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Top 10 Real Estate Search Tools [Lifehacker Top 10] 25 October 2008 at 11:21 am by admin

pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/real_estate_sign.jpg” align=”left” hspace=”4″ vspace=”2″ width=”494″ height=”203″ style=”display:block;float:none;” /br iframe src=”http://digg.com/api/diggthis.php?u=http://digg.com/business_finance/Top_10_Real_Estate_Search_Tools” align=”right” frameborder=”0″ height=”82″ scrolling=”no” width=”55″/iframeThe good news is there are many, many resources for searching, pricing, and comparing a new home or apartment. The bad news is that, for someone just Google-ing, say, “search homes Los Angeles,” there are a ridiculous number of loudly-advertised choices. Today we’re compiling the most down-to-earth, actually-helpful search and comparison tools, with all kinds of mashup maps, pricing data, neighborhood reviewers, and other stuff you should really know before you make that huge leap. Read on for ten tools that help you find a new place to park your life. emPhoto by a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/sercasey/248457195/”Casey Serin/a./em/p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”10. Skip the grocery store stalking at stronga href=”http://www.uhaul.com/boards/default.aspx?ForumGroupID=4″U-Haul’s Box Exchange/a./strong/h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/boxes_scaled.png” height=”155″ width=”200″ class=”right” align=”right”Paying for cardboard moving boxes can feel like paying for, well, fresh air or water, but hounding every grocery store and big-box retailer for weeks is no fun at all. Once you’ve settled on buying into new digs and moving, hit up this forum and see if anyone in your area has stuff to unload. No luck there? Pay less for good-quality boxes at a href=”http://www.usedcardboardboxes.com/”UsedCardboardBoxes.com/a, which is exactly what you might think it is./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”9. Make listings browsing easier with stronga href=”http://roost.com”Roost/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/roost_01.png” height=”172″ width=”210″ class=”right” align=”right”Launching a real estate search site takes a bit of guts these days, and a unique anglemdash;which Roost has both of, for the most part. The big-box search interface is a lot cleaner than most of its info-crazy competitors, and the site has pitched itself as having rigorously accurate listings. We can’t say from experience if that’s true, but if you live in or near an area it covers (and they’re adding more regularly), it’s kind of like the Yahoo to Zilllow’s Google searchmdash;good for a fresh take on your searching./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”8. Find the equivalent of your favorite neighborhood at stronga href=”http://neighborhoods.homethinking.com/”Homethinking Neighborhoods/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/neighborhood_compare.png” height=”149″ width=”210″ class=”right” align=”right”Homethinking, a site that nominally helps you find the “most remarkable” real estate agent for a certain area, has a pretty nifty feature that compares neighborhoods across cities in a conversational mannermdash;so it tells you that D.C.’s U Street Corridor is kind of like the Boerum Hill section of Brooklyn’s Park Slope. A good number of our readers found the a href=”http://lifehacker.com/5063969/homethinking-finds-a-neighborhood-youd-like-in-a-new-city”results a little if-y/a, but Homethinking includes user-submitted “reviews”mdash;actually complaints and critiquesmdash;on each match’s page. So if you doubt the veracity of a neighborhood transposition, see what someone who made the move, or knows the streets, has to say. You might just find the guide you’re looking for./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”7. Scope out potential neighborhoods at stronga href=”http://realestate.yahoo.com/neighborhoods”Yahoo/a/strong and stronga href=”http://www.city-data.com/”City-Data.com/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/yahoo_neighborhood.png” height=”150″ width=”220″ class=”right” align=”right”As with so many purchases, pricing isn’t everything when it comes to buying or renting. Yahoo Neighborhoods lays out the demographic averages and charts across a nicely graphical landing page, while City-Data.com is a Census geek’s dreammdash;one huge page for nearly every area of the country, with crime, housing, school performance, and pretty much anything that’s been collected and stored. A fire-sale home is no deal if you feel like an alien in your neighborhood./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”6. Compare buying vs. renting by region at stronga href=”http://hotpads.com/search/#lat=37.6790386010976lon=-97.312608897686zoom=12listingTypes=sale,newHome,rentalloan=30,0.0642,0″HotPads/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/buyvsrent.jpg” height=”157″ width=”220″ class=”right” align=”right”Type “buy,” “rent,” and “calculator” into Google, and you’ll get a fair number of similar tools to do the math. Search site HotPads, however, puts that decision in perspective by having you figure out what you can afford in a sidebar calculator, than filtering search results to show just those spotsmdash;color-coded for rental or purchasemdash;that you can swing. In other words, it makes a two-step, copy-and-paste procedure into a streamlined