Your Windows system tray and Mac OS X menubar have become prime real estate for highly functional micro-applications that provide easy access to information, settings, and tasks. Here are our top ten favorites for both Windows and Mac. More »
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Top 10 Micro-Apps for Windows and Mac OS X [Lifehacker Top 10]
Top 10 Must-Have Browser Extensions [Video]
Your browser of choice may have changed a lot in the past year, but luckily the best extensions for making your browser better have kept up with all the most popular browsers. Here are our cross-platform, must-have favorites. More »
How to Wirelessly and Automatically Back Up Your iPhone Photos [Backup]
Syncing your iPhone doesn’t backup your photos, and if you’re not in constant sync you could easily lose them in a crash. Here’s how to jailbreak your iPhone and set up an automatic photo-syncing process. More »
PhoneAble Syncs Your iPhone with Multiple iTunes Libraries [Downloads]
Windows: We’ve mentioned one way to sync your iPhone with multiple computers, but if you’d rather not download a hex editor just to manually hack your iTunes libraries, free utility PhoneAble will do it all for you with just a few clicks. More »
SYNCiTunes Synchronizes Songs in Any Music Folder with iTunes [Downloads]
Dazzboard Syncs Your Videos, Photos, Music, and Even iTunes Library Across Devices [Synchronization]
If you’ve been looking for a simple solution to syncing your media across computers and multiple devices from a basic MP3 player to your Android phone, Dazzboard is an impressive and free syncing tool. More »
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ITunes Store – Android – Music and Audio – Multimedia – Apple
The Cleverest Ways to Use Dropbox That You’re Not Using [Dropbox]
How to Automatically Sync Any Song You Download to iTunes [Hack Attack]
iTunes has never been great at automatically syncing new songs or folders of music, but with a little finesse and the latest version of iTunes, you can automatically sync any new music you download to iTunes, with relative ease. More »
BackOff Shortens Long iPhone and iPod touch Sync Sessions [Downloads]
iPhone/iPod touch: If you carry a ton of stuff around on your iPhone or iPod touch, you know syncing it can take forever. BackOff turns off iTunes’ automatic backup process so you can sync faster.
Okay, before you go galloping off to download this slick free utility, let’s go over the most important point one more time. BackOff prevents iTunes from making a backup of your iPhone or touch to speed up syncing. That may not be a big deal once in a while, but most of us may want to have a recent backup of your device in case something goes kablam! one day and you lose your device’s data. Still, since most of what’s synced to the phone lives on your computer, some users would happily go without the backup in favor of quicker syncs.
BackOff is a pretty bare-bones utility and doesn’t really do anything beyond disable automatic backup. If you need to do more than speed up your sync sessions, check out how to sync an iPhone with multiple computers.
BackOff installs in a flash, and turns on and off in one click. It’s available on Windows and Mac, and it requires iTunes 9.0.2 or higher. What tricks do you rely on to speed up your iPhone or touch syncing? Let us know in the comments.
What’s the Best Way to Share Files Across Multiple Home Computers? [Ask Lifehacker]
Dear Lifehacker,
We’re a large family with several computers in our home. What’s the best way to share files across our home network rather than putting them on thumb drives and running from PC to PC?
With much love,
Out of Touch with My Family
Photo by Marshall Astor.
Hi Out of Touch,
The number of homes with multiple computers is rising, so you’ve got a pretty common problem. Fortunately, we’ve got plenty of good solutions. The first option most people would probably point to is setting up a simple home network (or workgroup) to allow file access and sharing among computer users on your LAN (just enable your operating system of choice’s file sharing features across all your computers). That works fine, and it’s certainly a good option. For our part, though, we’d also suggest a few other alternatives that may be quicker and easier to set up for all the members of your family.
Our favorite option for serious file sharing (lots of files shared, especially large files): setting up a home server. Windows Home Server, for example, is one of the few Microsoft products that everyone who uses it seems to universally love. Jason detailed how to set up WHS to automate your backups and corral your media, but it’s basically one always-accessible repository that your family can use to easily and seamlessly share files. If you don’t want to shell out for the WHS operating system (it’s $92), you could also put together your own network-attached storage (NAS); FreeNAS is an extremely popular free and open-source NAS worth checking out.
One of our absolute favorite ways to swap files is with Dropbox. For the low cost of free, you can install a folder on any Window, Mac OS X, or Linux-based computer, then just drag and drop files right into it that you want to share with others. Once you stick a file into the folder, it instantly syncs to Dropbox’s server and is available to the rest of your family on their own computers in just a couple of clicks.
Set up a single Dropbox account and password with private folder access your whole family can share, or grab a personal account for each user and designate a shared folder that all family members have access to. Each account comes with 2GB of storage space, but there's an option to buy more if you need it. By the way, with Dropbox, you don't have to worry about your shared files getting stuck in the ether if you lose your internet connection—synced files remain on your computer's hard drive for easy access. Also, Dropbox's LAN sync feature means that rather than making the round trip to the Dropbox servers and back to all the other machines in your network, the files quickly propagate to all the computers on your local network directly—so even big files should make their way to everyone's computers very quickly.
Finally, note-taking application Evernote is another option for sharing small files with friends and families. The free version lets users upload up to 40MB of files each month, but you're limited to audio, images, or PDFs (you'll need a premium account to upload Microsoft docs, videos, and so on). Evernote is a great choice if you want to make separate folders—or, in this case, notebooks—for each family member to help keep files organized and orderly.
Happy sharing!
Love,
Lifehacker
P.S. Got your own preferred methods that you use to share files at home? Let’s hear them in the comments. Thanks, Matthew!







