2008.09.08
The Power of Alt + Space
Every DOTA player in our office knows how powerful Alt + Tab is. When they hear someone coming up the stairs while they are playing, they just press Alt + Tab and wallah, they can again pretend to work with the Visual Studio window open. But DOTA-ignorant as I am, and add being an honest employee to that (8-}), I don’t have much use for the Alt + Tab key combination, except if I have to browse through the different windows running on my desktop all at the same time. But I do use one Alt + combination often. The Alt + Space combination.
Now, for those of you who are fond of visiting GTD or lifehack websites (or for those who simply knows what I’m talking about), you must already have an idea of what I’m saying. I’m talking about the keystroke combination for launching Launchy, a free and open source application launcher. It’s so powerful that it can, uhm, launch applications! (Another 8-}).
Launch Apps with a few keystrokes…
So what happens after you hit the Alt + Space combination? The Launchy application appears, and from there on, you can launch about almost any application you want to use. Just key-in a few letters on the Launchy user interface and the helper app will give you the application with the closest match to those letters that you keyed in. So should you wish to open the Microsoft Word application, just key-in “wo” and the helper app would immediately present to you the application through its sleek UI. Press the enter key from there and the application you selected opens.

But what if the application you were looking for was not what Launchy gave you after a few keystrokes? Well, give the helper app a few seconds and it will list down the other applications that matched your query. Say you wanted to open Wordpad instead of Microsoft Word after you entered “wo”, just wait for a few seconds after keying in the letters and a list of other applications having “wo” in its name will be displayed, including Wordpad of course. Using the up and down buttons on your keyboard, select the application that you want to open from the list, press enter and the application launches.
… And more
Launchy does not only launch applications, it can also open a lot of other things. Your MyDocuments folder, a text file, an excel file—name it and if it is in your computer, Launchy can probably open it. A little tweaking may be needed though to launch particular files and executables. But most of the tinkering can be done easily through the application’s Option menu, which can be easily accessed by right-clicking on the application and clicking on the Option label from the popup submenu that appears. From the Launchy options window, additional applications and files that you want Launchy to handle can be added by accessing the “Catalog” tab.

If you don’t like the appearance of the user interface, there are selectable skins that you can use to replace the default, all of which are accessible through the same Launchy options window by clicking on the “Skins” tab. And to configure the primary appearance and settings of the helper application, just play with the options on the “General” child window.
Aside from opening files that resides on your hard disk, you can also use Launchy to automatically search for a keyword in Google. Just key-in google, then press the tab button, enter your search keyword and press enter. The helper app would then launch your default web browser and display the Google search result. Aside from Google, you can also make keyword queries from other sites, including msn, wikipedia, yahoo, and others.
Clean Desktop
If there’s one more thing that I like about Launchy aside from launching programs and what-else-there-may-be lightning-fast, it’s how the application allows me to maintain a squeaky clean desktop. On my work PC’s desktop, you can see nothing but my desktop wallpaper, a couple of reminders that I embedded on the desktop with the aid of Samurize, and a few links to work folders (which I still cannot configure to be launched by Launchy at post time) lined-up neatly on one side. The desktop of my home laptop is nothing different, minus the reminders that I wouldn’t need while relaxing at home.
The Verdict
I love it! With fewer mouse clicks and folder searches, it makes launching any PC application an ease to me. And it keeps my desktop clean. And one more thing… it makes anyone who goes near my PC give out a woaaahhh or an ehhhh whenever they see me launching an application. Hehe. Nonsense! Well, that’s all for now, unless you want to hear more nonsense from me. :p
And by the way, you can download the Launchy helper application here.
08:00 Posted in Web Finds | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this | Tags: launchy, web finds, gtd, lifehack, launcher app
2008.09.03
The Chrome -- Unmistakably Google
It was probably the shortest announcement for a new web browser in recent years. I heard about it from a Code Project newsletter last September 2, and just two days later, a beta version is already up for download! And just in case you, my dear reader, are among those few who weren’t able to catch up with the latest internet news, I am talking here about the Google Chrome—the latest browser to hit the world wide web and join the web browser wars.Due to the less-than-the-usual amount of fanfare that the release of Google Chrome Beta acquired, I almost forgot that the software is ready for download today. Good thing, I am fond of reading YM status messages while “thinking”, allowing me to chance upon the status message of Roda announcing that Google Chrome is great. (I don’t know if she was just being sarcastic or what?) So I downloaded it at around 1 PM (RP Time). And when the browser started running on my desktop, all I was able to say was that the thing is…
Unmistakably Google
Compare Google with other search sites, or Gmail with other web-based email applications, or even GTalk with other chat applications. More often than not, the web apps created by Google turns out to have the simplest design, yet performs the best. That’s also how I would describe Google Chrome’s position in the browser wars—it has the simplest design, yet… it’s just too early to say how it would perform against the others. :p It looks like a bare-basic web browser, sans the browser tabs, but it does seem to offer more than that. I can’t really say; after all, I have only been using the Chrome for around four hours, and I was just too busy this afternoon to navigate through all the features that the app has to offer.
Features
In the few hours that I was using the Chrome browser, and in the fewer minutes that I was able to surf through its functionalities, I was able to find these few features worth mentioning:
- Weird tabs – instead of the usual downward position of tabs below the address bar, Google Chrome tabs are set upright on the topmost part of the browser, above the address bar.
- Secret window – or what most of the IE8 testers refer to as “porn” mode browser. Like the InPrivate feature available in IE8 beta, Chrome’s secret window allows you to browse in private—which means no browsing history, no search history, and no way for the next browser user to tell if you were watching porn or not!
- Speed Dial (?) – or it may be another thing entirely different. Either way, it looks very much like the speed dial available for Opera browsers, although I haven’t tried using the feature yet.
- “Intelligent” address bar– which Google calls the “omnibox". The feature is nothing new to Firefox 3.0 users, but it is still good to know that Google Chrome also shares the feature.
These are but a few of the features that the new Google Chrome Beta has to offer. I wasn’t able tinker much with the app due to time constraints and language difficulties (translate: failure to read instructions in a Japanese OS). For more of the new features available for the Google web browser, just visit the Google blog; or better yet, download a Google Chrome Beta copy of your own here.
22:12 Posted in Web Finds | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: web finds, google, chrome, browser


