Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

Too many websites!

Sometimes you just need some space to walk around the web, so here's the space![Sounds geeky? Trust me it isn't that bad O:-) ]
Here's a list of some Internet's Websites, that i'll hope you'll be visiting first time.

Have too much time? Waste it here!
Dilbert You probably already have this one bookmarked
Homestarrunner.com - A strange off-center site but very entertaining
StrongBad Email - The most popular part of Homestarrunner.com
Spreadsheet Jokes - There are actually quite a few of them
GameHouse - A fun games site. (Doug has the world's highest Glinx score!)
Talk Like A Pirate - Arrrrr......
Awful Plastic Surgery - Beautiful people?!?
Museum of Obscure Patents - Strange stuff people invented
WonderfullyWacky.com - Gag Gifts and Funny Stuff
Jungle Jim's - World's greatest grocery store! Does your store have a monorail?
Gizmodo - Gadgets, gadgets, gadgets!
BBSpot - Geekie top eleven lists
Computer Stupidities - Strange tales from technical support
T.W.I.N.K.I.E.S. Project - Destructive fun with Twinkies
The Euphemism Generator - 198,211,143 unique phrases, collect them all!
ThinkGeek - Cool geeky stuff
TerraServer - See your house from space!
Camp Chaos - Parody cartoons, odd games, other weird stuff
Kiss This Guy - Misunderstood music lyrics
There Are No Words... - One photo, many variations
RoboDump - Pure toilet humor
Something Awful - A multimedia parody assault, no one is safe
Panoramas - 360 degree visuals from around the world
Movie Database - Look up all kinds of movie information
Bad Astronomy - It's more common than you think
NitPickers - Movie oopsies
Movie Poopers - movie synopses / spoilers
Bubble Wrap - Annoy the heck out of your friends and coworkers
Dave's Daily - A major storehouse of weird and funny stuff
The Art of Retouching - Beauty is in the eye of the mouse clicker
Glen Lachart Online - Goofiness from Scotland
Sand! - Kinetic cyber art
Strange New Products - Just what it says
M.I. Stupid - Stupid (and fun) stuff
Movie Trailers - Coming to a theater near you


News
Cosmic Log - A lively discussion of current space news and events
Oddly Enough - Odd news from Reuters and Iwon.com
411 Mania – News and discussion on movies, music, games, wrestling and more
Drudge Report - Compilation of many news sources plus commentary
Daryl Cagel - Political cartoons from around the world (categorized!)
Geek Press - Just for us geeks
Bizarre News - Exactly what it says
Fark.com - Odd news, real news...mostly
Wikipedia - Everything about everything
Sploid - Archives only right now
Fortean Times - News about UFOs, monsters and other weird stuff
News of the Weird - Yes it is


News - sort of...
The Onion - News the way it should be
Whine of the Week - A roundup of unprofessional professional athletes
The Answer Man - A twisted look at sports news
Am I Annoying? - Different every time. Refresh for new profiles.
Mr. Smarty Pants - Fun facts you probably didn't know
This Is True - Truth is stranger than fiction
Darwin Awards - Pray you are never win one


Helpful
Symantec Virus Hoax Page - Good information, fun reading
HoaxBusters - Some interesting history of internet and email hoaxes
The Skeptic's Dictionary - Deceptions and delusions debunked
BadBossology - Protecting people and companies from bad bosses
Snopes - Urban legends site. Check here before forwarding any emails.
Answers - Fast facts on a multitude of subjects
The World Clock - Get the local time, anywhere in the world.
Power Reporting - Journalist's resource, LOTS of great information links
Langenberg - Great phone references (reverse directory, etc.) and more
Baseball Reference - Baseball stats galore!
CIA World Fact Book - Select a county, get lots of info


Blogs
Bloggermann - Keith Olbermann on MSNBC
Wonkette - Lot of politics
Clicked - You never know where his links will take you!