search. After all, a href=”http://lifehacker.com/5056421/why-renting-makes-more-sense-than-buying”buying isn’t always better than renting/a./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”5. Find an apartment with a href=”http://craigslist.org”strongCraigslist/strong/a feeds./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/craigslist_feeds.jpg” height=”150″ width=”170″ class=”right” align=”right”If you live in an area with active interest in Craigslist’s classified ads, you can do a lot better than praying those back-of-the-weekly printings aren’t already taken. As Adam explains in his a href=”http://lifehacker.com/software/apartments/hack-attack-apartment-hunting-101-176670.php”Apartment Hunting 101 guide/a, the true advantage for those on the renter side are the customized RSS search feeds available. Set up searches for neighborhoods, features (”cats allowed”), pricing, and lots of other features. Better still, you can get at them from your mobile with a href=”http://www.lifehacker.com/software/bloglines/choosing-bloglines-for-your-mobile-device-134053.php”Bloglines’ mobile interface/a or Google Reader’s a href=”http://www.google.com/reader/m”phone version/a, which is perfect when you’re spending a weekend afternoon sussing out the best pads./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”4. Travel through Craigslist for-sales on stronga href=”http://www.mapskrieg.com”MapsKrieg/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/mapskrieg.png” height=”157″ width=”210″ class=”right” align=”right”Craigslist’s RSS feeds will get you the most up-to-date info in your browser or mobile, but it helps to see exactly where the rentals and homes are up for grabs. MapsKrieg, a spiritual successor to the (seemingly defunct) a href=”http://housingmaps.com”HousingMaps/a, simply plots all of your local Craigslist posting for homes, apartments, and rooms onto a nearly page-wide Google Map, and lets you click through to the ad. Simple, effective, really useful./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”3. Take a broader view with stronga href=”http://trulia.com”Trulia/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/trulia_heat_map.jpg” height=”145″ width=”179″ class=”right” align=”right”Trulia offers a different take on real estate search than many of its number-centric peers. Nearly everything you can pull up on the sitemdash;and there’s certainly a lotmdash;can be instantly mashed into a Google Map. You can certainly look up individual homes or sales, but the “Stats Trends” menu is where the unique stuff is. “Heat maps” that show prices going up or down, a Google-like “trends” page for an area, andmdash;be still our geeky heartsmdash;you can map any RSS search feed a href=”http://lifehacker.com/software/google-earth/see-real-estate-listings-in-google-earth-219008.php”onto Google Earth/a. If your choice is between neighborhoods rather than specific homes, Trulia’s a wise stop on the way to a decision./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”2. Plot your home-tour attack at strongGoogle Maps/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/gmaps_realestate.png” height=”173″ width=”220″ class=”right” align=”right”Unless you’ve specifically checked it out, you might not know that Google Maps can inherently show you homes for sale wherever you search. Pulling data from the a href=”http://www.google.com/base”Google Base/a project, GMaps can understand searches like “Duplex near Wooster, Mass.,” or let you refine a regional search by bedrooms, bathrooms, and price. It’s not the most advanced search tool on this page, but if you’re looking to get directions or plan a weekend home tour, you’re already there./p h3 style=”font-size: 120%; margin-top: 20px;”1. Do your pricing research at stronga href=”http://zillow.com”Zillow/a/strong./h3 pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/zillow_crop.png” height=”160″ width=”220″ class=”right” align=”right”Some might remember the media feeding frenzy over Zillow when it opened in early 2006, mostly because the site was only intermittently accessible for the first few weeks of existence. Now that it’s scaled and settled down, it’s become the de facto standard for looking up, comparing, and finding out as much about a home as you can without a stakeout operation. It pulls in a whole heap of data to give you a “Zestimate” about a home’s value, rather than relying on simply tax records or proprietary databases. Combined with its text-operated a href=”http://www.zillow.com/webtools/labs/ZillowMobile.htm”mobile version/a and a href=”http://lifehacker.com/software/real-estate/find-your-bosses-home-value-with-zillow-and-yahoo-188543.php”Yahoo Maps integration/a, Zillow’s probably the best place to start any search or hint of real estate interest, if only to send you on a mission for even more data./p pGot another tool that helped you make your biggest purchase ever? Found a better version of one of our ten tools? Tell us about it in the comments./p br style=”clear: both;”/
a href=”http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=camp;i=3e8651d64e390bc9be6f1bca70c9b190″img src=”http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=vamp;i=3e8651d64e390bc9be6f1bca70c9b190″ border=”0″ //a
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+ Top 10 Web Tools for Election Season [Lifehacker Top 10] By admin 11 October 2008 at 11:00 am and have No Comments


