Jan 13 2011

Remains of the Day: Android 2.4 to Drop This Summer [For What Its Worth]

Remains of the Day: Android 2.4 to Drop This SummerAndroid 2.4 “Ice Cream” may come as early as this summer, Google TV finally gets jailbroken, and Amazon launches the Kindle app in the Mac App Store.

Photo remixed from an original by Greg Ma.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5731029/remains-of-the-day-android-24-to-drop-this-summer

Zachary Quinto Zoe Bell Zooey Deschanel Adam Sandler


Jan 12 2011

Here’s How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for Free [IPhone]

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreeIf you’re excited that the iPhone is finally on Verizon and you want to switch, that excitement was probably short lived when you realized the cost that switching involves. Here’s how to make the switch at no cost to you.

Determining the Cost

If you have an iPhone on AT&T and it’s not fairly old, you’re probably going to have to pay an early termination fee (ETF) to get out of your contract. This fee can be as much as $325. Fortunately, if you’ve had your iPhone 4 for even a month, that fee isn’t quite that bad. It goes down $10 a month. If you’d like to figure out the exact cost of your ETF, the Consumerist points out a handy iPhone ETF calculator (courtesy of Wolfram Alpha). If you’ve had your iPhone for less than a month, chances are you can probably return it. That may be a bit of a hassle, since you’ll have to figure out some other phone to use while you wait until Verizon actually releases the iPhone on February 10th, but it’s better than getting stuck with a several hundred dollar ETF. Whatever your situation may be, once you’ve determined the cost of leaving AT&T we can move on to avoiding it entirely, or at least in part (depending on your situation and level of ambition).

Making the Switch

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for Free
Making the switch for free is going to take a little work because you not only have an early termination fee (ETF) to deal with, but the cost of a new phone as well. Nonetheless, a combination of a little Craigslist (or selling online in general) and creative negotiating should get the job done.

Sell Your AT&T iPhone 4

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreePresumably you won’t need your AT&T iPhone 4 if you’re making the switch to Verizon. It won’t work on Verizon because the technology is different and you’re going to have to buy a new phone anyhow. We’ve taken an extensive look at how to upgrade to the new iPhone for free, and those principles still very much apply to this situation. You’re not really upgrading your phone, but you are upgrading your network. If you have an iPhone 4, you also have the advantage of selling the current model. The resale value of an iPhone drops significantly when a newer model is released, but the iPhone 4 you currently own is likely worth enough to cover both the ETF and the cost of your new phone (or at least come close). Why? Because your iPhone is contract-free. If you really want to up the resale value, you can also jailbreak and unlock the phone. Most people will pay extra for this service because they don’t know how to do it themselves (or just don’t feel comfortable trying). While the idea of selling your iPhone on craigslist (or through other online classifieds) is pretty straightforward, getting the best price takes a little work and patience. For the full run-down, be sure to read our guide on upgrading to the latest iPhone for free.

Circumventing the Early Termination Fee

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreeWhen you buy your phone hardware, you’re probably aware that you’re getting a discount at a cost: you’re tied, via contract, to the carrier for a certain amount of time (generally two years). This is a legally-binding contract, and carriers currently have the right to charge you a fee if you want out early. This shouldn’t be news to anyone who’s owned a cellphone in their lifetime, but you may not be aware of how much your ETF actually is. As mentioned earlier, either call AT&T and find out how much it will cost to kill your contract or use this iPhone ETF calculator for a quicker answer. That’s the easy part. Getting out of your obligation to finish your contract or pay an early termination fee is where it gets tough.

Negotiate Your Way Out

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreeOf all the ways you can get out of your fee, this is my least favorite. You did sign a contract and you did agree to finish it, so you’re basically cheating AT&T by trying to get out of it for free. That said, the reason so many have wanted to switch to Verizon is because, for many, AT&T’s network performs horribly for them. If you’re not getting the service you’re paying (likely) upwards of $100 per month for, you’re getting screwed. Negotiating your way out of your contract can take some time and it can be stressful, so if you’re not ready for numerous calls to customer support and logging every dropped call you get from this day forward, this is not for you.

