Thursday 31 March 2016

5 Add-Ons: Make Facebook Way Better

5 Add-Ons: Make Facebook Way Better


The tools, indicated here, help you to organize your News Feed and make them easier to view content.

Although Facebook does its best to make the News Feed as relevant and useful as possible; it can still become a cluttered place. With more than one billion people using Facebook on average each day, it can be difficult to parse through all of the different types of content that pop up in your feed.

However, adding certain extensions to your Web browser can make Facebook’s website more customizable and easier to digest. Extensions are almost like apps that run in your browser to add new functions and features that wouldn’t otherwise exist. They’re developed by third-party developers, which means they aren’t officially affiliated with Facebook, and can be disabled at any time.

Here’s a look at the five Facebook-themed extensions for Google’s Chrome browser that we found to be the most useful.

1. Photo Zoom for Facebook
As its name implies, Photo Zoom makes it easier to view photos as you’re browsing the News Feed. When Photo Zoom is enabled, you can enlarge a picture simply by hovering over it with your mouse pointer. This allows you to expand the photos you’re interested in without being taken out of the News Feed.

2. Facebook Secret Emoticons
Facebook Secret Emoticons gives you a wider selection of emoticons to use when posting a status update. Facebook already allows you to tag status updates with a emotions and feelings (i.e. excited, happy, annoyed, sick, etc.), but the extension adds an extra set of symbols to choose from. It’s also a little quicker to access than scrolling through Facebook’s feelings menu.

A subtle smiley face icon will appear when the extension is turned on; clicking it launches a menu that includes everything from a Pac Man-themed smiley to Facebook’s classic thumbs-up icon. The drawback is that you have to navigate to the developer’s website to access symbols in different categories, such as animals and places.
 
3. Social Fixer for Facebook
Social Fixer is a tool for those looking to get more customization out of Facebook. It lets you tweak nearly every aspect of Facebook, from the way posts look in your News Feed to how notifications appear. 

For instance, you can choose to enable or disable the photo viewer from popping up when you click on an image, make it so that tapping “Enter” starts a new line instead of publishing a comment, and hide duplicate stories in the News Feed among other things.

4. Facebook Unseen
Read receipts can be both helpful and hurtful. While it’s useful to know if a friend has seen your last message, you run the risk of offending a recipient if you don’t respond in a timely manner. Facebook Unseen gives you some control over this by blocking read receipts in Chrome. When the extension is enabled in Chrome, the friend you’re chatting with won’t be notified when you read their most recent message.

5. Facebook Flat — New Design and AdBlock
If Facebook is too messy for your liking, Facebook Flat offers a stripped down alternative. Turning the extension on removes ads and cleans up the lefthand column by consolidating things like apps and groups into subcategories. It’s a slick interface that focuses on Facebook’s core features.

Friday 25 March 2016

5 Ideas To Save Your Printer Ink

5 Ideas To Save Your Printer Ink


The great nuisances of digital life, which irritate consumers, is the high price of printer ink. If you see black clouds rolled-in, just assume that it's time to drive to the store, open your wallet, and purchase a new round of color cartridges.


The gloom is understandable and hard to justify in paying so dearly for the privilege of printing out a grocery store coupon. And, while third-party printer ink cartridges may promise savings; but they often get rejected by printers that designed to sniff out off-brand intruders.

So, how do we save on printer ink? 
Here's a few ideas.

1. Change the Font
Two years ago, a 14 year old student from Pittsburgh created a stir on CNN by announcing that the U.S. government could save $234 million a year by printing its documents in Garamond instead of Times New Roman. While his discovery was eventually discredited—due to a point size issue unique to Garamond—the kid's instincts were right. So, the choice of typeface can make a difference in ink consumption.

When Consumer Reports tested fonts several years ago, we got 27 percent more mileage when using Times New Roman rather than Arial, a default font in many browsers. Calibri and Century Gothic both outperformed Arial, as well. 

An option called ecofont is designed specifically for frugality, which removes enough printer ink from its characters to stay legible and saving money. But you have to pay for it, a lifetime-license starts at $19.95.

2. Print in Black & White
The point of wasting precious ink is to print colorful ads or logos; but changing printer's default settings to black & white (also known as gray-scale), you can spare the color cartridges.

3. Strip Out the Stuff You Don't Want
Many websites let you select printer-friendly, which automatically remove color ink-sucking ads and images, leaving you with nothing but text. If the site you're reading doesn't offer that option, a service like Instapaper, Clean Print, or Print Friendly can help you reformat the story yourself, saving on ink and paper. Some even let you skip the printing process altogether and save the article for future reading on a laptop, tablet, or smartphone.

4. Upgrade Your Printer
Printers vary quite a bit in how much ink they use, and this is one of the factors that Consumer Reports tests in the lab. Laser printers are known for their low cost-per-page (around 2 cents, usually) and fast print speeds—a particularly strong performer in our Ratings is the Dell S2825cdn, which costs $280, and $0.02/page to print.

Inkjets are catching up on per-page printing costs, if not speed: Consider the HP Officejet Pro 8610, an all-in-one model that costs $100 upfront, and prints at a cost of just 0.017 per page.

Then there’s the Epson EcoTank line of printers, which have a novel take on the home printer, eschewing the classic ink cartridge for ink bottles and reservoirs. The bottles cost $12.99 each, and you need four of them. 


The printers have a pricey upfront costs—the Epson Expression ET-2550 costs $299. But the per-page printing cost is tiny, roughly an order of magnitude lower than some other printers at just $0.003. Do all that arithmetic, and you'll be saving money after about three years. According to Epson, a set of Ecotank ink bottles is equivalent to around 20 standard-capacity printer ink cartridges.

5. Use Draft Mode
If you're rarely using the printer for dissertation projects, wedding invitations, or quarterly earnings reports then the device spits out a legible soup recipe! When the end result doesn't have to be high quality, use the draft mode in your printer settings. This will not only use less ink, but also print faster.