Archive for April 10th, 2008

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SocialScan

If you run a blog or other web site, odds are you already know how important social bookmarking sites like Digg, Reddit, and StumbleUpon can be for generating traffic. But while you may be used to seeing massive traffic spikes from these sources occasionally, over time social bokmarking sites can give you yet another gauge of your blog’s popularity. Have your stories been Dugg or stumbled more times than your competitors? SocialScan makes it easy to find out.

Just enter any URL into SocialScan and the service will look up the site on 12 different social bookmarking/news sites. Some measures are more thorough than others. For example, you’ll only find out how many times that exact URL (ie: your homepage) has been submitted to sites like StumbleUpon or Reddit, while the Digg results will show any time a web page starting with your URL has been submitted.

[via MakeUseOf]

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SimpleBucket is a promising new pic sharing site that has just emerged from a complete redesign and rebuild. The service is very promising, and offers a lot of nice features that might make it a massive player in the days to come.

SimpleBucket’s tagline reads “Real Simple Photo Hosting,” and it shows. First off, SimpleBucket does not require registration. As in at all. Simply enter in any email address, choose a photo (or number of photos) to upload, and away you go. HTML code for embedding your photo, a link to the pic page, and a link to the pic itself are all instantly generated.

Gallery: SimpleBucket

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Continue reading SimpleBucket: Real Easy Photo Hosting

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If you shed a tear each time you have to delete a text message at the bottom of your inbox, or if you can’t bring yourself to part with the latest ROTFLOL SMS sent by your best friend, then TreasureMyText is for you.

TreasureMyText is an online service that’ll store all of your text messages online: the good, the bad, the mundane, the unintelligible. Simply create an account and forward any text message to their standard rate numbers (available worldwide), and your message is forever immortalized.

True to web 2.0 standards, TreasureMyText also has a sharing feature called TextStream (which definitely reminds us of Twitter). You can choose to share your text messages with totally everyone (and you wonder why the internet is sagging under the weight of needless information?), or you can pick and select friends and other members to share your messages with.

TreasureMyText also offers easy folders for organization, and an easy-to-use contacts list.

If you’re wondering where the iPhone fits into all of this (since you can’t forward text messages with the iPhone), the programmers at TreasureMyText have created a mobile client for your jailbroken iPhone that will grant you to archive your SMS over EDGE and WiFi. They have also stated their intention to create a more robust iPhone application with the release of the official iPhone SDK.

[via Technobuzz]

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This is the first of a new weekly column by WalletPop’s resident debt expert, Lita Epstein.

Two readers wrote in recently about situations where they tried to help out relatives. One was a mother who co-signed a student loan so her son could go to college. The second was a woman who took out an equity line for a relative so he could start a business.

In both cases the people who wanted the loan balked on making the payments and the women who thought they were doing a good deed are now screwed. They’ll have to pay off the debt if they want to keep their good credit rating and in one case, her home.

I hear this story over and over again from people thinking they’re trying to help a friend or relative and instead end up with a mound of debt and often destroyed credit history. Don’t co-sign on a loan or agree to take a loan for someone else who isn’t able to qualify for that loan on their own. Often the reason is that they’ve already got a low credit score because they haven’t been paying their bills.

There’s one exception to that rule. If parents want to help their child get a start in life and assist them with getting their first loan, whether it be a automobile loan, a student loan or a credit card, then they should do so. But if you do decide to help, be sure that your child has the both the emotional and financial stability to make the payments. Be ready to make the payments if he or she doesn’t, or your credit will be ruined.

When you co-sign on a loan you promise to make the payments if the person taking out the loan doesn’t. As a co-signer you:

* Obligate yourself to loan payments if the borrower defaults

* Might be denied a loan on something you want to buy because you’ve got outstanding debt as a co-signer.

* Live with the uncertainty of when you’ll be stuck with the debt.

Unfortunately, if you go one step further, as one reader who wrote in did when she took an equity line on her home, you could also lose your home. This reader must make the payments or the bank will foreclose on the property. An equity line or equity loan is a secured loan, which means the financial institution that made the loan has the right to take the asset that was used as collateral if the payments aren’t made.

Be debt smart. Don’t co-sign on a loan unless you know you can make the payments should the person you’re trying to help becomes a deadbeat and doesn’t pay the money back.

Lita Epstein has written more than 20 books including the Complete Idiot’s Guide to Improving Your Credit Score and The 250 Questions You Should Ask to Avoid Foreclosure.

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For years, my wife and I’ve treated our tax refund as a savings account, using it to fund travel or house projects. (Yes, I know how dumb I’m to allow the IRS to rake off more than my fare share of income and hold it for months, but for undisciplined savers like me, 0% interest on some money is superior than 5% interest on no money.)
Most Americans, have treated their rebate similarly. This year, however, the trend seems to be shifting away from splurging with tax refunds. More and more of us are using the money to pay down debt. According to the AP, 35 % of us are using of refunds this way, up 7% over last year. If you have a moment, why not add your intentions to the AOL poll?

This is, of course, of concern to the government in light of the upcoming one-time rebate coming next month. If we use this money to pay down debt or to build savings, it may not boost the economy as much as if we take it to Target or spend it on a Princess cruise.

Nonetheless, I can’t in good conscience advocate our readers ignore credit card debt just to stimulate the economy. Paying down that 20+% interest is going to help your economy, and isn’t the the central tenet of capitalism that acting in our own self-interest also benefits the bigger community?

Still, I might allocate a small portion to a nice dinner and a motion picture. Just to do my part as a good citizen.

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An innovative an dinteresting venture by the University of Southern California called Viewfinder seeks to spatially locate 2D photos within a 3D environment like Google Earth. The end result places the pictures within Google Earth so that they seamlessly integrate within their environment. Can’t picture it? Just check out the video after the jump, and check out the site for more information on how it works.

The goal is to eventually create a service that basically mixes something like Flickr with Google Earth, enabling users to view and post photos within their virtual environment. Flickr currently allows for geotagging, but viewing the photos within their environment adds tons of more fun to the idea.

Perhaps Flickr should think about expanding its photo services instead of adding video, which it is trying to do right now, since Flickr users seem to hate the presence of moving photos on the Yahoo owned site. It seems a partnership with Viewfinder and Google Earth would be a better move, and — since Yahoo’s busy intermingling with all sorts of companies right now — why not?

[via boing boing]

Continue reading New project aims to combine Flickr, Google Earth, and “spatial location”

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