JeremyMorel.com
It’s chic to be geek.
It’s chic to be geek.
Jul 27th

I don’t know about you, but as technology becomes more and more integrated into the everyday, I find that more and more people expect me to be online. If that wasn’t such a fluid term, things would be a lot easier. These days, online communication branches all over a social networking plane. Facebook, Myspace, Linkedin, Twitter… and that’s only the ones I checked in the last 10 minutes. I always snicker at the recent commercial for Hulu that had Denis Leary mocking social networking sites by referring to them as Facespaces and Tweetypages, but that’s the reality… it all collides into one big social networking smorgasbord.
Well if you’re like me, and trying to keep up, there’s hope. There are services out there like NutShellMail and Fuser.
Both are equally as cool, and have pros and cons to them.
First I’ll cover NutShellMail. It might seem counter-intuitive to sign up for yet another web service to try and cut back on another, but you have no idea what kind of power NutshellMail can give you. It solves what I’ll call the Email Alert Circle, which goes something like this:
The proposed solution: get a free account at NutshellMail. Authorize it to parse your Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, and/or LinkedIn accounts, and it takes all those “John Doe commented on your status” and “Jane Doe sent you a direct message” emails you really don’t need to see right this minute and delivers them in a digest format whenever and however you want them.
I can already hear some of you arguing, “But Twitter is an of-the-moment service!” Fine—go ahead and schedule your NutshellMail updates to arrive every so many hours, depending on your addiction. You’ll still get all the updates for everyone you’re following, and you won’t even have to hop into Twitter.com/TweetDeck/Tweetie/whatnot to reply, because NutshellMail lets you @ reply via email links.
For those who can be realistic about how connected they need to be, NutshellMail takes the constant back-to-work hurdles of email updates, known as bacn in some circles, and pounds them into one flat page.
As an aside, I think it’s fair to remind you that each of these services require you to share your login details with a 3rd party. I encourage you to do your own homework to determine whether or not you feel good about sharing your information with a private company. I think these two services are relatively safe, but their privacy practices are always subject to change — so keep it in the back of your mind!
The two services talked about here are known as Social Networking ‘aggregators’. They aren’t the only ones out there to be had, just two of the neatest ones I’ve yet to encounter. If you’ve discovered one that you can’t live without, sound off about it in the comments section. I’m always up for trying something new!
Mar 5th
Let me set up a situation for you:
It’s a normal day at the office, and you’re taking a mental break to scour the web for inspiration. Suddenly, you stumble upon the most interesting, most cool, most important site on the whole World Wide Web! Reflexively, you start crafting an e-mail to your buddies and forwarding that link like it’s hot. Now you play the waiting game…
Like a prarie dog, you poke your head up from your cubicle and stare across the vast plane, waiting to hear the reactions… a giggle, a gasp… anything that will clue you in to the fact that people are currently enjoying your amazing find. Instead, you get nothing — not even the baseline sound of a cricket’s chirp.
Fear not! There’s a solution to your current “did-they-see-it-yet” plight. At the risk of introducing what may be considered a stalking implement for the slightly deranged, allow me to suggest LinkBlip.
LinkBlip lets you know whether your recipient has taken a look at the page you’ve recommended. Go to the LinkBlip site and enter your important URL, and they’ll give you one back. You can email the new link to your pals. When they click on it, they go to the page you’ve pointed out to them, but in addition, you’ll also get an email back from LinkBlip letting you know that the link has been followed. No more wondering “did they, or didn’t they?”
Along with the fact that you recipient has followed your link, you’ll be told where they were located, based on their computer’s IP address — just the kind of creepy surperflous detail you need to settle all curiosity.
LinkBlip is a free service, and it’ll satisfy your itch. I wonder, however, if prolonged use might make you feel a little dirty.
Check it out at http://linkblip.com
Mar 4th
Like most of you, I HATE spam! Due to my disdain for junk in my inbox, I’m very selective with regards to whom I share my e-mail address with. If your address falls into the wrong hands, you’re pretty much doomed to a life of discarding Viagra ads and come-ons for pirated software.
Of course, however, for access to lots of online services, or to post to many blogs, you’ve got to register and supply an e-mail address. If you already get enough e-mail spam, you probably aren’t in the market to add to that total. That means that in many cases what you need is a “disposable” e-mail address.
I have, on (admittedly) more than one occasion, created a ‘junk mail’ address with a vendor such as GMail, to use as the e-mail I can freely provide to websites with confidence, knowing that I can always dump the address if my inbox becomes too junk-laden. One organization took it one step further.
Enter: 10 minute Mail.
10 Minute Mail is a free service that lets you do just what it sounds like. Just go to their site, click on the “Get my 10 Minute Mail e-mail address” link, and you’ve got an e-mail address that will be valid for exactly ten minutes. That should be enough time for you to use to sign up for the service you’re joining, receive the confirming e-mail back to you, and to finally send the “yes, it’s really me” message back to the website– then the address just goes away. If you know you’re going to type slowly, you can add an additional ten minutes to the life of the e-mail account, but the point is this: once you’ve used it, you don’t have to worry about it any more, and you won’t add the to burden of your e-mail spam filter by receiving that much more “stuff” from your new best friend.
Check them out at http://10minutemail.com