It’s hard these days to imagine how elections happened before the web grew to popularity. With all the instant-access news, video, data, and social networking available in a few seconds’ time, election season is a prime time to dig in and find out where the candidates are getting and spending money, what’s being by and about them and which of it is true, and how to make sure you get your vote in on Nov. 4. Read on for a roundup of ten tools to get politically savvy this this election season and beyond. Photo by ldcross.

10. Compare the candidates.

Unless you’re working on a campaign, chances are you don’t know where each candidate stands on every issue. McCain’s take on net neutrality? Barack’s stance on school vouchers? SelectSmart’s 2008 Presidential Candidate Selector gives you the skinny on the major-topic stances of every candidate, including most of the third-party contenders. Those are the five-minute takes; for a multitude of quotes straight from the candidates’ mouths on the issues, try OnTheIssues.org.

9. Go poll-crazy at FiveThirtyEight.com.

Nate Silver is a total data geek, but he knows how to apply it to interesting topics. He proved that with Baseball Prospectus, which projects performance by players and teams, and he’s striking out to do the same for election results. Silver’s FiveThirtyEight grabs all the polls it can find, weighs them based on methodologies and past accuracy, projects data for regions where it can’t find polls, then runs thousands of simulated elections to come up with a likely outcome. Silver’s site currently has Obama walking away with it; if nothing else, it’ll be interesting to see, come Election Day, how database projections fared with real people.

8. Get your video fix at YouTube’s You Choose ‘08.

Sure, it’s mostly campaign ads, he-said-she-said coverage, and other videos that are, depending on views, reassuring or infuriating. But YouTube’s You Choose ‘08 section is a central source of all attacks, scandals, video evidence of gaffes and quotes, and occasionally, informative video. Bookmark it and feel better about fast-forwarding through the ads when they blanket your television in the coming weeks.

7. Follow the money.

Spending’s become a much-debated issue, at least in this part of the race to the White House. Using some cool visualization tools, you can get all kinds of specific data on the wheres and whats of government spending. This Google Earth layer adds pinpoints wherever appropriated money is being sent, although it leans heavily toward military and homeland security bills. The graph-happy folks at Many Works have put together a ton of interactive (and usually Java-required) tools, including this earmarks visualization of per-capita earmark spending. Now you’re not just mad, you’re madly informed.

6. See what the candidates said about your hot-button topic.

Google Labs offers two neat search tools that let you get beyond the basic talking points and read or see the candidates speaking on any topic. In Quotes lets you type a term and see how Obama and McCain referenced it in speeches, interviews, and other places. GAudi, the YouTube-searching audio index tool, does basically the same thing, but points you to specific points in a video where they said it. Oddly enough, neither candidate has said anything so far about Google, Gmail, or YouTube, according to those tools.

5. Find out how and where to vote.

In all the never-ending debate and fervor of an election season, it can be easy to forget that it’s all about, you know, actually showing up and casting your ballot. Google’s Voter Info Map, run as a partnership with the League of Women Voters makes short work of finding out if you can still register (today is the last day in New York and others, for example), where you go to vote, where to grab an absentee ballot, and your local board of elections web site.

4. Vote early with a no-excuse absentee ballot.

You probably don’t know exactly what your schedule will look like on Election Day, or how crowded your polling place will be. In 28 states, you can skip the early-morning/lunch break/after-work jam and vote with an absentee ballot, no excuse required. The Early Voting Information Center runs down the particulars of getting the jump on your right as a citizen.

