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There’s already been quite a bit of ink spilled over the demise of the CrunchPad but I thought I’d add a few drops. My opinion is this: the CrunchPad was a testament to the power of online media and a fascinating study in the ability of new media to enact real changes on the real world. While the product faltered, it’s fascinating that the project went as far as it did given the forces arrayed against it.
Think about what happened: if we reduce this to its component parts you have some dudes in California who talked to some dudes in Singapore and who agreed to work together on a piece of hardware. I’ve seen the prototypes and the thing worked and worked well. Most hardware manufacturers can barely take each others meetings let alone coordinate a massive project while separated by a culture and an ocean.
Readers offer their best tips for using touch screens in the cold winter months, middle-clicking with your laptop’s touchpad, and staying focused on your work when that work is in your browser.
Don’t like the gallery layout? Click here to view everything on one page.
About the Tips Box: Every day we receive boatloads of great reader tips in our inbox, but for various reasons—maybe they're a bit too niche, maybe we couldn't find a good way to present it, or maybe we just couldn't fit it in—the tip didn't make the front page. From the Tips Box is where we round up some of our favorites for your buffet-style consumption. Got a tip of your own to share? Add it in the comments or email it to tips at lifehacker.com.

Logan shows us a quicker way to use touch screens in the winter:
Wearing winter gloves means having to pull them off every time you want to use your iPhone. There are a few stylus products out there, but I found that the negative (flat) end of AAA batteries, even when remote controls have exhausted them, are conductive enough to act as a stylus. Because it’s flat it doesn’t scratch the screen, but it works through light fabric too if you’re hesitant about the whole metal-on-glass thing.
AA batteries should work just as well and may be easier to come by for most.

Photo by CLF.
Chinmay tweaks his settings to allow for quick middle clicking on his laptop:
It’s simple really: since you can already left-click by tapping the touchpad and drag by double-tap dragging, set your left-click button to middle-click. Really helps while browsing. I use middle-click all the time for opening links in new tabs and closing tabs.

Felipe tells us how he keeps his favorite social networking sites handy in Gmail:
I just found out you can add iGoogle gadgets to Gmail. Since that is not what they are originally made for, they can look a little weird or just not be of any use at all. But these two gadgets I found work wonders!
The Twitter gadget is actually made for Gmail, and the great thing is that it goes “fullscreen”, that is, instead of your email you see tweets! The same goes for Facebook, although it’s originally made for
iGoogle. But it also goes fullscreen, you just have to click on “Expand” inside the gadget box.To install them, just do the following:
1. Go to Settings –> Labs, find "Add any gadget by URL" and activate it.
2. Find a XML gadget for Gmail or iGoogle.
3. Go to Settings –> Gadgets, enter the gadget URL into the text box and click Add.These are the gadget URLs:
Twitter - http://twittergadget.appspot.com/gadget-gmail.xml
Facebook - http://hosting.gmodules.com/ig/gadgets/file/104971404861070329537/facebook.xml

Ryan lets us know how he stays distraction-free when working in his browser:
I frequently find myself wasting time browsing the internet, specifically some of my favorite bookmarked sites, when I should be getting work done. I found that by simply opening the few tabs I actually need (such as Gmail and RTM), pinning them in Chrome, and hitting Ctrl + b to hide my bookmarks bar, the problem is solved! Just the act of seeing no bookmark bar there that I am so used to seeing serves as a reminder that I should be doing something productive. Simple, yet effective tip.
I don’t know about Windows, but on a Mac you can take this even further by hiding your address bar if you don’t need it too much, by clicking the button in the upper right hand corner of the window.
While more and more courts seem to be understanding that eBay shouldn’t be responsible for what users are selling on its site, it appears that French courts are a bit confused. Last year, a French court fined eBay $63 million because counterfeit LVMH products were being sold on the site. Of course, eBay has no way of knowing what’s legit and what’s not, but the French court didn’t seem to care. A similar case, also involving LVMH, but concerning Google ads, was also ruled in LVMH’s favor, but it was appealed to the European Court of Justice, and a judge there has already indicated that it makes little sense to blame the company. But that isn’t stopping the French courts. eBay has now been fined yet again, because of a French ban on selling even legally purchased brands of LVMH perfumes if you’re not an authorized distributor. eBay is appealing the ruling, saying that banning the resale of legally purchased goods doesn’t make sense and harms consumers. However, a much bigger question is why eBay should be liable at all. It’s not eBay doing the selling, but users on the site.
