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Janos Haits

Squarehub | Where Your Family Connects - 6 views

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    Where Your Family Connects SquareHub is the private social network designed exclusively for your family. You can send private messages and photos, coordinate activities, manage schedules, and share those spontaneous moments of joy with the people who matter most to you.
David Wetzel

Ideas and Strategies for Using Voice Thread in Science and Math - 0 views

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    Are you searching for a way to share documents, presentations, slideshows, or a series of photos or images with your students? Then Voice Thread is the free Web 2.0 tool for you and your students (teachers can register for a free education account).
Bob Bartley

Photosynth - 1 views

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    This looks amazing, 3d photo environments, can you imagine children making a virtual field trip out of this to share as a project with kids overseas or ina different part of the country???
Gordon Herd

The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now function getSharePasskey() { return 'ex=1421730000&en=3377c52164e5c387&ei=5124';} function getShareURL() { return encodeURIComponent('http://www.nytimes.com/external/readwriteweb/2010/01/20/20readwriteweb-the-3-facebook-settings-every-user-should-c-29287.html'); } function getShareHeadline() { return encodeURIComponent('The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now'); } function getShareDescription() { return encodeURIComponent(' In December, a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/fa'); } function getShareKeywords() { return encodeURIComponent(''); } function getShareSection() { return encodeURIComponent('technology'); } function getShareSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent('Technology'); } function getShareSubSection() { return encodeURIComponent(''); } function getShareByline() { return encodeURIComponent('By SARAH PEREZ of ReadWriteWeb '); } function getSharePubdate() { return encodeURIComponent('January 20, 2010'); } Sign in to Recommend Twitter Sign In to E-Mail Print By SARAH PEREZ of ReadWriteWeb Published: January 20, 2010 In December, Facebook made a series of bold and controversial changes regarding the nature of its users' privacy on the social networking site. The company once known for protecting privacy to the point of exclusivity (it began its days as a network for college kids only - no one else even had access), now seemingly wants to compete with more open social networks like the microblogging media darling Twitter. Skip to next paragraph More News From ReadWriteWeb 2010 Trend: Sensors & Mobile Phones Why Facebook Is Wrong: Privacy Is Still Important Nexus One and Android 2.1: Apple Better Watch Out Open Thread: Should Tech Get a Turn-Off? How The Web Is Transforming Personal Finance Those of you who edited your privacy settings prior to December's change have nothing to worry about - that is, assuming you elected to keep your personalized settings when prompted by Facebook's "transition tool." The tool, a dialog box explaining the changes, appeared at the top of Facebook homepages this past month with its own selection of recommended settings. Unfortunately, most Facebook users likely opted for the recommended settings without really understanding what they were agreeing to. If you did so, you may now be surprised to find that you inadvertently gave Facebook the right to publicize your private information including status updates, photos, and shared links. Want to change things back? Read on to find out how.
  • The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now function getSharePasskey() { return 'ex=1421730000&en=3377c52164e5c387&ei=5124';} function getShareURL() { return encodeURIComponent('http://www.nytimes.com/external/readwriteweb/2010/01/20/20readwriteweb-the-3-facebook-settings-every-user-should-c-29287.html'); } function getShareHeadline() { return encodeURIComponent('The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now'); } function getShareDescription() { return encodeURIComponent(' In December, a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/fa'); } function getShareKeywords() { return encodeURIComponent(''); } function getShareSection() { return encodeURIComponent('technology'); } function getShareSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent('Technology'); } function getShareSubSection() { return encodeURIComponent(''); } function getShareByline() { return encodeURIComponent('By SARAH PEREZ of ReadWriteWeb '); } function getSharePubdate() { return encodeURIComponent('January 20, 2010'); } Sign in to Recommend Twitter Sign In to E-Mail Print By SARAH PEREZ of ReadWriteWeb Published: January 20, 2010 In December, Facebook made a series of bold and controversial changes regarding the nature of its users' privacy on the social networking site. The company once known for protecting privacy to the point of exclusivity (it began its days as a network for college kids only - no one else even had access), now seemingly wants to compete with more open social networks like the microblogging media darling Twitter. Skip to next paragraph More News From ReadWriteWeb 2010 Trend: Sensors & Mobile Phones Why Facebook Is Wrong: Privacy Is Still Important Nexus One and Android 2.1: Apple Better Watch Out Open Thread: Should Tech Get a Turn-Off? How The Web Is Transforming Personal Finance Those of you who edited your privacy settings prior to December's change have nothing to worry about - that is, assuming you elected to keep your personalized settings when prompted by Facebook's "transition tool." The tool, a dialog box explaining the changes, appeared at the top of Facebook homepages this past month with its own selection of recommended settings. Unfortunately, most Facebook users likely opted for the recommended settings without really understanding what they were agreeing to. If you did so, you may now be surprised to find that you inadvertently gave Facebook the right to publicize your private information including status updates, photos, and shared links. Want to change things back? Read on to find out how.
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    The 3 Facebook Settings Every User Should Check Now .
Janos Haits

