Category: How To

  • How To Post to Flickr and Twitter at the Same Time

    UPDATE:

    This post is ancient old (september 2009). The best way to do this now is IFTTT.

    Tired of using Twitpic? Try this:

    1. Go to your email account settings on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/account/?tab=email
    2. Find the Flickr2Twitter upload email address.
    3. Now email a photo or video to your unique Flickr2Twitter email address and the photo will upload to Flickr and a tweet will be sent to twitter with a link to that photo on Flickr.

    The Subject line of the email will be BOTH the Flickr photo title and the Tweet.

    You’ve only got about 116 characters for your actual Tweet because the rest will be a short Flic.kr URL itself.

    You may also want to check out your upload by email settings to make sure your tags and privacy settings are correct as well:

    Word to the wise: Be aware of geolocation settings on your iPhone… Flickr automatically picks up the EXIF data in your photos so if you have location services on for photos on your iPhone they will automatically show up on your Flickr map… You wouldn’t want to tell everyone where you live!? Or would you…

    Also if you want to migrate from Twitpic to Flickr use this Twitpickr. (limited to yur last 25 pics)

    [Flickr | Twitter]


  • iPhone Tether

    old school motorola

    In 1993 I was thirteen years old. I was in a boarding school with no internet connectivity. There we’re no network connections in the dorm rooms. After reading about this new thing called the World Wide Web I really wanted to get online. I was rockin a Dell Pentium 120 with whopping 16MB of ram and 4GB of storage! She was a fast machine for her the time.

    In order to connect I used an analog Motorola mobile phone tethered to an analog/digital converter box the size of a brick. I would then log into an ISP by dialing in using the phone. The connection was obviously extremely slow and flaky but I was tethering in 1993. That pretty much makes me a giant freakin nerd.

    Fast forward to today….

    iphone 3g

    I now connect from wherever I want. I tether my mobile phone to my laptop using a wireless bluetooth connection and the 3g cellular network. My cell phone alone has more memory and processing power than my entire desktop computer in 1993. I can be working from anywhere that has cell phone connectivity. In fact I’m writing this from a cafe that doesn’t even have Wifi…

    I suppose this is an example of Moore’s Law and Gilder’s Law working together hand in hand?

    Here are some instructions on how to tether your iPhone 3g or 3gs:

    How to use your iPhone as a modem:

    1. In Settings, choose General > Network > Internet Tethering.
    2. Slide the Internet Tethering switch to On.
    3. Connect iPhone to your computer:

    Connect via USB: Connect your computer to iPhone using the Dock Connector to USB cable. In your computer’s Network services settings, choose iPhone. On a Mac, a pop-up window appears the first time you connect, saying “A new network interface has been detected.” Click Network Preferences, configure the network settings for iPhone, then click Apply. On a PC, use the Network Control Panel to select and configure the iPhone connection.
    Connect via Bluetooth: On iPhone, choose Settings > General > Bluetooth and turn on Bluetooth. Then refer to the documentation that came with your computer system software to pair and connect iPhone with your computer.
    When you are connected, a blue band appears at the top of the screen. Tethering remains on when you connect with USB, even when you aren’t actively using the Internet connection.

    Check your cellular data network usage:
    In Settings, choose General > Usage.

    [iPhone how tos]


  • How To Get Rid Of Digital Clutter

    minimal
    “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” -Leonardo da Vinci

    Anything electronic or digital taking up mindshare in your world is digital clutter. Stuff like: unread emails, 1000s of unread feeds, or piles crappy electronics lying around . If you’re anything like me you’re getting bombarded with the stuff. This post outlines a few ways to deal with this first world problem:

    Computer Clutter:

    • Remove cables that are plugged into your computer and not attached to anything.
    • Stop using your computer’s desktop to store files.
    • Don’t make a new word document or new file just put your stuff in the cloud.
    • Disable all notifiers or anything that will distract you, make noises, or pop up while you’re working.

    Inboxes:

    • Reduce the number of actual inboxes.
    • Meaning any place there is stuff coming at you, GTD style inboxes…
    • Then reduce the number of items entering these inboxes.

    Email Clutter:

    • Work from inbox zero. If there is something in your inbox, you need to do something about it. Archive, delete, just get it out of your inbox.
    • Use the “Send and Archive” button in Gmail.
    • Stop checking multiple email inboxes and aggregate it all under one roof. Gmail does this handily.

    Phone Clutter:

    • Stop using voicemail entirely. Important or useful voicemails are very rare. I’ve been without voicemail for a few years and I don’t miss it.
    • Alternatively use Google Voice.

    Media Clutter:

    • Stop watching television. It’s a waste of time. Cancel your cable subscription.
    • Stop reading blogs entirely or just subscribe to handful of feeds if you must.

    Online Clutter:

    • Use an ad blocker to clean up the web. This one replaces the ubiquitous ad banner with art.

    add art demo

    Twitter:

    • Follow 50 people or less on Twitter. It’s easy to do, just unfollow anyone that is tweeting too hard, or twhining (twitter whining) all the time.

