Resources and tutorials for Webmasters
Resources and tutorials for Webmasters

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

RoundPic - Add Rounded Corners to Your Images

RoundPic , an online rounded making tool for making anti-aliased rounded corners for avatars and images in web 2.0 style. With RoundPic, you can easily add rounded corners to your images via online.

It is very easy to use, simply browse for the image on your computer or enter the URL link of the image and hit the ‘RoundIt!’ button. RoundPic will generate a corner, with your custom colors, size and quality or the image.

The service is almost too easy. You simply upload your picture or enter the URL of the image, and click “Round It!” You can then save your new pic or customize it further by changing the size, background color, and how round the corners are. Once it’s complete, just click download and you’re good to go.

RoundPic is currently working on adding new sizes for rounding, borders, and featuring the option to save as html, png, gif, or bmp (currently you can only save pictures as png).

The site is so plain that it reminds me of old-school Geocities or Angelfire websites, but for those of us who blog or work with images all day and don’t have time to be exploring complicated photo-editing tools, RoundPic is the obvious solution. Finally, Photoshop for Lazies.

Visit RoundPic AQUI


Thursday, September 25, 2008

Google's 10th Birthday Present: World-Changing Ideas

Google is marking its 10th anniversary by offering 10 million dollars to back world changing ideas. Google promises to divvy up the cash between the five best ideas that spring from its Project 10 to the 100th, a reference to the numerical sum "googol" from which the Internet powerhouse took its name.

"Our company's very name expresses our goal of achieving great results through smart technology that starts small and scales dramatically over time to have a tremendous long-term impact," Google said in a website posting. "Project 10 to the 100th is a similar attempt to produce those kinds of scalable results by harnessing our users' insights and creativity."

Winning ideas will get Google funding, while the people that submitted them will get "good karma and the satisfaction of knowing that your idea might truly help a lot of people," according to the Northern California firm.

The deadline for submitting ideas to Google is October 20. A panel of Google employees will pick 100 top submissions to be announced on January 27, 2009. Google users will then vote to determine 20 semi-finalists, from which a Google advisory board will select five winners. "At Google, we don't believe we have the answers, but we do believe the answers are out there," a message at an introductory project Web page said.

"Maybe the answer that helps somebody is in your head, in something you've observed, some notion that you've been fiddling with, some small connection you've noticed, some old thing you have seen with new eyes."

Information about the project is posted on Google 10th Birthday Web pages that also feature a company timeline featuring such tidbits as how co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin met and the website originally being named "BackRub."


Tuesday, September 23, 2008

The Learn List: Ultimate Resource For Designers

The Learn List "is a super simple resource that aims to gather the best tutorial and book links from all over the web." It is a simple resource for graphic designers, illustrators, web designers, developers, basically anyone creative! It lists the best websites and books available to help you learn something new!"

The website is a tip and tricks collection for the most used web design tools. It's not an unmissible resource, but someone could find it interesting. Do you need to find photoshop tutorial? How about an Illustrator, flash, dreamweaver, actionscript, xml, css or even a php tutorial?

Well, look no further than the learn list. This is a super simple resource that aims to gather the best tutorial and book links from all over the web. The website was created by UK designer Chris Robinson at Crobbo.com. The lists of available online tutorial links are growing fast, and will in my humble opinion be the ultimate stop-off site for excellent tutorials online. Be sure to post them an amazing link if you know of any tutorials not listed.

The Learn List is still in it's early days but it has a decent list of links to tutorials for learning a number of programs etc., such as Photoshop, CSS, XML, Fireworks, Flash and more.

Visit The Learn List Here


Saturday, September 20, 2008

Save Flash Video? Just One Click - Flash Capture

Flash Capture, an Internet Explorer add-on, enables you to save Flash (.SWF) and video (.FLV) in just one click. A built-in player for Flash and video is also included.

With the latest version of Flash Capture, you can save flash videos of the following web site by a single click as well.

  • www.youtube.com
  • video.google.com
  • www.myspace.com
  • www.vidmax.com
  • www.tetesaclaques.tv

Key Benefits
  • Spend Less Time on Capturing
    Save Flash and video by a single click, instead of digging into Temporary Internet Files folder, and struggling with thousands of cached items.
  • Spend Less Time on Snapshot
    Taking snapshot of Flash and video by a single click, even without leaving IE.
  • Keep Flash and Video Permanently
    Keep a local copy of Flash and video to prevent the web site from deleting it.
  • Watch Flash and Video at Anytime
    Using the built in player to playback Flash and video at anytime, even offline.