3. Track developing stories on blogs and news sites.

Political veterans (or just jaded political wonks) always see an “October surprise” in an election year. See what stories and trends are gaining ground and staying there with two search tools: Microsoft’s Political Streams, part of its Live Labs, follows news stories across blogs, portals, and other aggregators, tracking how often, and for how long, it’s getting linked and written about. Google’s revamped blog search is more specific to blog-generated articles and the buzz they generate. Both are worth checking when you’re looking to see how stories are spun, refuted, and propagated across the web.

2 Track fund raising and donations by candidates (and your neighbors).

Want to see what interests, businesses, and individuals the candidates are helping line the candidates war chests? OpenSecrets.org has maps, graphs, and details that can keep you busy for days. But, honestly, it’s more fun to see who in your neighborhood is giving to whom. Luckily, you can get just that specific at Fundrace 2008, a Google Map mashup run by the Huffington Post blog network (you’ll see their left-leaning post links, but the data is straight-up). You can search donations by street, city, company, or occupation.

1. Get beyond the spin at FactCheck.org.

Run by the non-partisan, non-profit Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania, FactCheck.org has been a go-to source for years whenever politicians claims that they, or their opponent, did or didn’t so something that just seems a tad bit unbelievable. You can track the latest spins and truths by RSS or email alerts, but the site updates pretty quickly with blow-by-blows after debates, major news stories, and other events that cry out for a little objective double-checking.

How do you track the election, the topics at issue, and the galaxy of data available out there? Share your great election resources and links in the comments below.


+ Top 10 Easy Ways to Look Sharp [Lifehacker Top 10] By admin 04 October 2008 at 11:00 am and have No Comments


In a perfect world, it wouldn’t matter what a genius JavaScript programmer or top-flight professional looked like. In this world, though, coming across as an unkempt schlub won’t do anything good for your career, your social life, or your luck with that cute guy or gal from marketing. Luckily, it doesn’t take a lifetime of primping practice to get good at looking decent. A few clever grooming hacks can give you a new and improved look, or help you prep when you’ve got almost no time before a meeting. Read on for our list of 10 low-fuss ways to upgrade your appearance. Photo by Jaako.

10. Get rid of pet hair and sweater fuzz.

It should be your choice to talk about your adorable pet Mittens, rather than have it be obvious you two are close. If you lack a lint roller (or an over-priced refill for one), you can use the palm of your hand, or a document mailing package laying around the office. For non-mammalian trappings on your most stylish sweater, try using a disposable razor.

9. Track the time between haircuts with automatic reminders.

Nobody’s going to up and tell you that your hair’s in need of a trim, and it’s hard to make it a priority when you’ve got a packed schedule. If you’re Googler Matt Cutts, you still manage to keep up appearances by using a Google Calendar hack to track your between-cut time. Geeky? Yes. Easier to listen to than your boyfriend/girlfriend’s gentle nagging? For sure.

8. Fix your clothing choices with hangers.

We all make mistakes when it comes to clothing choices—busted gray T-shirt with khakis, huh?—but you can fight your own worst instincts with nothing but a few hangers. You can, for example, use them to weed out clothes you really don’t need any more. If you have to dress for co-workers’ scrutiny every weekday, you can arrange a left-to-right closet to avoid over-wearing outfits. Best of all, using these tricks frees up space for important stuff—like DIY projects.

7. Give your shoes a drill-instructor-approved polish.

Nice leather shoes stop looking so darned crisp with time, or after being actually worn and walked around in. Restoring their luster isn’t hard at all—you just need a can of the black stuff, a horsehair brush, a newspaper and a rag. Check out the Art of Manliness’ polishing guide and queue up the boot camp marching songs. No time for the rag routine? You can still pull off an acceptable shine in five minutes. Photo by abchbum.

6. Get a sharp-looking suit on the cheap.

Sometimes, advanced common sense can pay off big. Brazen Careerist blogger Penelope Trunk notes that for those who will only wear a three-piece once every job, spending a lot of dough just isn’t necessary. Spend your time instead looking for a good tailor; buy a passable suit, have it cut to fit, and don’t hit the Wii Fit before the interview.