If you want to take this ethically questionable route and complain your way out of your ETF, here’s what you need to do:

  • Log every dropped call for the next week. It shouldn’t be hard to get a lot of them, but try making calls in areas where you know you’ll lose service. If you can manage about 20 a day, that’s a lot of dropped calls. On an average day out in Los Angeles, I drop 8-10 calls. Use your phone more and you won’t have any problems hitting 20 pretty quickly. Do this for a week. (Note: this does not mean you should submit false claims to the BBB or FTC. Use your phone where you normally would, but in areas where you drop calls more often. For me, this would mean making calls from my desk instead of the couch, which is about a difference of 60 feet.)
  • Once you have your data, file a formal complaint with the Federal Trade Commission and the Better Business Bureau.
  • Complain to AT&T. They won’t do anything, so log some more dropped calls and complain again. When they do nothing, let them know you’re filing reports (even though you already have). If they offer to send you a free femtocell device to improve your signal, know that’s only for a single location and refuse it on the basis that your calls drop just as frequently outside of your home. Let them know you want out of your contract because your service has been so terrible, especially with the latest iPhone. If they won’t let you out of the contract, you’re going to need to call back again.
  • For your last complaint call, you’re going to need to go all out. Get to a supervisor or have the call escalated as quickly as you can, because you’re going to have a tough time getting out of your contract with just a standard customer service representative. You always want to be as kind as possible during this process, by the way, or nobody will want to help you. It’s best to make your situation seem tragic. You want to engender sympathy, not anger. Once you’re with the supervisor you should let them know you’ve filed reports and go over all the dropped calls with him/her. Ask nicely to be let out your contract so you can try other carriers. If you can’t get out of the ETF at this point, it’s probably not going to happen. If you’re a little emotionally manipulative (which is another place this method gets ethically questionable), however, you shouldn’t have any problem talking your way out of the fee.

Note: it also helps to be an undesirable customer. If you still have unlimited data on AT&T, use it. Download huge amounts of data on your iPhone. This will be far easier if you jailbreak it, since you can remove the 20MB cap and just let it download endlessly, but AT&T will want to get rid of you if you’re hogging their bandwidth. The same goes for phone calls, to a lesser extent, so make use of those unlimited minutes if you’ve got ‘em.

Use Contract Changes as a Way Out

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreeCellular providers change their contracts all the time and you’re pretty much forced to agree to the new terms. Whenever this happens, they’re almost always obligated to allow you to break the contract within 30 days of receiving and “agreeing” to the new terms. Keep an eye out for these contract updates and check the latest contract you have. If you’ve received it in less than 30 days (this may vary, but that’s the usual timeframe), canceling your cellular contract fee-free may be as simple as making a quick phone call.

Give Your Contract to Somebody Else

Here's How to Ditch Your AT&T iPhone and Switch to a Verizon iPhone for FreeIf you can’t get out of your contract on your own, you can always transfer financial responsibility to somebody else. If you know someone who will take over your contract, that’s a pretty quick way to solve the problem. If you don’t, you can use a site like CellSwapper or Cell Plan Depot to find someone. Generally this isn’t as simple as just giving your contract to another person—they’re probably going to want something for taking on the burden. Nonetheless, it’s often cheaper than paying your ETF and you may have the option of trading with someone who has a Verizon contract.


Collectively, all of this should earn you a cost-free switch to a hopefully better carrier. Got any good tips of your own? Let’s hear ‘em in the comments!

You can contact Adam Dachis, the author of this post, at adachis@lifehacker.com. You can also follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5730713/heres-how-to-ditch-your-att-iphone-and-switch-to-verizon-for-free

Ali Landry Ali Larter Alicia Silverstone Alyson Hannigan


Jan 12 2011

You Built What?! A Truck-Sized, Street-Legal Radio Flyer Wagon

Built for Speed The wagon drives as well as the pickup truck it was made from, even on the highway. Clark James Mishler
The classic children’s wagon, just…larger

Alaskan Judy Foster had long been asking her husband, Fred Keller, to restore her late father’s old fishing truck, but he always refused. “All that work, and you’d still only have a ’76 Mazda pickup,” he said. In August 2009, he came to her with a different idea: Let’s transform it into a large-scale, highway-legal replica of a Radio Flyer wagon. She gave the concept the nod.

Keller, an amateur engineer, had already designed and built several award-winning planes, and he and Foster had recently begun restoring old cars, including a Model T. The wagon idea stemmed from a Radio Flyer/hot-rod hybrid they had spotted at an Oregon car show. Keller loved it, but the perfectionist in him thought that it would be more fun and challenging to build a replica of the wagon that got all the details, from the scale all the way down to the angle of the handle, exactly right. He started the project by ripping apart the old Mazda pickup, ditching the body, and adding new tires, spark plugs, fan belts, radiator hoses and a number of other parts. The squarish shape of the scaled-up wagon wouldn’t have quite matched the more rectangular, elongated truck frame, so he bought a portable band saw at a pawn shop and cut off everything behind the rear axle.