    Facebook:

    • ‘Friend’ 200 people or less on Facebook. If you need to have lots of ‘friends’ create a list of people you actually care about. Drag that list to the top of the sidebar. This will make that list the default feed.

    facebook list

    Stuff You Don’t Use:

    • If you haven’t touched it in six months just get rid of it! This really applies to more than just digital clutter.

    Be Ruthless:

    • If it isn’t adding value dump it, delete it, unfollow, unsubscribe, or sell it. Otherwise it’s just adding to the noise. Try to regularly purge all this stuff as well. It’s therapeutic.

    Avoid creating digital clutter:

    • Don’t use the “reply all” button unless you have to.
    • Don’t email word documents.
    • Don’t email funny videos as attachments.
    • Don’t forward emails.
    • Don’t tweet a zillion times a day.

    I’m trying to get better at this myself… I hope this was useful for you.

    [Photo by GoldSardine]


  • How To Keep Cool During a Heat Wave

    iceberg

    1. Drink slurpees and smoothies
    2. Eat freezies
    3. Drink lots of water
    4. Open all doors and windows
    5. Keep the air flowing
    6. Wear loose fitting light colored clothing
    7. Have someone blast you with a super soaker
    8. Take a wet towel and wrap it around your neck
    9. Go swimming
    10. Streak through the sprinklers with your junk hanging out
    11. Do Souljaboy’s superman dance, underwater
    12. Add water to anything, your clothes, your bathtub, your mullet
    13. Have a waterfight
    14. Get sweaty and sit in front of a fan
    15. Eat spicy food because it will make you sweat and sweat cools you off
    16. Wear a hat
    17. Go downstairs
    18. Turn off your gadgets and computers
    19. In fact turn off any electronic heat sources
    20. Find shade
    21. Meditate or sit still

    According to Wikipedia a Heatwave is:

    “…a prolonged period of excessively hot weather, which may be accompanied by high humidity. There is no universal definition of a heat wave; the term is relative to the usual weather in the area. Temperatures that people from a hotter climate consider normal can be termed a heat wave in a cooler area if they are outside the normal climate pattern for that area. The term is applied both to routine weather variations and to extraordinary spells of heat which may occur only once a century. Severe heat waves have caused catastrophic crop failures, thousands of deaths from hyperthermia, and widespread power outages due to increased use of air conditioning.”

    [Photo by Rita Willaert | Heatwave Wikipedia]


  • Quick Tip: How to embed YouTube videos in HD

    YouTube unofficially allows you to embed their “HD” quality videos on your site. All you have to do is append a line of text to the embed code.

    To embed the “high quality” version of a YouTube video replace this:
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=UNIQUE-VIDEO-ID
    with this: (in the embed code)
    http://www.youtube.com/v/UNIQUE-VIDEO-ID&ap=%2526fmt%3D18

    To embed the “HD” quality version of a YouTube video replace this:
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=UNIQUE-VIDEO-ID
    with this: (in the embed code)
    http://www.youtube.com/v/UNIQUE-VIDEO-ID&ap=%2526fmt%3D22

    You can use this for linking as well:

    Keep in mind not all videos are available in YouTube’s “HD” format because they weren’t uploaded at high resolution… Here is an example of the three different quality levels:

    Normal Quality:

    High Quality:

    “HD” Quality:


  • How To Upscale Small Images in Photoshop

    If you’ve ever tried to enlarge a small image you’ve surely noticed that awful loss of quality that occurs. You know that super pixelated look… One way to minimize that pixelation is to scale the image up in small steps.

    Do not go from 100% to 200% size in one single step. Break it down into several smaller steps. This will give Photoshop more information to work with at each step and this will result in a cleaner final image.

    Create a Photoshop action to step up in 10% increments if you need to do this often. You could use Automator for this too if you don’t have Photoshop. I’m just skimming the surface here but if you want to know more just visit one of the bazillion Photoshop tutorial sites…

    (BTW I’m making an effort to bring more value with my blog instead of being a lazy reblogger. Hence the mini tips and how-tos…)

    [via Hugh Bell who happens to be a steadicam operator]


  • How To Import Your Blog Into Facebook

    Step 1


    Go to your profile page and click the settings button.

    Step 2


    Click the “automatically import activity” link.

    Step 3


    Click the blog/rss button, type in your blog’s feed, click import and you’re done!

    You can also import your content/profiles from other sites like Flickr, YouTube, and Delicious. I’d recommend that you avoid importing too many because your don’t want to overload your friends’ Facebook newsfeed with all the stuff you’re doing online…


  • Google Docs in Plain English – Common Craft

    [Original Post | YouTube | Common Craft]


  • Video – Social Bookmarking in Plain English

    [Original Post | Common Craft]


  • Common Craft Show Video: Wikis in Plain English

    Lee is doing a great job of explaining these technologies.

    [Original Post]