Monday, 22 December 2008

50 All time best Websites

When it comes to the Internet, we're creatures of habit – Google for search, Hotmail for email, Twitter to stay in touch and maybe the BBC's website for news. This means that we use only a handful of favourite sites, leaving the rest of the Internet unvisited. Let's put that right. By the time you've finished reading, we promise that your list of bookmarked sites will have ballooned and you'll be getting more from your surfing.
Software and tools
1. ThinkFree Office is a powerful suite of productivity apps that includes a robust word processor, spreadsheet and presentation tool. The suite has subtle touches such as an inline spell-checker, and you can work offline if the Internet goes down. There's also support for 11 languages and helpful PDF export capability. Most importantly, you can share documents with other users and work on files collaboratively. The suite is free if you can live with 1GB of storage, or upgrade for a nominal fee to a premium account.
2. Zoho is a highly useful web portal for being productive on the go. More than just a word processor and task manager, Zoho has a multitude of small web apps for taking notes, storing contact information and project management. There's even a web conferencing tool. APIs are available for the web services in Zoho's word processor and spreadsheet, too. There's also a slideshow creator so that you can make calls from another website – for example, an accounting site could read tables from a Zoho spreadsheet. The site is one of the first to support VB macros and the document mark-up language LaTeX.
3. It's time to ditch Microsoft Excel. EditGrid is powerful enough for basic number crunching without the extensive pivot table and worksheet functions. Its main strength, unsurprisingly, comes in how you can format cells, with image includes, JavaScript calls and a data exchange between spreadsheets and even between the spreadsheets hosted by other users. There's a plugin that reads Excel data, templates, mash-up features for integrating data from websites like Yahoo! Finance and plenty of text formatting options. Registration is quick and there are three pricing plans: one free account, a premium account for just a few dollars per month and a multi-user company plan. Unfortunately, it does not work in Internet Explorer 6.
4. Web project management has taken a beating these last few years, especially since tools like www.basecamphq.com stress simplicity over actual features. Clarizen is easy to use and runs fast on a 3Mbps connection on a 64-bit 3GHz Vista PC, but it also has deeper features. For example, you can update your task list by sending an email to the project inbox. (You can also request a daily task list by sending an email.)
5. The original idea for SlideShare came when co-founder Jonathan Boutelle was at a conference and saw how attendees were easily sharing large videos and photo collections online, but had to physically pass around USB keys to distribute sales presentations. He created SlideShare as a way to host and store PowerPoint files. It has became incredibly popular.
6. It may not have the flare and design of Microsoft Visio, but the online flow-charting program known as Gliffy certainly has an expansive set of features. There are icons for networking, office design and organisation charts to help you put some order around any idea. Line connectors automatically snap into place, or avoid certain shapes when you move them around the screen – a powerful programming trick, especially since the site does not use any plug-ins or require you to download any software.
7. Part online presence for slideshows and part client-side tool that helps you create presentations and post them online, sliderocket.com has one major benefit: it's lightning fast. In tests with several different PCs at different connection speeds (including one at a public hotspot), we found that we could create a detailed sales presentation with several high-res graphics in no time The site uses Adobe Flex and the AIR client. 'Presentation analytics' (now there's a buzzword) tells you who saw your presentation and even how long they looked at each of your slides.
8. Scribd is not quite a word processor, although it looks like one at first. Instead, it's actually a content creation tool that you could use to publish your own technical papers, schoolwork, or even a novel online. It's also one of the only document management tools we have found that is free and publicly available (Scribd also offers a closed service).
Storage and files
9. Our favourite online storage portal, box.net has the most fascinating social networking features. Other users can tag and comment on your files (if you give them permission). You can use APIs to link the storage (a basic account is free, premium services cost about £4-£10 per month) to popular web services like www.zoho.com and www.picnik.com. If you do go with the premium account, you get 5 or 15GBs and the ability to see version history on files. Alas, there does not appear to be a desktop folder as with Dropbox.
10. It's easier to understand Pando by what it's not: you can't sync files, store them online or make back-ups. Instead, it's the best site we' found for sending large fi les by email. Instead of using attachments, you just send your recipient a Pando link. Max file size is 1GB, and there's a video sharing version for consumers and corporate users – all free.
11. Although it's not what we really want (a full Microsoft Word client on the web), Workspace is as close as Microsoft is willing to get at this point. It's a 'store and share' site that is worth your time because you can archive thousands of Word docs for free and make them fully searchable online – for you or for any user you give permission to access the archive.
12. Instead of just storing your files online or syncing them between computers, MozyHome is both a web portal to view your archived files and a client-side back-up app. Its main feature is the ability to monitor important folders and archive them to the web so that you can restore them at any time, regardless of whether you are even using the same computer. MozyHome is the free version that comes with 2GB of online storage, while Mozy Unlimited costs $5 per month and Mozy Pro is a network back-up utility with several pricing plans.
13. Most photo sharing sites use some combination of web forms, HTML and JavaScript to help you organise your photos online. Zoto uses JavaScript, along with a client-side photo uploader that