Key Features
  • One-click save Flash (.SWF).
  • Search and save Flash (.SWF) by visually browsing IE cache.
  • Save multiple Flash in one batch.
  • One-click save flash video (.FLV) for following web site:
    • www.youtube.com
    • video.google.com
    • www.myspace.com
    • www.vidmax.com
    • www.tetesaclaques.tv
  • Search and save flash video (.FLV) by visually browsing IE cache.
  • Auto hide floating button after a specified time, to avoid covering the Flash content.
  • Flick the board of the active Flash.
  • Cleaning IE cache items.
  • Built in player to playback the Flash and video.
Download Flash capture HERE


Thursday, September 18, 2008

The Knol site has one goal: to help you share what you know.

The Knol project is a site that hosts many knols — units of knowledge — written about various subjects. The authors of the knols can take credit for their writing, provide credentials, and elicit reviews and comments. Users can provide feedback, comments, and related information. So the Knol project is a platform for sharing information, with multiple cues that help you evaluate the quality and veracity of information.

Knols are indexed by the big search engines, of course. And well-written knols become popular the same as regular web pages. The Knol site allows anyone to write and manage knols through a browser on any computer.

So what subjects can I write on?

(Almost) anything you like. You pick the subject and write it the way you see fit. We don't edit knols nor do we try to enforce any particular viewpoint – your knol should be written as you want it to be written. Of course, knols are subject to Terms of Service and Content Policy to ensure a good experience for all users and compliance with applicable laws.

What if someone else has already written an article on that subject?

No problem, you can still write your own article. In fact, the Knol project is a forum for encouraging individual voices and perspectives on topics. As mentioned, no one else can edit your knol (unless you permit it) or mandate how you write about a topic. If you do a search on a topic, you may very well see more than one knol in the search results. Of course, people are free to disagree with you, to write their own knols, to post comments and ratings.

Can I collaborate with other authors?

Of course. For each knol you can choose to write on your own or collaborate with other authors. It is up to you to find people to collaborate with. Some authors are organizing collaborative efforts using an unofficial list of knol authors organized by region.

Can I write knols in languages other than English?

Absolutely. Knol is now available in Arabic, Spanish, Portuguese (Brazilian) and Korean. It will take us some time to localize the interface into additional languages. In the meantime, feel free to create knols helping authors in your language.

Can I search for knols on a specific subject?

Yes, you can search on Google or other search engines to find knols, like any other web pages. You can also use the Search button found on the Knol homepage and on each knol to search. Some knol authors have started compiling lists of knols. Note that these are completely controlled by the particular authors, there is no oversight from the Knol team.

How do I get started writing my own knols?

Here are some links to knols that may be helpful to you:

  • Creating and publishing a new knol
  • Entering text into a new or existing knol
  • Using the formatting bar
Managing Knols
  • Listing all of your knols
  • Managing your author profile
  • Managing versions of your knol
  • Specifying settings for your knols

Advanced Knol Techniques
  • Inserting Images
  • Creating and formatting tables
  • Creating links and references
  • Working with the HTML source
  • Changing your bio/profile

Best Practices: Writing Good Knols
  • Things to do
  • Things to avoid
  • Publishing tips for authors
  • Indexing and search
  • Internationalization and localization
  • Stability, reliability, latency
  • Content Features
  • Other Features

Where else can I discuss or get help on Knol?

There are several public forums for discussing Knol.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Google prepares to celebrate its tenth anniversary

As Google prepares to celebrate its tenth anniversary the company has an eye on its future and declared that for web users "the best is yet to come". "Internet search has just gotten started," Marissa Mayer, Google's head of search products, told the BBC.

"The best search engine would be your friend, with a photographic memory about you and know what you know. "It would have access to the world of information and retrieve facts from anywhere in the context of what you know already."

While employee number 22 admits that gazing into the future is an imprecise science akin to asking "Newton to predict Einstein", Ms Mayer said the one thing she does know is that the next 10 years for Google "are going to be really exciting with big advances in the world of search.

Ms Mayer told the BBC that she foresees cloud computing playing an important role in the lives of people in the next decade. Perhaps unsurprisingly it features high on Google's strategy map going into the next decade.

As its name implies cloud computing involves users storing data on the net and getting at it and the services they want anytime and anywhere thanks to ubiquitous high-speed networks.

"There is a real vision and real story developing around cloud computing and what it means in terms of how people should use their computers," said Ms Mayer. "We see the cloud as an amazing tool for everyone."

It was 10 years ago this month that Larry Page and Sergey Brin formed Google Inc to "organise all the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" and do it better than anyone else. From humble beginnings in a garage in California's Menlo Park, the company is now one of the most recognised brands in the world. It boasts annual revenues of nearly $17bn (£9bn), profits of roughly $5bn (£2bn), growth of 35% and a worldwide workforce of over 19,000 full time employees.