To build the wagon’s frame, Keller used marine plywood and, for the rounded corners, a mix of PVC foam, epoxy and fiberglass that had been sitting in his garage since his airplane days. The finished wagon is 13.5 feet long and nearly six feet wide. Now the couple cruise in their
roof-free wagon-car whenever weather permits. “My dad would be proud,” Foster says, but she doubts he’d take it fishing.

How it Works

Time: 11 months
Cost: About $10,000

Handle

Both Foster and Keller played with red wagons in their youth, and they wanted their vehicle to be as similar to the original as possible. They not only worked out an exact-scale replica of the handle, constructing it from PVC piping and fiberglass, they also ensured that the angle in its upright position matched that of the original wagon. One difference: Their handle bolts directly to the frame, so it stays in position.

Hubcaps

For the car to be highway-legal, it needed real wheels, but Keller made them look as much like the wagon as possible by affixing red laundry-detergent bottle tops to the hubs (he saw one in his garbage during the build and realized it was perfect).

Interior

The pair first tried out seats from an old Kia, but Foster didn’t like the look. Eventually they found sleek black racing seats at a local auto- supply store and installed those. The steering wheel is an actual wagon wheel welded to the Mazda’s original steering column.

Windshield

The real Radio Flyer doesn’t have a windshield, so Keller was hoping they could just go with motorcycle helmets and face shields. The Alaska DMV insisted otherwise, so he cut a windshield out of Lexan plastic and tried out a few different ways of attaching it through test runs on a nearby airstrip. The DMV approved, and they got their vanity plate: “WAGON.”

Source: http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2010-12/giant-radio-flyer

Leelee Sobieski Leila Arcieri Lindsay Lohan Lucy Lawless


Jan 12 2011

Use Folder Hiding to Stay Focused on One Project [Organization]

Use Folder Hiding to Stay Focused on One ProjectHiding files and folders is generally reserved for system files that you don’t need to see. Reader Anonymous, however, uses it much more liberally, turning it into a way to stay focused on one project at a time.

For this tip to be really useful, you need a way to easily show and hide hidden files. In Windows, you can use AutoHotkey to toggle hidden files and and off with a keyboard shortcut. You can show and hide files in OS X, and turn that command into an Automator Service for quick toggling (and assign it a keyboard shortcut to it in System Preferences).

Update: It turns out hiding files in OS X isn’t as easy as it used to be. You’ll now need to install and run the Terminal command setfile, instructions for which can be found over at Mac OS X Hints.

The main idea is that you can hide less oft-used folders, which help you focus on a specific task and get to the necessary files more quickly:

I set up any folders that I don’t want in my sight, but that I want to be there (like my public folder) to hide. – right-click it, go to properties and set it to hidden. I set it to just hide the folder, not the contents just for the sake of it.

Then, I just show all hidden files with my keyboard shortcut when I need access to it. This will enable you to remove some folders (and files) from your sight, but still keep them in your Dropbox or Documents folder. I’m a person who likes to have all his documents in a single folder. And as a student I have a lot of classes and a lot of different files.

This is useful for more than just hiding the annoying “Public” or “Sites” folders, too. If you, like Anonymous, keep all your documents in one folder—as we’ve recommend you do—you may prefer to hide folders like “finance” that you only need to access every once in a while, and keep the folders of your main projects shown so you can quickly access them whenever you need to.

It seems like an extreme measure, but if you have a way to quickly toggle hidden files on and off, it’s actually a pretty neat use of the feature we hadn’t thought of before. How would you integrate this into your documents organization? Let us know in the comments.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5731540/use-folder-hiding-to-stay-focused-on-one-project

Sigourney Weaver Steve Martin T.R. Knight Tara Reid


Jan 12 2011

Farewell, Tevatron: Fermilab’s Particle Accelerator Will Cease Operation This Year

Fermilab’s Tevatron Collider DOE
As the U.S.’s premier particle physics machine retires, the search for the Higgs falls to the Large Hadron Collider alone

Tough budgetary times spare no one, not even the last best hope of American researchers discovering the “god particle” on their home soil. Rumblings and rumors surfaced early yesterday that Fermilab’s Tevatron would not receive an extension to continue operations until 2014, and by later in the afternoon it was confirmed by the DOE’s science office: Tevatron will cease operations before the end of this year.