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Musician Dan Bull seems to be carving out a nice space for himself responding to UK efforts to make copyright law more ridiculous that it already is, by voicing his opposition in song. A few months back, we wrote about his awesome open letter to Lily Allen (full disclosure: I get a brief mention) and now he’s informed us that he’s back again with an open letter (in song) to Peter Mandelson, called Dear Mandy:
I wonder if someone rich and famous has to buy Mandelson dinner before he’ll actually listen to it.
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Richard Alan Heene, best known for orchestrating the Balloon Boy hoax in October, once wrote a really bad supposed-to-be-funny book called The Official Offensive Driving Handbook. It includes racial stereotypes illustrated by exaggerated photos of buck-toothed “Orientals,” turbaned “Towelheads,” and “Bros” in Cadillacs. The book appears to be no longer in stock on Amazon.
Balloon Boy's dad — not smart, not funny [TMZ]
Firefox: The worst thing about losing your laptop isn’t the cost of replacing your gear; it’s the loss of personal info and saved passwords. Firefox extension FireFound tracks your lost laptop’s location and nukes your personal data in a few clicks.
Once you install the add-on for Firefox or its mobile version Fennec, FireFound uses geolocation to track where you are every time you open your browser, sending that information to a secure server (or your own server, if you prefer.) If your laptop is ever lost or stolen, log into FireFound's web site from any computer and find out where your laptop's being used—handy information to pass on to the cops, though not necessarily info that'll get you laptop back. You can also choose to nuke the personal data in your browser, including history and saved passwords, to protect if from prying eyes until you get your computer back.
FireFound lets you tweak several settings according to what level of security you desire, including the option to receive email notifications if your computer is used more than a certain number of miles from its last location. The data protection feature instantly annihilates some or all of the personal information contained in your browser if someone can’t provide a password to use it.
We’ve seen a fair amount of similar tools for Windows users on a whole in the past (see our laptop thief-proofing guide for more details), but FireFound is the first Firefox-specific version we’ve seen, and it’s got some solid features of its own.
Keep in mind that none of these tools are guaranteed to keep your data safe or recover your hardware, and remember that your best bet to safeguarding your data is encrypting your data. What other steps do you take to protect your laptop’s data besides securing your browser? Talk about it in the comments.
So this is funny. Yes, Twitter is having downtime issues right now. Yes, again. But that’s nothing new, obviously. What is new is that Twitter being down has also apparently borked the site many people use to check if Twitter is down, downforeveryoneorjustme.
While the site, made by Ryan King, is working for every other site on the web, the image below shows what is returned when you put in twitter.com now. Did I mention King is now a Twitter employee? Beyond meta.
And yes, I tried putting in downforeveryoneorjustme.com into downforeveryoneorjustme — and I somehow ended up inside John Malkovich’s head.
Update: Both are back up now, however the Twitter Lists feature appears to be disabled.
Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0
In the spirit of holiday house-cleaning, it’s time for a crash course in comments etiquette. What can you do? What should you definitely never do? What, in effect, do we want from you, Citizen Commenter?
We love our readers’ helpful commentary, and frankly, Lifehacker wouldn’t be the site it is without the help of our readers and commenters. We strive to let in a smart and plugged-in community, and we want comments that serve as first-rate contributions to the post at hand. We value informed response and welcome spirited debate. Above all, comments should always further the discussion. Our old guide to weblog comments is a great jumping-off point for the completely uninitiated.
We like to see good spelling and grammar, because we're nerdy like that. Capitalization and punctuation are important, too—though we'll give you the benefit of the doubt over the occasional typo rather than freaking out over a misplaced apostrophe. These basic requirements go a long way towards making us all look better. Staying on-topic in a thread is essential—but now you can also take a topic to your own generated #hashtag page, then direct others there. Editors may sometimes caution that a thread has gone off-topic and should be moved to another forum.
Many readers have already discovered how to make their voices stand out via our #tips pages. Here you can share breaking tips, links of interest, timely video, or whatever else you might think would be useful to Lifehacker’s editors. Give us some substantive lines on why we should follow up and your post may be promoted or featured on the front page. The #tips page is also an excellent space to audition as a first-time commenter with a juicy tidbit or to show off your investigative instincts. Self-promoters and spammers will be summarily banned, but quality contributors have the spotlight.