14. It might be easy to dismiss EyeOS as an attention grabbing alternative OS that runs in a browser. After all, it could be argued Firefox is a kind of operating system that runs JavaScript apps. EyeOS makes easy work of common tasks like file associations and one-click access to your favourite apps. The OS includes 60 popular apps, including word processing and audio players – you can get more at www.eyeos-apps.org. Still in its infant state, EyeOS reveals a tantalising glimpse of what Windows could look like if it ran in a browser.
15. The concept of a 'social database' might seem like a contradiction – but Blist pulls it off. You can enter vast quantities of data – the entire fantasy football roster for all your friends, for example – and then share the data between Blist users. Templates are geared for those who want to weed out duplicate data.
16. The holy grail of file syncing is the ability to drop files into a folder and have that same folder show up on every other computer you own and work exactly like a network drive – except that it's online. Dropbox (still in beta) solves this issue. Just add a folder to your desktop and copy files. You can also share complete folders so that anyone with access to the folder sees and is able to use the shared, synced files.
17. Carbonite is a unique online back-up utility that sits in your system tray and watches important folders, such as those containing 'dev' files or Word documents, automatically archiving them to a secure website as you work. There is no limit to the storage space available, although the program will only upload a couple of gigabytes per day. Strangely, after install, the clientside app reboots Windows Explorer.
Graphics
18. There are no extra frills offered by dafont.com – the main draw is that the site houses over 7,000 fonts, all freely available to download for Mac or Windows. Linux users will have to convert the fonts. You can grab every single font in one eMule or BitTorrent file; just go to www.dafont.com/faq.php#howmany and look for the 'zip' file links.
19. Part Flickr replacement and part entry-level photo editor, Photoshop Express proves that Adobe is on a clear path toward online apps. It's fairly basic: you can apply a handful of filters for lighting and exposure, rotate and re-size images, embed photos into a web page and share your shots with other users – even those on Flickr. The site shows huge potential: with 2GB of free storage, imagine being able to apply complex editing tasks to a series of photos where 'the cloud' does all the processing for you.
20. There's a plethora of general purpose how-to sites on the web, including the fantastic www.wonderhowto.com, but Luxa is for the technical-minded Photoshop user. You may already know how to perform a Gaussian blur, but Luxa teaches you how to make neon glow effects, complex layering, text design within Photoshop and many other skills.
21. Don't avoid Bluestring just because it's owned by AOL: the site is an example of how the web can be a powerful ally in digital media collection. You can upload music, photos, and videos. The handy status bar lets you do a massive bulk upload and switch to a different tab, then check back to see how much data has been uploaded.
22. Ecommerce sites have changed dramatically over the years. Imagekind is a unique site that lets you preview museum art and photos on various picture frames and even different canvas materials before making the purchase. Prints generally cost about £15 each. You can also sell your own prints.
23. Web users are always in a hurry, which is what makes Flauntr so attractive. You can click one option to see multiple views of how a filter will change your photo. Using the 'PicasR' filter, you can pick a work of art from Picasso and apply that technique to your image. The site isn't exceptionally fast, but the drag-and-drop interface and one-click effects are worth exploration.
24. If registering with Simplebucket could be easier, we'd be surprised. To upload photos (2MB max per image), you don't even need an account. You just type in your email, select photos and upload. You can then view those photos associated with your email account by clicking on a secure link the site sends you. Simplebucket is free, although you can buy more 'upload credits' for a few dollars – you get five free per day. If you want a password, you can always upload a photo and then click 'Settings' to create an account.
25. 1001freefonts actually has about 7,000 fonts to pick from, each with a useful preview. You can also perform a 'custom preview' to see how the font looks with the text you intend using. There's also a download option to buy 7,000 fonts all at once, which costs about a tenner.
26. InterfaceLIFT is a vast collection of icons, images, wallpapers and random clipart, which can help you add some flair to a web app or an interface. You can also just download desktop wallpapers — it's an amazingly good collection and all the artwork is free to use.
27. Similar to Photoshop Express, Picnik goes much further with an extensive array of photo-editing effects, histograms, fine pixel alterations and colour correction. You can upload photos from your PC, a webcam and any website.
Research and e-learning
28. Not all sites have to use a flashy interface. Martindale's reference desk is essentially a collection of links to really useful information. There's a huge wealth of reference material on disparate topics such as banjo lessons, world clocks, time and expense calculators, eye tests for computer users, a science database, currency convertors and just about anything you can think of. As the web moves closer to a 'single use' model where one site performs only a simple function, Martindale's throws the book at you – virtually.
29. Ever wonder how to embed a picture to a cell in Microsoft Excel? At eHow, you can find the answer in just a few clicks. They have categories for electronics, careers, health and many others. The site is almost all text, so you can find the answers you need quickly.
30. Mashery is a hosted service for your web API – it allows you to create links between, say, Yahoo! maps and Flickr photos, or plot the location of public parks with disc golf data you pull from a volunteer site. It supports usage tracking, asset management, encryption – everything you need to link data form one host to another.
31. Amazon uses the term 'artificial artificial intelligence' (sic) to define what the Mechanical Turk site is all about. It's actually a site where you can sign up to perform very repetitive tasks, such as typing text transcripts for videos. You pay just a few cents per completed Human Intelligence Task. These are generally things that a computer is not very good at. It's a very illuminating example of where AI is faltering.