“The current budgetary climate is very challenging,” the director of the DOE’s Office of Science, William Brinkman, stated in a letter to the chairman of the High Energy Physics (HEP) Advisory Panel dated January 6, in which he effectively (and reluctantly) determined that Tevatron would shut down as scheduled this year.

The friendly rivalry between Tevatron and CERN’s Large Hadron Collider had been ratcheting up recently as both are in hot pursuit of the theoretical Higgs boson, the so-called “god particle” that is thought to imbue all other particles with mass. It’s discovery would provide a huge and necessary piece of the puzzle in the Standard Model of particle physics and naturally would be a feather in any laboratory’s cap.

Tevatron discovered the b quark in 1977, meaning that a top quark must also be out there somewhere along with the W and Z bosons. CERN beat Tevatron to the W and Z bosons but Fermilab’s researchers scored a coup by charging back into the race by confirming the top quark. Since the LHC – the largest and most expensive science experiment in the known universe – went into operation, the two accelerators have been racing toward confirmation (or denial) of the Higgs’ existence.

Tevatron could still find the Higgs before it shuts down, but the odds aren’t great. That means the LHC will likely take those honors sometime in the future. But the DOE’s High Energy Physics program is by no means out of funds or short on science – their budgetary decision was based on the need to further develop other programs. The HEP program has several mandates, of which the Energy Frontier is only one.

There are plenty of U.S. researchers contributing at the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC, Brinkman says, and the exploration of the energy frontier will fall to CERN with HEP’s and DOE’s support. But the mandate for HEP will now shift to exploring the Intensity Frontier via other energy beam research that will complement whatever the LHC finds.

In other words Tevatron and the LHC were kind of redundant, and the DOE and HEP program are respectfully bowing out of the Higgs race to focus on other aspects of particle physics that aren’t already being probed by more powerful experiments elsewhere in the world. It’s a letdown for those who wanted to see Tevatron find the Higgs first, but it’s a practical move that will keep science moving forward while keeping Fermilab and it’s HEP program at the forefront of particle physics.

Discover’s Cosmic Variance blog has a nice history-rich eulogy that’s worth a read for further background on Tevatron and its healthy rivalry with CERN.

[Discovery News, Fermilab PDF]

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-01/farewell-tevatron-fermilabs-signature-particle-accelerator-will-cease-operation-year

Amy Jo Johnson Amy Lee Amy Poehler Amy Smart


Jan 12 2011

New Metallic Glass Beats Steel as the Toughest, Strongest Material Yet

Toughest, Strongest Glass An initial sharp crack in palladium-based metallic glass causes the material to bend before it breaks. Courtesy Robert Ritchie

Materials scientists in California have made a special metallic glass with a strength and toughness greater than any known material, using a recipe that could yield a new method for materials fabrication.

The glass, a microalloy made of palladium, has a chemical structure that counteracts the inherent brittleness of glass but maintains its strength. It’s not very dense and it is more lightweight than steel, with comparable heft to an aluminum or titanium alloy.

“It has probably the best combination of strength and toughness that has ever been achieved,” said Robert O. Ritchie, a materials scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who is one of the authors of a paper describing the new glass. “It’s not the strongest material ever made, but it’s certainly one of the best with a combination of strength and toughness.”

In other words, some tougher materials exist, but they are less strong; there are stronger materials, but they’re not as tough. To grasp this, you have to define the the difference between strength and toughness. Strength refers to how much force a material can take before it deforms. Toughness explains the energy required to fracture or break something; it describes an object’s ability to absorb energy. Most of the time, these qualities are mutually exclusive. “The holy grail is to get both those properties at the same time,” Ritchie said.

Think of a ceramic mug – it’s pretty strong, maintaining its shape while handling hot and cold temperatures with ease. But it’s not very tough – there’s no give, no bendy quality to stop it from shattering when it falls to the floor. On the other hand, a rubber band is tough, stretching and contorting to wrap itself around your newspaper, your carton of eggs and a myriad other objects. But it’s weak, and it doesn’t take much energy for it to deform and break, snapping back on you with a painful recoil.

Souped-up glass is nothing new – Corning’s Gorilla Glass, which coats cell phones, laptops and TVs, is chemically strengthened with compressed ions, which helps prevent cracks and chips. Pyrex, used in telescope mirrors and baking dishes since 1915, is heat-strengthened to resist breakage. But neither has the toughness you’d want for making things like airplanes or bridges.

