February 15, 2010 – 12:52 pm
Here at Browserland we love web based products: there’s absolutely nothing to install, they run on any machine, no matter which operating system it is running. You just launch your favorite browser, and they work right away. Today what I want to tell you about, is a great web based online conferencing solution called Fuze Meeting.

Fuze Meeting is a web conferencing tool that lets you share everything on your screen in high resolution with anyone, anywhere, on any device⦠on any continent, on any planet, in any of the neighboring galaxies. Okay, not quite. But one day.
Available in various pricing plans, depending on attendees’ number and storage space, Fuze Meeting allows you to host conferences online, without the need of installing any software, offering a lot of great features that I’ve not even seen in standalone softwares.
Let’s take a look to all the features…Or check their feature list here!
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February 14, 2010 – 1:04 pm
If you are on Facebook and want to follow us, here’s another way to subscribe to our latest news feeds: we used to have RSS, email newsletter and Twitter only, but now you can also choose to use Facebook and get our latest updates directly in your Home Page.

To do this, simply use the widget in the sidebar or use the link below, and become a fan!
Here’s the Facebook Page Link
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February 13, 2010 – 12:25 pm
Today’s news is not about web browsers or web based service, but it is a humanitarian call out to the world, and it is certainly something that you can watch and share through you favorite browser!

After 25 years from it’s first publication, a new version of We Are The World is out, called We Are The World 25 for Haiti, and this time it aims to help Haiti people come out of the disaster that has caused the loss of thousands of people. Led and produced (again) by the legendary Quincy Jones, in collaboration with Lionel Richie, it involves all of the major modern music personalities, starting from Celine Dion, The Black Eyed Peas, LL Cool J, Snoop Dog, Mary J Blige, Usher, Pink, Wyclef Jean, Akon, and much more.
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February 11, 2010 – 11:40 am
Have you got a multitude of email addresses? Wouldn’t it be great to have them all together in one single place, that you can also check on the fly using just a web browser? No more Outlook, Thunderbird, and all those things?

Google’s own Gmail is simply the best webmail application ever: I have been using Gmail since it was in the invite-only beta phase, and it has been adding features over these years, coming to be an almost-perfect email web based client, and one of the best things it does, is the ability to send emails pretending to be another account, on a different domain and server. That’s what we will use in this mini-guide to transform a single Gmail account into an all-in-one email client for all of your address (that support forwarding).
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January 26, 2010 – 8:58 pm
To restore Firefox to its default settings, without having to uninstall it, you had to pass through its Safe Mode: nothing long or complicated, but still something that might be avoided easily. As it is with Chrome!

In fact, restoring Google Chrome to its default settings is really easy as doing three clicks:
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January 25, 2010 – 1:03 pm
With version 3.5, Mozilla introduced in Firefox a new feature: Private Browsing. For those who don’t know, Private Browsing is a particular state of Firefox which allows people to browse anonymously on the web, without leaving any trace into the browser’s history, cookies, complement data, etc.

Unfortunately this feature in Firefox is not very practical to use: in fact, you have to close your actual session in order to start it.
Luckily there’s a plugin, Private Browsing Window, that lets you open a new completely independent anonymous window, like it is in Chrome’s Incognito Mode, so that you don’t need to close the current browsing session.
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January 23, 2010 – 8:53 pm
When you need to download something, often you will find that the file is hosted on RapidShare: if you don’t know what it is, RapidShare is a file hosting service where people can upload their files and share them with others easily by exchanging a link.
The only bad thing about it, is that free accounts have to wait a set amount of time before you actually download that file, you can’t exceed a maximum data size (after which you have to wait about an hour), and simultaneous downloads are not permitted.

Rapidshare Premium Link Generator use Rapidleech system. What Rapidleech is?
RapidLeech is a free server transfer script for use on various popular upload/download sites such as megaupload.com – The script transfers files from rapid share (for example) via your fast servers connection speed and dumps the file on your server. The script was originally created by Vyrus who wrote the script in Russia. Than this script got modified by various people who then released copies, encrypted the source code and made so-called improvements.
Here’s a great website that does what you want: Rapidshare Premium Link Generator is a site that buys and shares Rapidshare Premium accounts, allowing you to access all of the features that you would not have with the free one. The site is based on user’s donations, and you can borrow a free Premium account at anytime, instantly. Let’s see how:
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January 21, 2010 – 11:29 pm
If you are a Photoshop heavy user like I am, you are likely to miss it when you are away from home, without your PC or laptop: sure you have Photoshop.com as a great alternative, but it might not satisfy you at all, specially from the layout point of view since it looks totally different from the original version.

Luckily there is a fantastic fully web-based alternative, which will make Photoshop’s absence easier for you: its name is Pixlr, an online full-featured Photoshop-like image editor, which allows you to modify your images without installing any type of software, at begginer’s and advanced levels.
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January 14, 2010 – 9:17 pm
By default when you first install an operating system on your machine, the default web browser that you find will be Internet Explorer on Windows and Safari on Macs…Only some Linux distributions have Firefox as their default browsing program.

It is really easy to set Firefox as default on any OS, but someone might not have had the chance to learn how yet…so here’s how to do it in two easy steps:
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January 12, 2010 – 8:28 pm
Google Chrome extensions are a great way to add more features and functionality to the browser. Sometimes, a feature is really useful for some people, but not for everyone. Extensions let you customize Google Chrome with features you like, while keeping your browser free of clutter that you don’t use.

That’s how Google itself describes its new extensions search engine, which all of us were waiting for, and that already features more than 1000 entries.
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