Archive for May 12th, 2008

Stamps just got more costly again! I’ve decided that 42 cents is too much. It’s time to halt sending letters.

In lieu of going out and buying a sheet of 100 one-cent stamps, I say we figure out how to not need them. Here’s a helpful tiny guide to make those “forever” stamps you purchased six months ago last as long as possible.

Discover the joys of scanning
I used to think that every time I had to send someone an official document, it required a stamp. The truth is, that’s just not so.

Now I invariably ask, “Is it OK for me to scan and email this?” Ninety percent of the time, the answer is yes. I actually have a signed and scanned W-9 that I’ve sent to dozens of clients. All I need to change is the date.

Scanners are cheap and simple to come by. I actually recently gave one away of Freecycle because I couldn’t find a buyer for it on craigslist. It might take an hour or so to figure out how to use it, but once you’ve got the procedure, you’ll save yourself time, money, and paper.

On the internet bill pay
These days, this probably seems like a no-brainer. But, chances are, you haven’t fully switched over yet. You’ve got most of your bills on auto-pay, but a couple still get paid with a check in the mail. Take an hour out of your day and go completely treeless. Either sign up at the company’s site, or schedule monthly transfers with your bank.

And for those bills that you might pay to companies or individuals that don’t have billing systems, like my landlord, discuss the possibilities of PayPal. When I showed him how easy it was and told him that it would significantly reduce the number of times per year my payment was late, he was completely into it!

State ‘I love you’ in binary
I know that the greeting card industry wants you to believe that caring can only be expressed through dead trees… but it’s just not true. While email is certainly too impersonal for a Mother’s Day card, and most online-greeting cards are seriously lame, it can be done.

Spend some time in your favorite graphics program doctoring a photograph or visually executing an inside joke. Make it personal and digital. In the end, the thought will be more appreciated, and the delivery will be 100% free.

When all else fails: Post a card
Postcards take far less energy to create and send through the mail. Because they are a single sheet, they have the ability to be more easily sorted and sent and are light enough to be mostly trivial in terms of shipping emissions. This is, in the end, why they’re so much cheaper to send than letters.

Avoid airmail at all costs
I know this story was supposed to be about $0.42 stamps. But if you ever find yourself thinking you want to send a letter that needs to get on an airplane, think again. While most post is sent over ground — a relatively efficient way to travel — air mail is far more carbon intensive.

Anything you can do to minimize airmail will have a bigger environmental impact than what you do to minimize ground mail. 

These simple steps, if fully executed, should get you down to less than one stamp per month. And while saving forty-two cents a few times per month might not seem like that huge of a deal, it’s just one more step on the path to ridding ourselves our reliance on physical objects and transportation.

When all we need to send are electrons, the Earth, and especially its forests, will thank us.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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A jar of Google hot sauce and a few dishes from the 'Food 2.0' cookbook by former Google chef Charlie Ayers.

(Credit: David Karp)

(Credit: Amazon)

I was lost somewhere in the labyrinthine corridors of a sprawling Whole Foods supermarket, looking for foods I’d never known …


Source [The social]

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This post was updated at 11:02 AM PT with comment from MySpace.

Facebook on Thursday reached a user safety agreement with the attorneys general of 49 states and the District of Columbia, much as rival MySpace.com did several months ago.

“We’ve agreed with 49 says and the …

Source [The social]

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American Intl Group Cut To Neutral From Purchase By Goldman Sachs Last Update: 5/12/2008 6:49:07 AM (MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires May 12, 2008 06:49 ET (10:49 GMT) For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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American Intl Group Cut To Neutral From Purchase By Goldman Sachs Last Update: 5/12/2008 6:49:07 AM (MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires May 12, 2008 06:49 ET (10:49 GMT) For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Reuters is reporting that shares of Blinkx, a publicly traded video search site based in the U.K., climbed 50 percent on Friday following rumors that corporate giants Google and News Corp. might be vying for an acquisition.

On Friday morning, Blinkx shares were trading at 36.75 pence, their …

Source [The social]

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Cold calls from telemarketers and other companies that ignore the do-not-call list are one of the banes of modern day civilization.

A simple Google search for a mystery number you’ve received usually lets you know who’s on the other end before you have to pick it up. The problem is that cell phones don’t have the same quality of caller ID landlines get (numbers not names); so that call you’re getting could be something important like an overdue library book, or a pushy desk jockey trying to sell you a heavily discounted hafnium-forged non-stick pan set.

In most cases the telemarketers don’t leave messages and will simply call you back, resulting in an endless cycle of you not knowing who’s calling and having to call back to find out–something you’re unlikely to do. To avoid this, there’s Caller Complaints, a crowd-sourced index of the phone numbers of law breaking companies that have called folks on the do-not-call list. Users come together to list these numbers, what was being pitched–and the frequency of the calls. If you find someone else has already listed the number and shared their negative experience, you can pile on and leave your experience, which votes it up.

The most popular (or in this case unpopular) companies rise to the top and are tracked on leaderboards. Users can also browse by area code and what type of call it was, from political phone spam to prank calls and debt collectors. The idea is that there will be enough resources to help you get to the bottom of who’s calling to either leave a complaint with your carrier or simply blacklist the number from calling again.

So far the site has amassed almost 200,000 number searches from curious call recipients. If you’re adding a number to the database you also have the option to do a tiny quick research on ReversePhoneDetective, which will tell you where the call originated from and give you the option to pay for a full report.

Related:
Reverse Mobile helps track down mystery callers
SlyDial lets you call straight to voice mail

You can browse bad numbers by how many folks have complained about it, which area code it's from, or how often it's searched for.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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I love things that save me money when shopping on the internet. While PriceGrabber and Google Shopping are my two go-to sites for finding the lowest prices on electronics, tons of sites track prices and give the heads-up when something goes on sale or gets its price reduced.

There’s also PriceAdvance, a browser plug-in that will pull up competing prices from other on the internet sellers automatically whenever you hit a page with a product and price on it. Its latest iteration for Firefox and IE doubles the number of prices it shows you compared with the previous version.

Right now it only works on 16 major online retailers including heavyweights like Amazon.com, Purchase.com, and Wal-Mart. For non-supported sites I’d recommend going with a service like Retrevo (review), which pulls in the prices throughout the day and includes a listing of product manuals–just in case you don’t feel like hunting around for the spec sheet.

I’ve embedded a demo of it in action below.

Other cool price tools:
Use the Web to watch for price drops
Pricepinx intelligently watches for price drops on the internet
Tjoos: Somewhat smarter shopping

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Later, gator.

Google has announced the shutdown of Hello, a sort of photo-messaging service that became part of the Mountain View family when Google acquired Picasa in 2004.

“All good things come to an end,” a placeholder on the Hello.com home page says. “So it is with sorrow that …

Source [The social]

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