Ideal structural materials are both strong and tough; steel is a good example. The new glass has a far better combination of strength and toughness than any steel.

“When you build a structural material, you want it to be as strong as possible, but the limiting property is that it must be resistant to fracture, i.e., as tough as possible,” Ritchie said. “For instance, the Golden Gate Bridge is made of a relatively low-strength steel, because you’d like it to bend first rather than break catastrophically without warning.”

Glassy materials are usually very brittle – they break after the formation of shear bands, which are narrow zones of strain that ultimately become cracks. Once the bands form, it’s pretty much impossible to stop cracks from forming. But palladium’s properties change this dynamic, Ritchie explained. Instead of a single shear band propagating throughout the glass, a proliferation of shear bands form and curl back on themselves, taking longer to turn into cracks. The bands allow the material to bend before it breaks – not a property you’d expect from glass.

“It is very easy to form these shear bands, but it is difficult for them to become cracks. The net result is, you get a lot of shear bands forming, and this causes plasticity – you can bend it very readily,” Ritchie said.

Researchers at the California Institute of Technology, led by Marios D. Demetriou, have been working on metallic glass for several years, using various formulations to toughen it or prevent it from breaking. A previous iteration involved introducing a crystalline phase that stopped the shear bands in their tracks, for instance. The new glass has no crystals at all, just microalloys of palladium with phosphorous, silicon, germanium and silver.

“Each element wants to effectively crystallize in its own form, but if there are five, the material gets confused – it doesn’t know which way to crystallize, so the crystallization process is slowed down,” Ritchie said. “It’s 100 percent glass; there’s nothing to stop the cracks, and we think this is an important development.”

The Caltech researchers want to try it with other metal recipes next.

The glass is expensive and difficult to make because of the amount of metals involved and the process required to cool them. So you won’t start seeing palladium-glass airplanes and bridges anytime soon – but the material, and its fabrication process, holds promise for the future of those structures.

“For a bridge, a ship, a spacecraft, for engine material, you would like to combine strength and toughness. This does provide a means of doing that in quite frankly the most unlikely of all materials, a glass,” Ritchie said.

The new glass is described in this week’s issue of Nature Materials.

Source: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2011-01/new-metallic-glass-toughest-strongest-material-yet

Kate Walsh Kate Winslet Katee Sackhoff Katherine Heigl


Jan 12 2011

Replace OpenOffice.org with LibreOffice in Ubuntu [Linux Tip]

Replace OpenOffice.org with LibreOffice in UbuntuThe LibreOffice suite has more momentum behind it than OpenOffice.org, and also writes to the .docx format natively. Here’s how to switch out OpenOffice.org for a more regularly updated LibreOffice repository.

On a philosophical level, some users may want to get out from under the thumb of Oracle, which discontinued the openSolaris desktop project upon acquiring Sun Microsystems, and which may not have the most interest in continuing the OpenOffice.org project. On a more realistic level, with many of OpenOffice.org’s developers having jumped ship to the team behind LibreOffice, and with better built-in support for the OOXML/.docx format that’s (unfortunately) used by Microsoft Office 2007 and later, it could be a smart upgrade.

A commenter points us to a blog post offering the proper terminal commands—just one or two of them, honest!—for replacing OpenOffice.org with LibreOffice. LibreOffice also offers Windows and Mac downloads, although in beta at the moment.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5730943/replace-openofficeorg-with-libreoffice-in-ubuntu

Rachael Leigh Cook Rachel Bilson Raquel Alessi Rashida Jones


Jan 12 2011

Cool Your PC with the Cold Winter Air [DIY]

Cool Your PC with the Cold Winter AirIf you live in a cold area, there’s no reason to buy expensive and complicated cooling setup for your PC. With just a bit of dryer ductwork, you can actually cool your PC using air from outside.

While most computers don’t need extra cooling, if you’ve overclocked your PC for video editing, gaming, or other processor-intensive tasks, keeping your computer cool is a must. In fact, the better your cooling system, the higher you can overclock, so a bit of winter air is sure to provide some nice speed boosts.