Memolane | Your time machine for the web - 0 views

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    Keep your memories alive. Capture photos, music, tweets, posts, and much more. View and share your entire online life in one place. Explore and search your history.
Janos Haits

Online Backup and Storage | Not just another online backup remote service. - 11 views

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    A Better Online Backup and Storage Service MiMedia brings you a totally new approach to online storage - a way to protect, access, enjoy and share your digital life all in one place. MiMedia will back up and protect your files in a secure online storage account. Beyond online backup, MiMedia also provides instant on demand access to your files from anywhere. With MiMedia, you can listen to your music, watch your latest videos, view any of your photo galleries, and access your other files all in one user friendly location.
Janos Haits

TwitC | Your Social Media Management Hub - 16 views

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    Upload and manage your photos, videos and documents, and share them on all your favorite social networks from one location. TwitC also lets you import your favorite or personal content from YouTube, Docstoc, Slide, TED, Break, Hulu, Google Docs, Viddler, Soundcloud, Kickstarter, SlideShare, Blip.tv, Ustream, Vimeo, College Humor, Break, Meefedia, Funny or Die, Metacafe, Daily Motion, Livestream, The Onion, National Geographic, eHow, and dozens more sites.
Janos Haits

layers.com - 9 views

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    Layers makes getting your friends' updates on social networks a more fluid, visual and enjoyable experience. Get news from your friends -- the links they share, their tweets and more -- in a beautiful flowing stream. See previews of photos and videos as they were meant to be seen -- instantly and without all the clicking. You can even follow your favorite websites -- from newspapers to blogs -- and the news you're interested in in a whole new way.
Janos Haits

Katango - Personal Crowd Control - 14 views

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    Auto-magically organize your friends and family into groups Privately share photos and status updates within groups  Free!
Janos Haits

Empressr - The Best Online Rich Media Presentation Application - 27 views

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    The rich media presentation tool Tell your story anyway you like. Add photos, music, video, and audio, and share it publicly or privately in an instant.
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    if you want best news like this. Or follow. Your article in here www.killdo.de.gg
Janos Haits

Upthere - Home - 12 views

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    "Upthere is a new cloud computer that combines the creative power of our devices with the massive storage and compute power of the cloud. It enables us to store our entire digital lives-our photos, videos, music, and documents-in a single place that's always accessible, growing, evolving, and ready to share."
Janos Haits

min.us - 9 views

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    Min.us helps you create and share galleries online. Drag your pictures onto this page, and we'll do the rest.
my mashable

Posterous : Post Your Images to Popular Twitter clients With New API - 0 views

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    Recently Posterous joined Twitpic for sharing images on Twitter. Posterous is a simple place to post anything including images, videos, mp3 and files by sending an email to post@posterous.com in reply you can see your post at http://yourname.posterous.com.Posterous new API let users to post your image to some of the most popular Twitter clients either from desktop or from your iPhone.
John Onwuegbu

Google Drive: How Google made storage and file sharing more useful on the Cloud | Quest... - 5 views

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    While, storage on Google Drive isn't a problem in itself, photos and videos, which are automatically backed up from mobile devices, have come to present some difficulties owing to excessive accumulation over the years.
Graham Perrin

Google Wave - 0 views

  • Google Wave is a new communication service
  • formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more
  • free-form workspace
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • write documents collaboratively
  • plan events
  • discuss
  • create a wave and add people
  • formatted text, photos, gadgets, and even feeds from other sources on the web
  • reply
  • or edit the wave
  • concurrent rich-text editing
  • "playback" to rewind the wave to see how it evolved
  • API that could be used to extend the service
  • Wave protocol that allows anyone to run a "wave" server
  • available later this year
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    Google Wave on the unofficial Google Operating System blog.
awqi zar

http://www.liveshare.com/ - 5 views

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    LiveShare / Group photo sharing made simple
awqi zar

Free File Sharing - Minus.com - 12 views

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    The Minus desktop app allows you to drag-n-drop photos, music, documents and files into the taskbar and instantly upload onto Minus.
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