Phone to a Computer

Install the Nokia PC Suite software (usually via CD ROM.)

Follow the on-screen instructions. (You’ll need to find the USB socket on your computer and have the Nokia phone cable handy.)

Once that’s done, attach the phone to the computer using the cable provided.

The short end goes into the bottom of the N95:

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The big end goes into your computer’s USB port (it won’t look exactly like this.)

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Windows will install the necessary drivers.

When the two devices are connected, a list of options will appear on your phone. select PC Suite mode:

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Launch the Nokia PC Suite:

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An icon will appear in the system tray in the bottom right hand corner, which will be gray when the phone isn’t connected, and blue when it is:

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Click on the Nokia PC Suite tab:

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You should see a window like this:

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That’s it.

Filed under: easy

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