32. Agreeing on basic business principals often requires written contracts and lawyers. You can skip that chaos by using Mumboe, a site that hosts online applications for business agreements. The free account is quite limited: you can only host up to 10 agreements and only three users can apply. Pricing for premium accounts runs to about £12 to £24 per month for unlimited users, secure and searchable contracts and version control. Registration is a little clunky: you have to agree to the terms twice and the confirmation email took a while to send.
33. Not quite a web aggregator, yet more than a simple search engine, PageOnce lets you add secure sites to one page – you can see your bank balance, airline ticket info, Netflix rentals and a host of other data. Registration was pretty easy: no codes to type in, just a confirmation link sent through email.
Mobile workers
34. The problem with most video chat software is that everyone you chat with needs to have downloaded the client. TokBox works online for two-way chats and multi-point video conferences with no software to download, and the registration is Web 2.0-streamlined to get you talking straightaway.
35. Other online conversion sites show you a laundry list of other options besides currency, for example weight, measurement and even language. Xe focuses entirely on currency, which means that it's easier to navigate and conversion options are all on the main screen.
36. While many online flight search sites are US-only, Skyscanner lets you choose any country as your origin, supports many different languages and presents an uncluttered, mostly ad-free interface for finding the lowest rates on international flights.
37. A web whiteboarding tool, Twiddla lets you visit any site and then host a meeting online where you can chat about the site, host an audio chat and mark it up with shapes and notes to participants. It's very useful for web developers and designers who want to visit a site in production to talk about the look and feel of it. It's also just a good meet-up site for mobile users who need to exchange ideas, and best of all, it's free.
38. Mobile users can watch TV any time they want with Joost - and the service has recently switched to an online viewer instead of requiring that you download a client. With 28,000 shows online, Joost has a leg up on other more 'premium' sites such as Hulu, although don't expect a high bit-rate or HD quality for any of the online streams.
39. Vello is unique. It lets you arrange a phone conference by calling a Vello number that re-distributes the conference call number to anyone that you want. There's no registrationor sign-up for attendees, and the site even offers a seven-day free trial to check it out.
40. Instant messaging aggregators are handy because they put all of your accounts into one page so you can chat with your associates and friends without installing any software. Orgoo is helpful if you tend to visit Internet cafes or use a borrowed laptop from work, or just want one-click access to IM. Still in private beta, it also offers a new video chat service that uses your webcam and is now open for unregistered use.
41. Like an open-source version of Microsoft Exchange, Zimbra is a mail client for business use where you host all of the mail online for every user. You can share all of your personal folders, assign specific tasks to certain people, instant message, integrate IMAP and POP mail as well as use an iPhone client to access the mail repository, and arrange meetings with your team.
42. Note-taking apps are usually small utilities that you download and use on your desktop. Evernote is a webbased version that collects all of your fragmented data into one searchable portal. You can scan documents, send an email to your account and upload photos, videos or just about anything you can think of to your own secure site. Then, when you need to find that one website or phone number, or that hilarious photo from the last business outing, you can fi d it on the free notes database online.
Miscellaneous
43. Keepm is a business card manager for the web. Adding a contact is very quick: you type the name, then add the phone numbers and address for that person. You can also import data from Outlook or using a the vCard file format and you can export your contacts database for use in other programs as a vCard or CSV file.
44. It's about time someone created an aggregator for video content. OVGuide doesn't actually host any videos, but it helps you find where they are located on the web. It's agnostic about the legalities of full-length feature films, merely pointing you to known locations.
45. Weeding out the undesirables and trolls on Internet forums is a Herculean task. Daniweb is a different kind of IRC chat: only IT professionals can join and the chats tend to be highly technical rather than just mindless chatter.
46. Google searches are a million miles wide and a centimetre thick. Stumpedia only returns the results that other users think are valuable. We searched for virtualisation on both search engines. On Google, we saw millions of links, most of them poorly worded definitions and myopic marketing sites. On Stumpedia there are just three links, including a site entry that does the server technology justice – it's worth a click.
47. The brilliant thing about trip planning site TripIt is that it knows where you are. If you plan a business trip to London, you can load all of your contacts from email clients and then track who will be in the area at the same time as you.
48. Intense – that's the initial reaction we had when using TunesBag (still in private beta – you have to request an invitation). Legal because the site is hosted in Austria, you can upload all of your music files to the site and then listen to the songs from any computer – or share the music with anyone you want. Use it while it's still alive!
49. If you use an RSS reader then it's worth checking out Toluu. The site is an 'aggregator of the aggregators'; you can import multiple RSS feeds from various sources and read them all in one spot before sharing the feeds with other users. Sharing is key: it means that you see what people who have subscribed to the same feeds as you are reading.
50. SoSauce is a catch-all for journaling to yourself (reminders, thoughts for the day), finding travel deals, social networking with other users and sharing photos. We love the area where you can play games like extreme sledding and hyper pong against other SoSauce members. (via tech radar)