Today it controls around 40% of online advertising as well as 70% of search. Its suite of products is ever expanding and this week it launched its own internet browser called Chrome to compete with Microsoft's Internet Explorer and Mozilla's Firefox.

Google's code of conduct says "Don't be evil" but some fear its motives as it gathers extraordinary amounts of information on users habits, likes and dislikes. "Google is an incredible success story and has become the central nervous system for our digitally dependent lives but there is a price to pay for that," said Jeff Chester, executive director of the respected Centre for Digital Democracy.

"Google is not alone in invisibly structuring its operations so it can collect more and more information and data about all of us and deliver our online behaviour to a growing list of advertisers and fatten the Google bank account." Industry watchers maintain that in the last couple of years the tide has turned against Google which is "no longer taken for granted to be the good guy."

"To start with Google couldn't make any mistakes and was the favourite of everybody," said Laurent Lachal, an analyst at research firm Ovum. "Recently there has been a backlash with an element of paranoia developing against Google with some saying they are as evil as Microsoft. "The world is no longer at Google's feet and looking at the launch of Chrome there was a real deep scrutiny of the product and Google's motives which resulted in a change to the wording of its end user licence," he said.

Despite a change in attitude towards the company, Fortune Magazine reports that it tops polls of the most desired place to work. The firm is inundated with applications from people eager to sign up as a potential Googler. It is famed for its free lunches and dinners, onsite massages and softball games, but none of this is what persuaded Biz Stone to go and work at the famed Googleplex in 2003 to run the Blogger service that Google had bought.

He told the BBC: "I was attracted to the idea of working with a bunch of smart interesting people even though it meant moving from Boston to California and getting a new group of friends. It felt like a real adventure." Mr Stone left after two years for another start up which eventually resulted in the founding of micro blogging service Twitter. He left too early to turn his potentially lucrative share options into cash.

"Google was a great place to work because it was so brainy and it was like being at a college campus," he said. "Friends speak in alarming tones about Google having all this information about us, but I'm not worried because people are getting more and more open anyway and sharing their history, their photos, their opinions online more and more."

Google's rise to the top and its ability to maintain that position for so long is what analyst Laurent Lachal described as "no mean feat." But as it goes into its next decade with an eye to search and the world of cloud computing, he sees the world of enterprise as vital as the company goes forward. "Enterprise is crucial to the future success of the company because most of the applications and services they provide are used by the consumer market and not the enterprise market which represents millions in untapped potential." For Jeff Chester, privacy and security are dual issues, not just for Google, but for the industry as a whole.

"Google will be a digital king maker and it is possible the way it uses the information it has about us all might result in a privacy nightmare as it partners with business to monetise everything they do." In response Ms Mayer said that "everyday we strive to be the best and earn the trust of the user". But even amid all this sober assessment of Google's last ten years, Ms Mayer remembers the good old days of 120 hour weeks, fantastic cafeteria food and being interviewed while sitting at a ping pong table that doubled as a conference table.


Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Google Chrome Beta Now Available for Download

The new rival to Explorer and Firefox, now available for testing in Windows, makes up in exceptional speed for any minor shortcomings. And it's got a nice array of features. Google's much-anticipated Web browser, Chrome, arrived Tuesday like a shiny new sports car: It's streamlined, has some great new features and is very, very fast.

Chrome, the most talked-about new tech product since the iPhone, became available shortly before noon as a free download -- for Windows only -- in what is officially called a beta test version.

A short test drive shows that it could be a worthy contender for alpha browser.

Not that it won't take some getting used to. Unlike the familiar Internet Explorer and Firefox, which put functions such as Print and Save at the top, Chrome goes for a minimalist look, with controls hidden under the hood.

Its overall color scheme -- after-Labor Day white with sky-blue trim -- is a bit harsh on the eyes. Not everything worked right out of the showroom. Oddly, several of Google's own applications, such as Gmail, didn't function when we took the beta version out for a spin.

And although the company said it was working on Mac and Linux versions, no release dates were given. But Chrome's shortcomings and unfulfilled promises can be forgiven for one basic reason: This baby flies.

Even on a pedestrian Dell laptop, most pages popped up on the screen almost before the finger left the mouse.

If Explorer and Firefox are the Toyotas of browsers, Chrome is the sporty Mini Cooper.

Downloading the Chrome beta -- at www.google.com /chrome -- is painless and comes with a nice surprise for Firefox users. Their bookmarks, passwords and browsing history are automatically incorporated and ready for use.

