Showing posts with label Application. Show all posts

Cool Websites & Apps July 31st 2013 – Coverbud Facebook Photos & Driving Test Exam

muoToday in Cool Websites and Tools, we take a look at 5 cool websites, including customizing your Facebook timeline with a high resolution cover picture, reviewing past driving exam papers to give you the edge in your own test, a place to try out programming languages with minimal setup and much more. Read on below!

 

Metronome – The Metronome has come full circle with this free online version from the guys at 123. Find the tempo and boost your rhythmic state with a real metronome. Choose from a wide range of BPM’s, patterns and beats right here to find the groove. From hand claps to 808 drum and snare, musicians are sure to make use of this fine tool. Whether you’re a guitarist, drummer or singer, this app is a big help.

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Coverbud – Coverbud allows you to create unique and personal cover photos for your Facebook timeline. You can personalize any cover you see on the homepage with your own photos, text, and colors. Simply authorise Coverbud to access your Facebook account, choose a design from the site, customize it to your liking, then Coverbud will publish it to your timeline. Quick, easy, and simple. Each cover photo is a high resolution image and looks great.

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Bazqux Reader – Are you one of the Google Reader refugees looking for a suitable replacement reader? Then look no further than Bazqux Reader. It shows blog posts and comments in one seamless stream, tracks what was read and displays only new discussions next time. Comments from Reddit, Livejournal, blogs with comment feeds, Disqus and Facebook widgets are supported. Unlike Google Reader however, Bazqux is a paid product, costing either $9 a year, $19 a year or $29 a year. All users get 30 days free.

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Driving Tests 101 – Your driving test is probably one of the biggest events of your life. Passing it will earn you your driving licence, and with that, a whole world of possibilities open up. So preparing for the test becomes extremely important, and like all test preparations, the best results will come from studying previous exam questions. This is what Driving Tests 101 is all about. Simply choose your country and province and the relevant tests will appear.

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CompileOnline – Just follow the simple steps to compile and execute any of your favorites programming languages online using your favorite browser and without having any setup on your local machine. Select the programming language you want to write, write it in the text editor provided, then click the button to see your output. It’s neat, tidy and free.

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Airfoil Adds Extended AirPlay Functionality To Mac and PC

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AirPlay is Apple’s way of wirelessly streaming audio and video to supported devices on your local network. If you have one of Apple’s more recent Airport base stations, an Apple TV or a Boxee box at home, you should already be able to stream music from your computer to your entertainment system, wirelessly.

Originally, only iTunes was outfitted with AirPlay capabilities. Later, the option was added for you to route all system audio to an AirPlay device, like an audio counterpart to AirPlay screen mirroring. These AirPlay devices should simply show up in your sound output settings, though Apple has made it notably more difficult to use AirPlay with third-party apps like Spotify or Rdio instead of iTunes.

For that, you’ll need something like Airfoil.

Airfoil ($25)

If Apple doesn’t do it, someone else often will. Airfoil is a third-party application that aims to bridge this rather serious gap in usability. Apart from extending AirPlay audio functionality on Mac OS X computers, the PC version also makes Windows computers capable of this feat. If you’re a Windows user in an Apple hardware household, this is great news. Alternatively, Windows users should take a look at Shairport4w.

Airfoil is developed by Rogue Amoeba, who you might know from other high quality sound applications like Audio Hijack Pro. Together with AirParrot, which gives older computers (and PCs) access to AirPlay mirroring, Airfoil is an essential component of the AirPlay toolbox.

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After installing Airfoil, the application pops up both in the Dock and Menu Bar—or, if you’re using Windows, as a regular application in the task bar. Both provide access to pretty much the same settings, so if you want to limit the application to one of these two views, you can do this in the preferences.

Source and Destination

Alas, Airfoil can’t automagically add AirPlay buttons to all the interesting applications on your computer. As such, you’ll manage these things inside Airfoil. To start streaming, you just need two things: a source and a transmit destination. As a destination, just select your AirPlay device. You can even select multiple targets at once. This is great to play your music in multiple rooms, on different AirPlay devices.

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Pressing the source button shows you a whole list of options, as illustrated above, and often the better choice is to select a single application. In theory, you can select almost any application as a source for audio. Spotify transmission works flawlessly and the rest of your system’s audio is still played back locally. This means you won’t miss any important notifications while sitting in front of your computer, and that the music that comes out of your remote speakers is just that – music only.

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In Airfoil’s options you can further link AirPlay volume to your system volume. If supported, this will immediately adjust the volume on the AirPlay device when you use the volume keys on your keyboard.

Airfoil Video Player & Speakers

It may sound like a great idea to watch a video on your computer while rerouting the audio through your big AirPlay-connected sound system. The only thing standing in your way is a serious lag in the audio. Airfoil Video Player, which is included with Airfoil for Mac, solves this problem by similarly delaying the video.

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Use Airfoil Video Player to open local files and DVDs, or play web videos using the embedded delayed web browser. Browsing isn’t as smooth as you’re probably used to, but once the video is playing that won’t matter anyway.

Even if you don’t think you have any AirPlay-compatible devices, you can use Airfoil. The free Airfoil Speakers application, which is available for Mac OS X, Windows, Linux, Android and iOS turns almost any device into an Airplay-enabled speaker (though the mobile apps work exclusively with Airfoil).

