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Top 10 Underhyped Webapps, 2009 Edition
As with rock music, video
games, and other awesome pursuits, great web applications often
don’t get enough credit for what they do well. We’re revisiting and
updating our favorite underhyped
webapps to give a new crop of contenders their due.
Photo by thievingjoker.
10. Freckle
Like previous underhyped champ
Remember the Milk, Freckle
doesn’t require you to learn a new set of rules or input methods to
track how you spend your time working for clients. If you type
“Writing copy for Benderson Corp. 1h45m,” it assigns a
1-hour-and-45-minute billing for Benderson. Want to make something
non-billable, but still tracked? Add an asterisk after it. Freckle
offers visually appealing reports about how you’re spending time
for clients, but also how you’re spending your own time, giving you
the chance to assess how you’re spending your time. A plan with one
account and one project is free, and any of Freckle’s other plans
can be tried for 30 days free, so if you don’t find yourself
addicted to its charts and graphs, you can return to your
spreadsheet. (Original
post)
9. TinyChat
Setting up a live video, audio,
and screen-sharing chatroom for up to 12 people at once seems like
something that might require a dozen software installations and
point-by-point walkthroughs. If you aren’t pitching a client so
much as just trying to get folks talking, TinyChat handles the task
admirably, and nobody has to do a thing but follow a link and turn
on a mic or webcam. The rooms aren’t password-protected unless the
chat owner has a paid account, but you can require chatters to sign
in with a Twitter handle to verify identity, and control just who
gets to jump in with their video or audio feeds. Pretty impressive
stuff for a free web service. (Original
post)
8. ScreenToaster
Your boss asks you to
demonstrate exactly how “that thing you do with that program
works,” but you’re at work without screen recording software
installed. Fire up ScreenToaster’s site, load its Java-based
applet, and you can record surprisingly decent quality screencasts
and demonstrations, with audio voice-overs, at the push of a single
button. When you’re done recording part of your desktop or the
whole thing, you can have ScreenToaster upload the finished product
to YouTube or ScreenToaster’s own site, download your screencast as
a QuickTime or Flash file, and re-record audio if you didn’t hit it
the first time. Here’s our own
quick ScreenToaster test. Tell your viewers to hit the
full-screen button for your screencasts and it’s like you’re
hovering right over their shoulder, semi-patiently showing them
just how it’s done. (Original
post)
7. Lovely Charts
Sure, it’s a pretty
presumptuous name, but Lovely Charts succeeds at what it promises.
The Flash-based webapp produces very clean-looking charts for all
kinds of purposes, be it a flowchart to describe a process, a
diagram describing a network setup, conference seating, or whatever
you might want to sketch out on the back of a napkin. You only get
to save one chart at a time to edit later with a free account, but
you can export any number of charts to JPG or PNG as often as you’d
like. (Original
post)
6. Instapaper & Read It Later
It’s a really cool article or
blog post you just stumbled across, but at the moment—right
this second—you don’t have time to read it. If you had a
bookmarklet or browser plug-in for either the Instapaper or Read It
Later service, you’d be able to quickly send that web page to your
account for bookmarking. Once there, it can be stripped of all but
essential text for reading, saved for offline reading in your
iPhone, marked as read when you’re done with it, shared with
others—you get the idea. Read It Later offers a Firefox
extension for offline reading, easy saving, and a lot more
functionality in general, but Instapaper keeps it clean and simple
on purpose. Both are great services that quietly do similar, and
extremely useful, things. (Original posts:
Read It Later &
Instapaper)
5. YouMail
Not everybody can swing a
smartphone, many smartphones don’t offer visual voicemail, and very
few people (at the moment) get to play with Google Voice and its transcribed
voicemails. For those feeling like their phones are under-powered,
there’s YouMail. Sign up, follow YouMail’s instructions on setting
up your phone to hand over your phone’s voicemail duties to its
service, and you’ll be able to listen to or download voicemails
from its web site or smartphone apps. With the limited free or paid
unlimited transcription plans, the
halfway decent speech-to-text versions of your messages are
emailed or sent by SMS right away. If you want different voicemail
greetings for different contacts, YouMail can do that, too. Whether
you’re rocking the cheapest phone they had at the store or an
iPhone, YouMail’s a great add-on. (Original
post)
4. PDF to Word
If you need to grab elements
from a PDF, edit part of its text, or cut down its size, you might
try converting it to a Microsoft Word file. For doing that task,
PDF to Word is more than just adequate—it’s darned
impressive. We were kind of amazed at how well even the most
complex of PDFs we had access to (an invitation to a snooty art
installation opening) were flipped into almost exact facsimiles in
Word format. Simply upload a PDF, provide an email address, and
your document is on its way to you. Maker NitroPDF has other free PDF tools
worth checking out, and paid software to entice you with, but PDF
to Word is a webapp that does exactly what it says, no catches or
gimmicks. (Original
post)
3. drop.io
It’s hard to say that drop.io
doesn’t have a fairly persistent marketing push behind it, but for
all the helpful functions it offers, the service doesn’t get enough
notice. Besides giving anyone 100MB of temporary file-sharing space
without any sign-up required, drop.io can handle
the rare faxing job,
record voice memos by telephone, set up
quick multimedia presentations, and more as developers hack on
the open API. Having recently been assigned as Yahoo Mail’s default
large attachment handler should bring drop.io out of
semi-obscurity, though its deeper functionality still deserves a
bit more attention.
2. Fonolo
If calling a company’s customer
service line and dealing with automated answering systems fills you
with a certain kind of dread, you need a Fonolo account. The free
service has diagrammed the customer service phone trees of more
than 500 major firms, letting you click the point in the call you
want to be at (“Press 4 to cancel an account …”), then taking
care of the tedious number-punching up to that point, calling you
to connect exactly where you want to come in. With its
latest update, Fonolo can even record your call, giving you the
power to
get better customer service with detailed records. (Original
post)
1. The Aviary suite
Aviary is a webapp maker that
specializes in fully-featured Flash apps, and they’re seemingly
engaged in a dare to see how much users can get done entirely in a
browser. Jackson West called Phoenix the
best online image editor, and our
readers agree. They’ve got a lighter, faster version dubbed
Falcon, and if you
want to annotate an image that’s already on someone’s server, you
can
paste its URL after http://aviary.com and it’ll
quickly import the image for your editing pleasure. Most recently,
and most impressively, they’ve launched a full-featured audio editor that
we
totally geeked out over. If you can remember their name, you
can benefit from Aviary’s host of impressive in-a-pinch
tools.
Send an email to Kevin Purdy, the author of this post, at kevin@lifehacker.com.
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