5. Freshen your breath without mints.

At many white-cloth Indian restaurants, customers are given a dry assortment of herbs after the meal, or between dishes. That’s because herbs like coriander seeds and spearmint do a heck of a job destroying harsh breath. MSN Health points out that yogurt, fiber-rich fruits and veggies, sugarless gum, and snacks stocked with vitamin C are similarly potent at knocking down post-meal remainders. Photo by yoppy.

4. De-grease unwashed hair.

Maybe the alarm didn’t go off, or the night went a bit late—however you ended up with greasy hair, you can pull off some one-minute triage. Throw some baby powder (or talc, or even corn starch, if you’re out) into your palms, run it through your hair with a comb or fingers, and wipe off any excess white dust. eHow’s got the details, but our commenters have got their own bad hair how-tos.

3. Learn to shave with a straight razor.

If you want to look good, save money, and feel like an old-fashioned man’s man, learning how to shave with a straight razor is your ticket to all three. It can be a bit daunting, but it’s the closest and cleanest shave, and quite a bit greener, too. If tackling your face Sweeney-Todd-style is just a bit too intimidating, you can still avoid razor bumps and get twice as much life from disposables.

2. Get a black belt in tie-tying.

Maybe the reason so many people never quite master the art of tying a tie is because it’s embarassing to ask—it’s a total head trip in helplessness. Luckily, there are lots of ways to get your tie on without ever having to admit naivete. For straight-up, diagrammed knots, check out Tie-a-Tie.net, with a basic video tutorial at YouTube. For advice on what style and knot go with which occasion (or face structure), try the Kinowear blog’s guide. Feeling confident, grasshopper? Learn how to get it done in 10 seconds.

1. Pack for wrinkle-free clothes.

Hotel room irons—they’re small, leaky, and not very good. Avoid them altogether by packing like a pro. Travel firm Fodor’s suggests separating hanger items with bags. Then there’s the Advanced Hobo-jitsu of the bundle wrapping technique, and the mind-blowing skills of the Japanese turbo-fold for T-shirts. If you’re fearing the worst, no matter how skilled your packing, you can avoid giving Downy their pound of flesh and whip up your own wrinkle releaser.

How do you stay a sharp-dressed, neatly-coiffed, proper-looking lad or lady? What routines or last-minute tricks save your morning routine? Tell us your not-so-secrets in the comments.


+ Top 10 Ways to Stay Energized [Lifehacker Top 10] By admin 27 September 2008 at 11:00 am and have No Comments


Even if you’re a hyper-organized, task-oriented worker with an expansive mind and endless ambition, you won’t get a lot done if your mind and body are demanding you curl up and doze off. Luckily, you can overcome a late night of net surfing, a rough morning, or just the post-lunch stupor without becoming an over-wired mess. We’ve put together 10 of the best ways to jumpstart your brain and get back into a productive groove, and all of them are tricks you can put to work this Monday. Photo by neps.

10. Make your own energy products.

If you’re going to resort to a brick of grains and protein to give you short-term “power” or “energy,” you may as well have it be cheap—and tastier than those foil-wrapped roofing tiles. Same goes for re-hydrating drinks, which can be easily mixed at home. Foodie extraordinaire Alton Brown has recipes for three different home-baked bars, as does About.com’s Sports Medicine section. Of course, there’s always the free stuff flowing from the tap for true replenishment.

9. Listen to brain-stretching music.

Among other tips offered up by software programmer Brad Isaac beating “brain drain,” the exhaustion that comes from sustained concentration, is working a little Mozart or Bach into your playlist. There’s no overly hook-y melody to pull your mind away, and the harmony of so many instruments together relaxes your mind. Strings and brass not your thing? Try the non-intrusive, up-tempo ambient of Groove Salad.

8. Deal with job burnout.

Even if you’re generally happy with your job, the people you work with, and the work you’re doing, small annoyances and responsibilities can build up over time, until a dark, angry cloud hangs over you seven and a half hours per day. Seriously—feeling overwhelmed by your tasks was the second most frequent response in our poll on energy zappers. The Simple Dollar blog recommends scheduling an immediate vacation to take care of piling-up home stuff and set your mind free. Web Worker Daily suggests finding a new project. However you handle burnout, keeping an even head about your job gives you a lot more energy to spend on stuff that’s a lot more fun.