All you need is a flexible duct, some pieces to connect it to your window, and some scotch brite to act as a filter. By setting up one of your PC fans near the duct, you can blow air from outside right into your computer case. Note that the above setup, while clever, will probably cause your heating bills to go up as the cold air is funneled into the room through the PC—if you set up a second duct with a fan blowing the air outside, you might make this a bit more efficient. Hit the link for more details.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5729987/cool-your-pc-with-the-cold-winter-air

Alana De La Garza Ali Landry Ali Larter Alicia Silverstone


Jan 6 2011

Perfect Browser Adds Tabs, Gestures, and More to iOS, Is the Ultimate iPad Browser [Downloads]

Perfect Browser Adds Tabs, Gestures, and More to iOS, Is the Ultimate iPad BrowseriOS: Safari is an okay browser on the iPhone, but it’s surprisingly unsatisfactory on the much larger-screened iPad. Perfect browser completely changes the iOS browsing experience, bringing tabbed browsing, user agent control, touch screen gestures, and hyper fast scrolling to your fingertips.

The somewhat pompously (yet accurately) named Perfect Browser is available for all iOS devices, but really shines on the iPad, where an alternative browser is a must-have in your arsenal of apps. Perfect browser is one of the most feature-filled ones out there, adding features you probably miss from desktop browsing, like tabs, hyper or automated scrolling, session saving, popup blocking, and more. What’s even better, is that it also adds features designed to compliment the iPad’s touch screen (like a wide range of gestures that cycle through your tabs, browser history, and even toggle a fullscreen mode). On top of all that is a handy user agent switcher, for those times when your device refuses to cooperate and show you the desktop version of a web page.

As if that weren’t enough, Perfect is full of other, slightly more niche features. For example, you can scroll through scrollbar-less frames on the occasion you end up on a web site that doesn’t want to cooperate. You can also save any web page for offline viewing later, which is pretty awesome. There’s also a nifty web compression feature which uses Google’s mobile rendering for pages that aren’t formatted for mobile. It changes the layout of most sites pretty drastically, but is really nice if you’re on an iPhone, or pages are just taking a long time to load over 3G. Honestly, a few minutes with this browser and I was hooked—Safari be damned, this is what browsing on the iPad was meant to be like. Hit the link to check it out.

Perfect Browser is a $0.99 download for all flavors of iOS. Update: Looks like the price of the iPad version jumped to $2.99 this afternoon. So now it’s $0.99 for iPhone and iPod touch, $2.99 for iPad.

Note: I can already hear many of you Atomic fans shouting for recognition, so I will mention that previously mentioned Atomic browser is another great alternative, and has a lot of the same features that make Perfect so great. I personally give Perfect the edge for its scrolling features, but other users may prefer Atomic for its custom search engines or the ability to view a page’s source. If you’re looking for an alternative iOS browser, both are great options.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5725881/perfect-browser-adds-many-desktop-and-touch+based-features-to-ios-is-the-ultimate-ipad-browser

Steve Martin


Jan 6 2011

Use Your Kindle for Free Overseas Browsing on 3G [Kindle]

Use Your Kindle for Free Overseas Browsing on 3GThe Kindle is great for reading books on-the-go, especially when travelling. However, what some people don’t know is that you can also browse the web on your Kindle’s 3G for free—even internationally.

Photo by bfishadow.

I was in Canada recently, where, as a user of AT&T, I would be charged extortionate rates to send/recieve texts or use any data whatsoever ($15-20/MB and $.25 to send/receive a text (if I remember correctly)).

Communication being opted out, I go to read on my Kindle. There I too receive a notification from Amazon about international data.

I read through it, and find—to my shock—that using the kindle browser internationally is free (as in ‘free beer’, not as in ‘free speech.’ or maybe both).

I then go to fire up the browser and find that good ol’ Google Voice worked and rendered (generally) just fine on my Kindle. So I removed my mobile forwarding number, sent out a mass text from Google Voice to reach me there, and ended up texting enough over my brief trip to save $30+ compared to if I had used my phone.

I think that it’s likely that this would work in any of the other Whispernet-available areas so, next time I go to Europe, my Kindle is definitely on the packing list for more reasons than ‘can read on it.’

A warning: It can be kinda harsh on the battery, so remember to (a) have a way to charge it available, and (b) turn wireless off when you’re not using it!

I don’t have a Kindle nor a plane to immediately test this out on, but a quick Google search reveals that a lot of other customers are discovering the same thing. Whether you knew about this already or not, it’s pretty darn handy—all of a sudden that “experimental” Kindle browser looks a lot more appealing than Chrome on your laptop or Safari on your phone.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5725246/use-your-kindle-for-free-overseas-browsing-on-3g

Paris Hilton Patricia Arquette Patricia Heaton Patrick Dempsey