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December 23 2010
Track Santa's Journey Across the Globe with Google and NORAD [Video]
Every year, Google teams up with the North American Aerospace Defense Command to track a bearded man flying a sleigh across the globe. This year, you can track the journey via Google Map, Google Earth, from your phone, and more.
More specifically, your Santa-tracking options are:
- See Santa on a Google Map: On your home computer or laptop, visit www.noradsanta.org and choose your preferred language. You'll see a large Google Map on the page displaying Santa's current location and his next stop. Click the video icons to watch "Santa Cam" videos, and click the gift icons to learn more about each city.
- Watch Santa fly with the Google Earth Plug-in: From www.noradsanta.org, click on the link Track Santa in Google Earth. You'll see Santa steering his sleigh right on the webpage. If you don't have the Google Earth plug-in, you can get ready by downloading it ahead of time.
- Follow Santa on your phone: Track Santa from your mobile phone by opening Google Maps for mobile and searching for [santa]. Or, visit m.noradsanta.org on your phone's browser.
- Subscribe to his YouTube channel: Santa's home on YouTube is at http://www.youtube.com/noradtrackssanta. That's where you can find videos from his journey throughout the night.
- Get real-time information about Santa's location: Use Google's Realtime Search to get updates from social networks, news and micro-blogs like Twitter at @noradsanta, and keep up with news about his journey on this Facebook page.
The party starts tomorrow (Christmas Eve) at 2am EST. If you want a better idea of what you can expect from Google and NORAD's Santa-tracking, they've even got a dedicated page of tips and tricks.
August 04 2010
Be Merciless In Cutting Down Your Business Ideas [Video]
Jason Fried, co-founder of noted web developer 37signals and author of Rework, made a pretty good case for ignoring people at work. In a newer interview, he explains how starting your business should involve seriously, drastically paring down your ambitions.
Fried isn't suggesting you just give up or conclude that janitorial service is the only logical path for your entrepreneurial idea. What he's advocating for is not killing yourself over the peripherals of your business—physical space, mailing lists, logos—but focusing your limited energy and time on your core product.
... Doing all that stuff when you really got to focus on the product first and keep it as small as you can and if you're going to open a bakery, open it out of your house first. Just make – I mean, that's probably technically illegal in some place, but make some... if you want to open a cupcake bakery, make some cupcakes and sell them at the Farmer's market for six months, for a year first, on the weekends. See if it works. If it works, okay, now you have some people who like your cupcakes, you're selling out every weekend. Now maybe you can move into something else. Instead of saying, "I'm going to open a bakery" and go buy a storefront and some expensive machinery and stuff like that. So I think people kind of start a little bit too quickly sometimes too and they should just make their time and starts something on the side and see where it goes.
It's not a new idea, but the bakery example seems like a nice down-to-earth example of why you see businesses that seem to have great people behind them fall down in their first year.
February 08 2010
FollowUpThen Automates Email Follow Ups [Follow Up]
You're pinging somebody over email right now, but they'll probably need a reminder or follow-up in two days. CC twodays@followupthen.com, and if that person hasn't responded yet, they'll be automatically re-pinged 48 hours from now. It's a neat service, and it's free.
That's the main way FollowUpThen works: CC a message that needs a second push to an address like 5hours, 2days, 1week, or even 10minutes@followupthen.com, and if your recipient doesn't reply (with FollowUpThen as one of the addressees) before your time period is up, the original message is re-pushed by FollowUpThen.com, with a little email graphical tweak, seen above, and a notice that FollowUpThen is acting on your wishes.
If you want to handle the second notice yourself, add the @followupthen.com timed address to the BCC field, and it will only get back to you, with a reminder of what you sent. You can also send a message directly To: followupthen.com, and your reminder is pushed back to you at the time you specify. All these uses, and some basic explanation of FollowUpThen's methodology, is explained in this quick video tutorial:

No software installs required, and it works from pretty much any email client after you verify your address upon first use. If you've got a clever use case for FollowUpThen involving webapps or other tools beyond the standard person-to-person email, tell us about them in the comments.
Maybe Soup is currently being updated? I'll try again automatically in a few seconds...