Among the Chrome features:

* The standard home page is all about you. It includes links to the sites you visit the most and recent bookmarks.

* At start-up, you can pick up where you left off -- not just on the last page you visited but also on all the screens you had up when you shut down. Even better, you can tell Chrome which pages you want it to open every time you launch the program. This is especially handy for folks who regularly monitor numerous pages.

* The URL address bar at the top of the page doubles as the Google search field. For example, you could type www .latimes.com in the space to go directly to the site or type "Los Angeles Times" for a search.

It's a nice, streamlining touch, like the radio controls on the steering wheel.

* Functions such as Print and Save are hidden under a small pull-down window, thus giving the browser a cleaner look and more room for content.

If you don't like using the pull-down window, those functions can be reached with a right-click on the mouse.

* Like tinted windows, Chrome allows for privacy while cruising the Web. In incognito mode, sites are kept off the browsing history list.

* If you don't want to go to the same designated home page every time you start up, you can create several as shortcuts that live on your desktop. Click on one, and the browser opens up and takes you there.

All in all, a nice array of features.

But what's likely to make Explorer and Firefox especially nervous is Chrome's exceptional speed, which could leave the older browsers in rush-hour gridlock as it zooms on by.

Even problems can be amusing to discover.

An error page that cropped up in browsing resulted in this message:

"Aw, Snap! Something went wrong while displaying this webpage. To continue, press Reload."

Download Google Chrome

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Convert pretty much anything with youconvertIt


YouconvertIt is a new web-based file conversion service. Like Zamzar, YouconvertIt lets you upload audio, video, image, or document files and convert from one format to another. Just select the file from your computer to upload, select your target format, and the web service will send you an e-mail when your new file is ready to download.

Unlike Zamzar, YouconvertIt doesn't appear to have a file size limit (although that may change), and currently has no advertising (which will definitely change). Oh yeah, and you can convert units like miles, kilometers, inches, and feet.

The service is definitely fast and convenient. But you get a lot more control over your file conversions if you're using desktop software. If you're converting a document from HTML to text, this might not matter so much. But if you're converting a WAV to MP3 or MPEG-2 to MP4, there's no telling what kind of file size/quality you're going to get with these web-based services. If you need to convert a file and you don't happen to have a good desktop program handy, YouconvertIt will do in a pinch. But we wouldn't recomment it if you regularly need to convert/compress multimedia files.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2 Now Available

We’re excited to release IE8 Beta 2 today for public download. You can find it at http://www.microsoft.com/ie8. Please try it out! You’ll find versions for 32- and 64-bit editions of Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, and Windows Server 2008. In addition to English, IE8 Beta 2 is available in Japanese, Chinese (Simplified), and German. Additional languages will be available soon.

While Beta 1 was for developers, we think that anyone who browses or works on the web will enjoy IE8 Beta 2. Before the team blogs about our Beta 2 in detail, here’s an overview of what you’ll find in IE8.

  • Smart Address Bar: IE 8 beta 2 includes a Smart Address Bar, that, like Firefox 3's "AwesomeBar," drops down suggestions as-you-type a web site URL gleaned from your favorites, feeds, and history. Unlike Firefox, IE 8 includes headers so you can see where each suggestion comes from.
  • Tab Grouping: Ever open a bunch of links from a single page in new tabs, and then lose track of which tabs came from what page? IE8's got a nifty "tab grouping" feature that colors your tabs based on their source. Here's what a few tab groups—one from Lifehacker, one from the MSN homepage—look like.
  • InPrivate Browsing: What with the Smart Address Bar pulling up every site you've visited recently in plain view in its History suggestions, there may be times when you visit a site and have the browser forget it ever happened. IE 8 beta 2's "InPrivate" browsing mode adds an icon to the address bar, and forgets you were ever at a web page when it's enabled.
  • Tab Crash Resolution: Several commenters point out that IE8 offers a feature no other browser has—the ability to restore a crashed web site on a tab by tab basis.
  • Favorites Bar: Getting to your bookmarks and feeds is a little easier with a button to expand your Favorites bar, a one-stop bookmarks shop. In the Feeds tab (not shown), any feeds you're subscribed to with new items show up in bold, and any "Web Slices" with new content also appear in bold.
  • Suggested Sites: When you enable the "Suggested Sites" feature, an item on your toolbar drops down a panel of web sites like the one you're on. This feature is great in theory, but in practice not so much. Lifehacker's suggested sites were totally off the mark.
  • Find on Page: This one's a yawner for anyone who's used to Firefox, but apparently IE doesn't already have "find on page," the ability to hit Ctrl+F, type a keyword, and see any instances of it highlighted on the current page.