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Just download and install the application on any one of your devices (or all of them!) and you can subsequently use Airfoil to play audio on it. If you plug that device in, you’ll get an Airplay-enabled sound system.

The Bottom Line

Airfoil is available for both Mac OS X and Windows. However, these two applications aren’t usually sold as the same package. $25 gets you Airfoil on only one operating system. Alternatively, you can buy a package bundle, which includes both versions for $40.
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Cheap? By no means. But depending on how often you use AirPlay and switch between operating systems, it might be worth it. Luckily, you can download a free trial from the website to find out. It’s an unlimited trial, but noise is overlaid on transmissions longer than ten minutes.

Download: Airfoil for Mac or PC

Do you use AirPlay in your home? Have you tried Airfoil? Add your thoughts to the comments below!

Image credit: Shutterstock.

3 More Awesome Google Services That You Probably Never Knew Existed

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Though it’s where its fame and fortune first came from, Google has advanced far beyond just being the world’s most popular search engine. You and I both know that Google plays host to many amazing services that we use on an everyday basis. Gmail is a great example. I have Gmail. I bet you too have Gmail! How about the late, great Google Reader? That was a service that so many of us would already love to have back. Why Google, why?

These are just two examples, and you’d be pretty surprised to know how many other goodies Google has floating around out there. Beyond their alerts system and floundering social network, Google has developed a wealth of web applications that just aren’t given enough shine. We’ve done articles in the past that help highlight some of Google’s hidden treasures that don’t get the limelight they deserve, but Google is always changing and pumping out more. In this article, let’s look at another three.

Google Trends

Google Trends is a great place to go when you want to see what is hot on the web. When that sort of content comes to mind, the first thing you might think of are Trending Topics over on Twitter. Trends is to Google what Trending Topics are to Twitter, except without the social aspect. You’re getting what is on the rise in Google Search.

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As the above screenshot manages to capture pretty well, what you’re normally going to see on this list are things like national or world news and events, movie releases, sports stories, and things of that nature.

Beneath each result, Google gives a rough estimate of the recent increase in searches for terms related to this subject and an immediate link to a related article to help explain the change in search volume.

Google Trends is a localized list, and you’re able to see results from the US, Canada, Germany, Hong Kong, India, and more.

Google Fonts

Google Fonts is a really quick and simple way to look at hundreds of different font faces through the web browser, offering features that cater more specifically towards webmasters.

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This website allows you to view 629 fonts by word, sentence, paragraph, or poster. You’re able to sort this list of fonts by alphabet, when the font was added, by how it’s trending, and more. When you find a font you like, you can add it to your collection of saved fonts for later use.

When you’ve selected the fonts you’re interested in using for your website, simply click the Use button in your collection and you’ll be offered several different ways to import the font to your website.

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The best part is these fonts don’t need to be downloaded or anything to be used on your site. You only have to include a single line and a bit of CSS code to your page and you’re able to make use of them, all thanks to the powers of the Google Fonts API. Here is my colleague James taking a look at how you can use Google Fonts in a web project.

Google Sky

While Google Sky is a feature from Google Earth, it does have its own standalone interface on the web.

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I don’t need to go on about how awesome Google Earth is, because you’ve surely heard of it by now. How cool is it that we’re able to go practically anywhere on this planet and get an interactive view of the area, all through a website? Google Sky offers this same experience, but the imagery is provided by NASA satellites, the Hubble Telescope, and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.

Put simply, it is the Google Earth for space exploration. Although the search feature was recently disabled, you’re able to drag and scroll all through the galaxy and zoom in to ridiculous resolutions to see beautiful images of our sky in detail.

Google Sky is a project that was put together by developers during their 20% time, and while it lacks some of the major functionality of services like Google Maps and Google Earth, it’s worth appreciating. If Google keeps up at this pace, we’ll be on track for a Google Universe in the next however-many years!

It’s a short list of services, but a list of very purposeful ones that I can only hope never experience the termination that services like Google Reader and iGoogle are going through. Have you ever used any of these three services before? Which one seems most interesting to you? Leave me a line in the comments below and let me know!

45 Mobile App Designs For Inspiration

Today we found amazing application designs for you to get inspired. Since iPhone’s first release,Apple changed the way we look at mobile devices. was the first smart phone that supports functions like photos,music,movies etc. iPhones’s style and user interface was a revolutionary and still is.

Well,here are 45 new mobile application – mostly iPhone- designs for your inspiration.As the design industry goes for flat design you can find really beautiful examples of flat mobile app designs.Enjoy!!!

Alarm Clock


TargetBuy



Location Finder


Task Manager



Task Tracking


Slide Concept


Fashion App


dB Meter


Tracker App


Marketing Agency


Music App


Room App


Portfolio App


Coffely


Fantasy Leagues App


Live Messages App


Flat Mobile Music Player




MID



Music App


MetroLite App


Alarm Clock App


AudioRec App


Furort App


Natalie


App Liga Moche


Mix Tape


Weather App


Weather GUI App


MY Bank


Arles Festival App


Swiper 1 Mobile App UI


Mobile Portfolio Concept


NightFever App


Smart Home


Logic PD


Weather App


Weather App



WeatherHelper App


Mingling App


Safety Gauge


Covert


Teamride


Notekall App


Napp Menu Slider


Thermometer