Skip to main content

System Rebuild Utilities - Clipmate, Knockout, ActiveWords

ClipMate - this utility captures everything I copy and allows me to perform sophisticated editing, pasting, and searching capabilities on my collection. ClipMate turns the standard Windows Clipboard into a power user’s dream - an archive that is always ready and available with the click of the mouse or tap of the pen. I stor all of my passwords in an encrypted ClipMate collection and can, with a couple of keystrokes, authenticate myself to any web page or account I need to access.

Knockout - This free utility addresses the number one complaint I hear about Outlook - it’s tendency to leave “orphan” processes running in the background. When this happens, Outlook behaves badly. Add-ins refuse to load properly, your system slows down, and some pretty bizarre things can start happening. Lookout puts an icon int he system tray that monitors whether Outlook (as well as Word which apparently has similar tendencies although I rarely experience them) is running and provides the ability to force Outllok processes to terminate. From the context menu of this tray icon, you can also create new e-mail messages, contacts, appointments, tasks, and notes.

ActiveWords - ActiveWords allows you to associate a key word with an action on your computer. Use ActiveWords to launch an application, open a web page or document, or perform other tasks by entering a key word. If I want to launch Outlook, for example, I press Control+Space (the ActiveWords trigger) and type “ol”. Presto! Outlook is running. I have an ActiveWord for every application on my system. I also have ActiveWords for my most frequently visited web pages and documents that I open all the time (like a project tracking spreadsheet and my ResultManager dashboard maps). But ActiveWords also allows me to generate ready-to-send e-mail messages to common queries I receive (or send), initiate the creation of Outlook tasks associated with a particular contact, perform system changes that would normally require a lot of mousing and clicking, and more.

Anagram - If you use Outlook or the Palm Desktop, you need Anagram. This gem intelligently parses what ever text you have selected and determines with uncanny accuracy whether your selection should be used to generate a new contact, appointment, or task in your information manager. It enters the appropriate information into each field in the destination application and, on the rare occasion when it “guesses” incorrectly, provides a one-click mechanism for redirecting the data to the appropriate new object. The lates version extends this capability to the Salesforce.com CRM system. It has saved me thousands of keystrokes.

Popular posts from this blog

How to Download Contacts from Facebook To Outlook Address Book

Facebook users are not too pleased with the "walled garden" approach of Facebook. The reason is simple - while you can easily import your Outlook address book and GMail contacts into Facebook, the reverse path is closed. There's no "official" way to export your Facebook friends email addresses or contact phone numbers out as a CSV file so that you can sync the contacts data with Outlook, GMail or your BlackBerry. Some third-party Facebook hacks like "Facebook Sync" (for Mac) and "Facebook Downloader" (for Windows) did allow you to download your Facebook friends' names, emails, mobile phone number and profile photo to the desktop but they were quickly removed for violation of Facebook Terms of Use. How to Download Contacts from Facebook There are still some options to take Friends data outside the walls of Facebook wall. Facebook offers the Takeout option allowing you to download all Facebook data locally to the disk (include

Digital Inspiration

Digital Inspiration is a popular tech blog by  Amit Agarwal . Our popular Google Scripts include  Gmail Mail Merge  (send personalized emails with Gmail ),  Document Studio (generate PDFs from Google Forms ) and   File Upload Forms ( receive files  in Google Drive). Also see  Reverse Image Mobile Search , Online Speech Recognition and Website Screenshots , the most useful websites on the Internet.

PhishTank Detects Phishing Websites by Digg Style Voting

OpenDNS, a free service that helps anyone surf the Internet faster with a simple DNS tweak , will announce PhishTank today. PhishTank is a free public database of phishing URLs where anyone can submit their phishes via email or through the website. The submissions are verified by the other community members who then vote for the suspected site. This is such a neat idea as sites can be categorized just based on user feedback without even having to manually verify each and every submission. PhishTank employs the "feedback loop" mechanism where users will be kept updated with the status' of the phish they submit either via email alerts or a personal RSS feed . Naturally, once the PhishTank databases grows, other sites can harness the data using open APIs which will remain free. OpenDNS would also use this data to improve their existing phishing detection algorithms which are already very impressive and efficient. PhishTank | PhishTank Blog [Thanks Allison] Related: Google