Wednesday, 22 October 2008

13 Internet Websites(tools) To Create & Host a Website

Today, we are listing 13 Free Web Applications That Helps You To Create And Host Your Website when you want to create website for yourself or for your clients. To use these web applications you dont need to be a designer or developer or dont need any technical knowledge. You can create mutliple types of website using them, few of them are offering flash based websites while few of them are static, and some of them have functionality to create blog and photo gallery as well. Most of them are not very well known but they are really amazing in respect to their features and functionality. I am not going to add Wordpress and Blogger in this list as you already know about them. and Just take a look at them and share your thoughts here. Enjoy creating your absolutely free website now!


Wix - Create a free website,  Free MySpace layouts & Flash MySpace layouts
Wix - Create a free website,  Free MySpace layouts & Flash MySpace layouts
With Wix you can create a free website or  make free MySpace layouts and Flash MySpace layouts. It’s the simpler, faster, better way to build & design on the web.
Weebly - Create a free website and a free blog
weebly
Weebly is the easiest way to create a free website. From personal to professional sites, Weebly will enable you to spend your time on the most valuable part of your site, its content. You can create free website and free blogs.
Google Sites
google sites
Google Sites is a free and easy way to create and share webpages. This is powerful enough for a company intranet, yet simple enough for a family website as well.
Freewebs - Make a web site with photo albums, blogs, videos, forums and more!
freewebs
Make a website in minutes with simple tools for individuals, groups, or small businesses to share photos and videos, open a store, and build a member community.
SynthaSite - Free Website & Hosting
SynthaSite - Free Website & Hosting
You can build a free website with SynthaSite. This is really quick & easy website builder that requires no technical skills to create your new website thats will look more professional and beautiful.
Viviti - build a website as unique and dynamic as you
Viviti - build a website as unique and dynamic as you
Viviti is the fastest way to make a professional, easy to update, web site with only a few clicks. You’ll have your web site looking great and online in minutes!
Jimdo - Create your free website
jimdo
It’s really easy to create your own JimdoFree-Page free website, you will need to just sign-up, follow the link to your own Page, integrate pictures, videos and texts in seconds, change the design with a click, add as many pages as you want and show your swifty JimdoFree-Page to your friend.
Tumblr - The easiest way to share yourself
tumblr
Tumblr makes it effortless to share text, photos, quotes, links, music, and videos, from your browser, phone, desktop, email, or wherever you happen to be.
Webon free websites and free website hosting
webon
You can build the dynamic, stylish, and ad-free site you’ve always wanted with Webon’s powerful site creation platform.  You can embed widgets from services like YouTube, Flickr, and Slide. Developers can even extend Webon’s library of add-ons using the OpenSocial standard.
Webnode - Build a free website and create a free blog
webnode
Webnode brings you a brand new innovative way of creating and editing advanced websites by just using a web browser. By using Drag-and-Drop from the toolbar you can add new content such as polls, forums, articles, catalogues, widgets such as PayPal and much more.
Edicy - Build and edit websites with ease
edicy
Edicy is so easy to use you can build a site for your business or organization and have it live on the internet in a matter of minutes. All the tools are available online with no additional software required, just pick one of our beautifully made designs, enter your text, add your images and then publish your site to your own custom web address, it’s that simple.
WebSketch - Your web your way
WebSketch - Your web your way
As you move objects on your page in WebSketch, others move out of the way automatically for you. The end result is a clean, crisp and clear layout that looks great.
Microsoft Office Live Small Business  - Web site Design and Hosting
Web site Design and Hosting – Microsoft Office Live Small Business
Microsoft Office Live give you free Web hosting, easy-to-use design tools, and site traffic reports, They also provide everything you need to look professional on the Web, as well as free, around-the-clock support.

