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The second edition of the Lifehacker book, Upgrade Your Life, is a compilation of the best 116 hacks and downloads from Lifehacker's archives. This dead tree version of the web site transforms dozens of blog posts into comprehensive, edited tutorials, which will be familiar to longtime readers. While an official electronic version of Upgrade Your Life isn't available, today I've pulled together links to all the past posts that informed each book chapter to give you a one-stop preview of what's inside that cover. Consider this post the unedited web version of the book. After the jump, get a ginormous roundup of al read more »

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www.BuildYourList.com Another tool for determining the right keywords for your internet marketing business is freekeywords.wordtracker.com/gtrends. This website will actually show you the same digits for the same keywords for your internet marketing business that you typed in freekywords.wordtracker.com. The only difference is, with gtrends, you would see a multi-colored bar graph on the right hand side of the screen. This is what we call the google trends scope. read more »

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Microsoft Outlook has three "risk levels" it can apply to attached files, which determines whether it warns you before downloading, tries its best to block you entirely, or just lets a file be grabbed without comment. If it doesn't know what kind of file is attached, however, it prompts, which can be annoying for workers who regularly pass around certain file types. The gHacks tech blog explains how you can set Outlook to see files of any kind as low-risk, through a registry hack. Details of the hack after the jump, but be sure to back up your registry before marching forward.To add file types to Outlook's (and Windows') low-risk watch, head to the following registry folder:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER Software Microsoft Windows CurrentVersion Policies
Right-click on "Policies" and create a new Key named "Associations." Inside that key, you can create a new DWORD value of "LowRiskFileTypes," then change its value by including file extensions, with periods, separated by semi-colon read more »

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Apple may open up its iPhone and iPod touch devices to third-party apps next month, but the chances that Linux users will get invited to the party are slim at best. That hasn't stopped some intrepid hackers from coming up with a better music-syncing solution than the one Mac and Windows users have—a two-way wireless transfer, from almost any music organizing app you like, no wait for iTunes or USB cable required. Linux users, let's take a look at how to set up your iPhone or iPod touch for any-time wireless access after the jump.


Note: I'm using Ubuntu Hardy Heron (8.04) to access an iPod Touch, but the software and steps should be much the same for other distributions and an iPhone.
Set up your iPhone/iPod touch
First things first, you'll need to jai read more »

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The writers at Macworld are going over to the dark side and listing all the Windows applications that make them want to dual boot or virtualize Windows on their Intel Macs. The main package that makes Windows-on-a-Mac worth it? Microsoft Office 2007, simply because it includes Outlook and Access, both Windows-only packages. (Yes, Office 2008 for Mac includes Entourage, but Entourage can't do everything Outlook can.) Likewise, some of the other Office on Windows programs have features MS Office on Mac does not—like Word's handy revision tracking. Other applications on the list include IE 7 (for web site testing), Windows Media Player 11, Visio, and Netflix. Oddly, Macworld didn't mention the one program I absolutely pine for when I'm booted into OS X.






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music-player.pngYou've got gigabytes of music, movies, and other media stored on your computer, but without a solid media player to manage it all, you'd be drowning in digital media. That's why for this week's Hive Five, we want to hear all about your favorite media player. Hit the jump for more details and to nominate your favorite desktop media player in the comments. The first round of the Hive Five voting takes place in the comments, where you nominate your favorite tool for the job. We get hundreds of comments, so to make your nomination clear, please include it at the top of your comment like so: VOTE: Media Player Goes Here. If you don't follow this format, your vote may not be counted. To prevent tampering with the results, votes from first-time commenters may not be counted. After you've made your nomination read more »

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