In addition, there is now an informal commenter forum, #openthread, where the conversation is yours to guide. This is the place to add comments, liveblogs, pictures, video, and links that are relevant to your community. It’s also easy to jump over here if you find yourself veering off-topic and want to take others with you.
So: thumbs up to attention to detail, thoughtful typing, and prodigious use of the ‘Shift’ key. Personal attacks, inappropriate behavior, and off-topic rants in comments are subject to bans, disemvowelling, and deletion. Starred commenters should be aware that their privileges are not guaranteed, and should be careful in the comments they approve and promote. We’ll quickly demote commenters for unruly or obscene posting. Baiting trolls helps no one, and we want the level of dialogue maintained to be high. But editors and moderators are equally on the lookout for our best contributors, too, to promote and star for brilliant efforts of the commenting kind, so let’s see what you’ve got.
Yet again, despite all the secrecy and bogus claims of “national security,” the details behind what’s being proposed in ACTA have leaked, and they don’t look good at all. It’s basically an attempt to force the worst of the DMCA on much of the rest of the world, with a few carefully chosen modifications. While there are lots of issues, it’s worth noting the most basic of all, found in the first paragraph that contains the “general obligations” of participating countries. As Michael Geist details:
These focus on “effective enforcement procedures” with expeditious remedies that deter further infringement. The wording is similar to TRIPs Article 41, however, the EU notes that unlike the international treaty provisions, there is no statement that procedures shall be fair, equitable, and/or proportionate. In other words, it seeks to remove some of the balance in the earlier treaties.
This is the sort of thing that you really have to watch out for in these types of agreements. The lobbyists for the entertainment industry are amazingly good at carefully selecting or omitting words that, to the casual observer, don’t seem all that important. However, in the long-term, they can change the entire thrust of an agreement. By leaving out the requirement that enforcement be “fair, equitable and/or proportionate,” it makes it much easier for the industry to push for more and more draconian enforcement measures under a typical game of leapfrog or “ratcheting,” where they focus on getting one country that’s agreed to ACTA to impose something draconian, and then insisting that everyone else has to follow through in the name of “harmonization.” Be aware of these sorts of tricks as the Hollywood lawyers will waste little time in leaping forward with claims that these rules really aren’t any different than what’s already in place. Of course, if that were actually the case, they wouldn’t be arguing so hard for these new rules. They know how to work the system.
The second paragraph is also a bit troubling, as it would require a contributory infringement setup, or an “inducement standard.” The industry has been pushing for this for a while, and while it failed to get the INDUCE Act passed in the US, it effectively got close with the troubled ruling in the Grokster case, written by a Justice who clearly admitted to not understanding basic technology. The problem with any sort of inducement standard should be obvious (though, it seems like it’s not to maximalists): you are creating a liability for someone based on the actions of others. That should always be seen as a bad idea. However, the entertainment industry loves it, because they would rather fight legal battles against a small number of file sharing services and sites, rather than the users of those service and sites.
Even worse, by “harmonizing” these sorts of things via international treaty, we are left in the same troubled position we are on other similar treaties like Berne and TRIPS, whereby countries are locked into very specific rules on how intellectual property must work, and are unable to make serious and meaningful changes, based on their own knowledge of what works best to encourage and promote progress. Having a very small body of folks, heavily influenced by industry lobbyists, decide exactly what copyright laws must be does not allow for experimentation and actual knowledge of how these sorts of changes impact creative output. They’re designed to hide the damage done by bad copyright law, rather than figure out a way to fix it.
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Browsera is an all-in-one, web-based tool for testing web sites for errors, complications, and layout issues. Unlike other similar tools, it does more than just take screenshots of various browsers; it provides an in-depth assessment of problematic areas in need of attention.
Browsera is a program that has features similar to previously mentioned browser comparison sites like BrowserShots and IETester. Browsera kicks things up a notch, not only showing you what your site will look like to users with assorted browsers, but identifying and flagging problematic areas, making less dirty work for you.
Browsera is free with registration for use on up to 25 pages per month, which should be plenty for your weekend tinkering. If you need more, the service offers additional tiered pricing levels ranging from $49 a month to $499 a month as users and page views increase. The service currently runs its tests against the following browsers:
Windows: Firefox 2.0.0.20, 3.0.12, 3.5.0; Internet Explorer 6.0.3790.3959, 7.0.5730.13, 8.0.6001.18702; Mac: Safari 3.2.1 (5525.27.1), 4.0.3 (5531.9)