Thursday, 11 September 2008

Can You Look At these Websites?




BLENDER.ORG (www.blender.org)

While big budget animated films are all the rage for the likes of Disney and Pixar, you can actually create your own low budget production using open source software that you can download for free if you visit blender.org.

Download and installation is pretty straight forward. What is more daunting by far is launching the package and trying to figure out your way around the interface. If you are familiar with 3D animation software, it will all look pretty familiar. And more intuitive, I am told, than most professionally available packages as this has been designed by the kind of people who will use it.
But for newcomers there is a great tutorial on wiki that will see you from newbie to, well not exactly pro as the title suggests, but certainly able to start doing some simple modelling and animation within hours.
Persevere and you will be amazed by what you can create.


Still from Super3boy tutorial on You Tube.
Now while the text and screen shot tutorial is really great for stepping you through the processes to your animation, some people prefer a more visual medium. So I just want to show you this series of films on YouTube that address some of the more complex activities once you have your feet under the table. Super3boy has made a series of 26 video tutorials uncovering the many mysteries of Blender that I am finding incredibly useful. Start at number one and work your way through.
Pretty soon you will be Blending like a pro and posting your own short films on You Tube.


Sample font from getfreefonts.info
If 3D animation is a bit too much for you, you can still exercise your creativity in your every day correspondence. Do not get stuck in a rut with boring old fonts like Times New Roman and Arial - getfreefonts.info instead. I love the quirky selection of fonts on these pages, that are sure to brighten up any letter, e-mail or presentation. Tantrum Tongue, BubbleBath, Easily Amused - they have great names too.

You can search the fonts alphabetically then browse through the pages until you spot something that suits. There are 2,500 fonts to choose from, with the sample text displayed beside each download link so you can see what you are getting. Simple and functional, this site delivers exactly what you would expect with the minimum of fuss. Lovely.


Still from Throw Me

This site is well worth a visit as long as you have some time to spare, I found it incredibly hard to drag myself away.

Start by swinging your mouse back and forth to build up momentum and when you are ready to throw, hit the space bar to see the little ... what would you call that? A ball with an eye? Anyway, whatever it is, it does not half fly. Keep your hand over the space bar as you get the chance to boost your flight occasionally if your eyeball lands on a cloud - the longer you leave it to relaunch the little fella, the less powerful the boost.
Your go ends when he hits the ground and will fly no more - but use your space bar again and you have a limited amount of stamina to give him a lift and hopefully hook onto one of the cranes along the hillside, which gives you another chance to launch him into outer space. 

Thursday, 14 August 2008

Alltop: Top Websites in every Subject

Looking for a fabulous website but didn't find it on google, Don't worry Alltop is there.

Featured in Alltop

Alltop is a website to help you explore your passions by collecting stories about “all the topics” on the web. They’ve grouped those collections — “aggregations” — into individual Alltop sites based on topics such as environment, photography, science, Hindu, celebrity gossip, military, fashion, gaming, sports, politics, automobiles, and Macintosh. At each Alltop site, They display the headlines of the latest stories from dozens of sites and blogs.

You can think of an Alltop site as a “digital magazine rack” of the Internet. To be clear, Alltop sites are starting points—they are not destinations per se. The bottom line is that they are trying to enhance your online reading by both displaying stories from the sites that you’re already visiting and helping you discover sites that you didn’t know existed. In other words, our goal is the “cessation of Internet stagnation” by providing “aggregation without aggravation.”