7. Schedule around your energy peaks.

Writer and speaker Michelle Dunn describes herself as “very organized,” but there are times of the day she just can’t be productive. So when she’s about to hit a lull—like right after lunch—she schedules errands and tackles non-thinking tasks, and otherwise schedules around her energy. Of course, not everybody can just run off to Target whenever they’re feeling blah, so 43 Folders honcho Merlin Mann explains subtle ways to work inside your schedule.

6. Get outside—even if it’s cloudy

Even if you live in one of those areas with perma-gray skies for two-thirds of the year, getting outside every day can give you a vitamin D boost and the resulting mood and energy improvements. The National Institutes of Health recommends getting 10 to 15 minutes of sun each day, and a layer of sunscreen if you’re getting more. Even better, you get away from the screens, voicemails, and low-level humming of the office.

5. Crank out some morning exercises.

You know those mornings where you have to get right up and do something with a deadline? The groans about coffee and sleep fall away, and you usually get it done. Give yourself a now-now-now pushup cycle right after your breakfast, and you might just shake off your sluggish self-doubt and get moving. If you’re looking to get more out of your morning time, personal trainer Dan Boyle offers a two and a half minute core routine that’ll definitely leave you aware that you’re awake. Photo by whyld.

4. Eat the right nutrition mix.

Sugar and bread give you a quick jolt of energy, but ultimately result in an insulin-powered crash later in the day. Too much meat doesn’t give you enough of the quick-firing stuff. Balancing out your lunch, instead of just eating leftover pasta, can have a big impact on your day, according to the Harvard School of Public Health Nutrition Source. As Lifehacker guest editor (and current io9 editor) Annalee Newitz puts it:

Remember, carbs come in fruits and veggies as well as grains. And you can get protein from meat, dairy, fish, eggs and beans (like soy or pinto). The perfect lunch might be a veggies with fish (mmm, nicoise salad, anyone?), and the best snack an apple with a little cheese.

It’s also not a bad idea to keep the heavy meals for morning to ensure better sleeping patterns.

3. Put your senses to work.

If you’re stuck at work after a rough night, chances are you’ll be staring at a hypnotizing screen or look-alike paperwork and finding it hard to stay awake. WikiHow suggests a multi-sensory assault on your tired self. Try scenting yourself awake with some essential oils of (or just strong scent of) peppermint or rosemary, or target the alertness-sparking stress points like your earlobes and the skin between your thumb and forefinger. Keep yourself a little chilly, and try to move around a bit—it’s your best shot at not having the boss notice you haven’t said a word since 9AM. Photo by cote.

2. Switch from venti to smaller caffeine doses.

Slamming half a carafe of coffee to get alert and productive is kind of like pounding a six-pack to get social and funny—you’re going to miss your mark , in often painful ways. Research suggests that small, frequent doses of caffeine—like tea breaks, caffeinated mints, and even chocolate—do a better job of keeping your brain from feeling fatigued than jitter-inducing java. Of course, if you’ve got the willpower and patience, you could also just drink half-cups of coffee more frequently. Photo by ToOb.

1. Master the power nap.

Taking a nap isn’t calling it quits on getting energized—it’s just running a quick defrag on your neural drive and rebooting. We’ve covered the ins and outs of napping pretty thoroughly here, but if you need a quick take-away, try the Boston Globe’s comprehensive cheat sheet. If shut-eye alone can’t bring you back, try a coffee-charged caffeine nap.

How do you keep your energy levels high and even throughout the day? What do you do when you need a recharge? Tell us your own tips and tricks in the comments.


+ Top 10 Right-Click Tools [Lifehacker Top 10] By admin 17 September 2008 at 11:00 am and have No Comments

The right mouse button—beloved by geeks for its power, theoretically unnecessary on a Mac, and generally under-utilized on the average desktop. Right-clicking can be a powerful tool for automating file actions and saving yourself time and arm effort, but only if you’ve put your own stamp on the offerings of that secondary button. Today we’re rounding up some of the best tools for adding power and precision to your right-click menu on Windows, Mac, and Linux systems, so check out what can be done from the other side of the scroll wheel. Photo by geobeo.