Features:
  • Helps find you the brilliant websites
  • You can randomly surf the pages from alltop
  • Increases your precious knowledge about particular subject
Visit Alltop: Click Here!

Pdfgeni: Search, View and Download PDF Files

Pdfgeni is a simple PDF search engine where you can find, view and download all sorts of PDF files, reports, data sheets, ebooks, public papers, and so on. You can either search from the website or use provided search plugin and add it to your Firefox search bar.
pdfgeni - pdf search engine
Features:
  • Find and view and download data sheets, ebooks , reports etc.
  • Save downloaded documents as PDF.
  • View PDF files directly on the website no Adobe Acrobat viewer needed.
  • No sign-up or registration needed.
  • Also check already profiled similar services PDF search tool , Data-Sheets
Check out Pdfgeni @ www.pdfgeni.com

PieColor: Online Pie Chart Maker

Great online utility that generates customized Pie Charts. Think of it as an online pie chart maker where you can select the number of slices you want your pie chart to have, add values, names, title, customize colors, and then click “Generate”. Once you’re satisfied with your chart, click “download ” and save it on your computer. Done.
online pie chart maker
Features:
  • Create pie charts online.
  • Customize charts: colors, size, titles.
  • Save ready charts on your computer.
  • No sign up or registration needed.
  • Similar web apps: ChartGizmo, Charts, and ChartAll.
Go to PieColor @ www.piecolor.com

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

I am Highly intelligent

Hurray,
Today i am feeling proud of myself, yeah! i am Highly intelligent by Free IQ Test.com

Free IQ Test
Free-IQTest.net - Free IQ Test

Please take the test, and share the results with me!!
It's awesome, really it's good to be and feel Superior Intelligence in yourself!!
Consult the IQ Guide to know how much intelligent are you!!!

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Text Book Torrents

Torrent service for textbooks. Using this service you can find and download text book torrents for free. You can search or browse Textbook torrent database by category such as Art, Science, Language, Literature, Business and more. The download process is as usual, first find a book you need, download the torrent to your PC, and launch your torrent client.
textbooktorrents.png
Features:
  • Find and download free text books.
  • Search torrent database by keywords.
  • Browse and sort database by category such as art, science, language, literature, business and more.
  • Contribute by uploading a text book of your own.
Check out TextBookTorrents @ http://85.17.226.223/index.php

Firefly: Let Your Visitors Chat

Firefly is a new web app which lets you chat with the visitors of your blog or website in real time. It gives you a javascript code which can be embedded in your website and set it up in the Firefly admin area. Once it’s done, you will get a small horizontal firefly bar in the bottom right corner of your webpage which updates in real time with the number of people on your site and the number of people talking.
You can chat with maximum 50 visitors at a time. Visitors can type anywhere on the site and chat among themselves. If you are a visitor on a firefly enabled site then you can start chatting directly without the need to install anything.
blog chat widget
Overall, this is certainly a nice concept and introduces a new way of spontaneous communication and interaction with the readers of your blog. You can get feedback from your site visitors directly without any time delay. Moreover even your site visitors get to interact with each other and talk about your site.

LINK [http://firef.ly/]

Monday, 28 July 2008

Create a Website for free At Microsoft

Microsoft offers free websites and free domain names. These sites are designed for business use, but can also be used for personal sites.

There's a great article at eHow that describes how to get a free domain name and website from Microsoft:

How to Get a Free Website From Microsoft(eHOW)

Signing up and building a site is pretty easy. You also get to pick any website name you want (like yourname.com), as long as it's not already in use.

Nice of Bill Gates to be giving something away, eh?

Believe it or not It's true!!
Get your own site NOW!!!

Monday, 7 July 2008

Creating a Free Website

Do you ever thought that you should have your own website?
Now the first question that will arise is "How do I will create it?"

See that for it you should have a little knowledge of HTML(it's just optional you can make website even if you don't know it) it's not necessary but it can help you a lot!

So mostly people want to create it FREE
If so you'll get a domain as http://hostname.com/username or http://usename.hostname.com
People get worry that people will visit less as they has a free website, On that i think that paying for your website can not only increase your visitors, for that you SHOULD have a Good and Original Content, However if you cant find anything you can get some articles from article city, as for your visitors i think you if you wanna spent you SHOULD spent money on advertising site, using Paid such as AdWords, Adbrite and Content Link, there are more but they are not more that just a Dump! And You should also use advertising through Free advertising Sites such as Ad grid network, Mogado




Free Web hosts
You can make your FREE website at
Wetpaint
Freewebs
Myspace
x10hosting
blogger.com
mister.net/
wordpress.org/ or wordpress.com/

A list of free web hosts
http://www.free-webhosts.com/

If you just want a Free simple, and not so professional website
Google Pages

I also find a great way of creating a free websites----
Believe it or not, Microsoft offers free websites and free domain names. These sites are designed for business use, but can also be used for personal sites.

There's a great article at eHow that describes how to get a free domain name and website from Microsoft:

How to Get a Free Website From Microsoft(eHOW)

Signing up and building a site is pretty easy. You also get to pick any website name you want (like yourname.com), as long as it's not already in use.

Nice of Bill Gates to be giving something away, eh?

Hope it Helps!!
For any queries Comment on Post!!

Monday, 30 June 2008

All about Internet

Wetpaint

The whole world wants a website. Well, maybe not the whole world, but a lot of people do. And I do not mean just one website for all of them.

What do you do if you have a hobby or pastime that a lot of people are interested in, and you want to be able to create a site that everyone can contribute to?

The answer is wiki. At Wetpaint you can learn how to make simple and effective wiki pages in three easy steps.

Wiki is a piece of server software that allows users to freely create and edit web page content using any web browser - and whilst you do not need to use this site to achieve that goal, it takes all of the hard work out of the process so even the most technically inept surfers can take part.

Click the link to play the tutorial on the opening page for an overview. When you are ready to get started just click the big green Go.

Now just follow the steps, choosing who you want to be able to view and or edit the pages, a basic template for the design, and then inviting the people you want to participate.

It is fast, totally free, and you do not have to be a genius to make compelling pages - you just need some interesting content and a bunch of mates to help you out.


My Classic FM

A little bit of class next. Online radio is booming, in many senses of the word. But not this site - My Classic FM is far too cultured to be booming.

The design of this website is not particularly sophisticated, but that does not really bother me as the majority of the time you are using the page you will not actually be looking at it at all.

You can of course learn about all of the shows and presenters by exploring the menus and sub menus, but the bulk of the content can be accessed through the left hand navigation panel.

Click How to Listen to launch the live broadcast feature, or listen to any of the shows you may have missed over the past seven days.

The Podcasts and Downloads section hold the keys to plenty of content for you to sign up for - and if you click on Music and then Playlists you will find a useful tool to help you find composers or tracks you have just heard.

Do be aware though, if you have a bandwidth restriction on your connection, listening to or watching anything that is streaming will really suck it up quickly.


Ideal bite

We all want to live a life that is a little greener don't we? Now you could just decide to paint your entire house apple green, but that is not really going to help the environment - or your eyes.

Idealbite.com offers the solution for those that want to take positive action.

The premise of this nicely designed spot of the internet is to deliver a daily tip for green living into your e-mail inbox every day.

Just sign up and it is totally free - the tips claim to be convenient, inexpensive and to make you feel good, with a little sprinkling of fun thrown in for good measure.

If you do not want your in box spammed on a daily basis you can read the tips online in the website's library.

Check the top 10 tips section for the most popular bites. They include everything from the most economical use of car air-conditioning, to how to spot phantom loads on your electricity supply - such as mobile phone chargers and electrical equipment on standby.

Each daily tip has a bunch of other stuff tied to it, like quick facts and interesting titbits. It is a little nibble of what does you good every day - so go on, spoil yourself.


Lifehacker

And talking of what does you good, the next site I'd like to recommend is full of great articles for improving your life - we could all use a little of that right?

You will find this first class blog at Lifehacker.com. Tech tips, tricks and downloads for getting things done is the blogger's tagline, and a thoroughly suitable tagline it is too.

With definite leanings towards nerdyness, Lifehacker keeps it real with a hard working editorial team publishing lots of tips each day - linking through to other bloggers, tech sites and download sites.

Basically anywhere they find something they think might interest you. Anything from how to be a great tipper to where to download software that will let you hide sensitive documents in superfast time.

Browse the site at your leisure using the section links across the top or use the search tool if you are looking for something specific.

You can even sign up for a daily tips mailer or RSS feed for life-hacking on tap.


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