10. Add convenient actions to Nautilus (Linux)

The default file manager for GNOME-based Linux systems has a pretty sparse right-click menu when first installed. Install a few helper packages, however, and soon you’re rotating and resizing images without an editor, popping open terminals for quick system work, and skipping the sudo command entirely with a “Run as administrator” link. Ubuntu users can install the nautilus-gksu, nautilus-image-converter, and nautilus-open-terminal packages for starters; users of other distributions should search their package manager for “nautilus” (or “konqueror” for KDE-based systems) to see what’s available for quick right-click fix-ups.

9. Use two fingers for trackpad right-clicking

If you’re new to Macs, or you just haven’t dug deep into its configuration options, it’s easy to miss this one. Mac laptops only have one button; instead of stretching your hands an octave-length to the Control key, put two fingers on the trackpad and click. To enable it, head to the Keyboard & Mouse section of System Preferences, under the Trackpad section, check this option: “For secondary clicks, place two fingers on the trackpad then click the button.”

8. Get Google Map directions without a street address

You can know where “that restaurant with the good burgers” is (a few blocks over from the big intersection) without knowing an actual street address. Find the general spot in Google Maps, right-click, and click for directions to or from that area. You might find it helpful, or you might not truly appreciate it until you’re on a scarcely-there Wi-Fi connection, trying to find a way across town and furiously Google-ing for possible addresses.

7. Make one-click FTP uploads with RightLoad

Anyone with access to their own web space, or with a need to do a lot of FTP transfer, should add RightLoad to their file-swapping arsenal. Set up your FTP servers in RightLoad’s preferences, and sending files to the server is as easy as right-clicking and choosing a server. After you’re done, RightLoad creates HTML-formatted links for quick web writing or friend-linking, and automatically renames duplicate files. Your overworked FTP client thanks you for the downtime.

6. Tweak Windows’ Send To Menu

If you’re not a fan of installing contextual applications or power toys on your system, Windows’ built-in “Send to” menu on the right-click box can offer a lot of flexibility—you can create instant shortcuts, email or open a file, and much more. Lifehacker reader Howard Dickens explained the process for adding “Send To” actions and items in Windows 98 and XP; for the Vista method, check with the How-To Geek.

5. Customize the Mac Finder’s actions with FinderPop

One of those apps that gives back the more that’s put into it, FinderPop is a hugely customizable tool for cutting down the number of clicks needed to copy, move, or alias files between locations on your Mac. FinderPop can also launch applications or kill runaway processes, making the right-click (or Ctrl-click) menu a powerful launching pad.

4. Add or delete context items with ShellExView

Programs come and go from your computer, and even after they’re thoroughly scrubbed, they can leave behind annoying traces in your context menu. ShellExView is where you get complete control over what shows up when you right-click a file, your desktop, or even Internet Explorer. You can add any program, delete useless links, and otherwise hook yourself up with time-saving shortcuts.

3. Roll your own right-click Mac actions with OnMyCommand

Let’s face it—some of the work you do is creative, and some of it is just resizing a bunch of images to 400 pixels wide and converting them to JPEG. Automate those mandatory tasks with OnMyCommand, an AppleScript/command-line app that adds your own scripts or already-compiled offerings to Finder’s right-click menu. Check out SimpleHelp’s concise and clear guide for help getting started with OnMyCommand.

2. Create file-aware right-click options

Many of the tools listed above make adding custom file-wrangling options to your right-click menu easy, but only for every file or folder you click. If you want to get specific with certain file types, adding custom for-this-file-type-only actions isn’t as hard as it might seem. Adam has explained the custom context menu process (pulled from a MetaFilter thread) for Windows XP; Vista users should check out FileMenuTools, detailed elsewhere in this list.

1. Combine lots of right-click tools with FileMenuTools

If you’re a Windows user and only have time to try out one of the right-click tools we’ve gathered here, FileMenuTools is a safe bet for maximum utility. It doesn’t get as in-depth as some of the utilities it rolls together, but it lets you create contextual file actions, improve your Send To menu, add super-helpful tweaks like “Run Command Line from Here” and “Copy Path,” and generally geek out your right-click menu without touching the registry or hunting down obscure command line options.

Right-click menus are definitely a to-each-their-own tool, as the most useful tools depend on what you’re trying to get done. So we ask our dear readers: What right-click actions, links, and tweaks help you act quickly and shuttle files more efficiently? Share your own tips in the comments below.