In the first of a series, I'm going to post about the maps I use the most and let you know the good and the bad about the map systems out there.
First up, Ask City!
I haven't used ask.com in about a billion years, so it took a posting on TechCrunch to get me to pay attention to their new mapping utility, Ask City.
Here's the good:
Being late to the game has its advantages. You can rip off ideas from your competitors and then make it better. What's neat about Ask City?
1. You can draw on the map and send it to friends. This opens up a whole new brand of social networking around a map. If you're trying to figure out where to go on Friday, everyone can pin their fav restaurant on the map. You can write your opinions about it and vote, all on the map.
2. Search for business near a location. Google has it, but Ask City lets me search it from the little pop up balloon.
3. Search events. Google lets you search events, but you have to do it through Google Calendar. This puts it all in one app and it looks pretty thorough. After you choose your event, you can use "search nearby" to find a restaurant to eat at before and a bar to hang out in afterward.
4. Find movies. You can find movies on Google, but I think I'm the only person I know who knows how to do it (type movie: your zip like movie: 77449 in the search box).
5. Pin your results. You can pin a result down, then run a new search so that you can see where the stuff you pinned is in relation to something else you're looking for.
You can also send info to your phone, e-mail the map to your friends, and save snapshots of the maps you've created.
In the next post, the bad.
1.03.2007
New Direction for the Blog
So, I've realized that my talent lies in finding really neat things on the web that others have no time to find or no interest in finding or trying out because they aren't quite as geeky/nerdy as I am. So, in the tradition of boredom making you blog, I will try and focus my blog on the neat/new stuff that I find on the web. I'll review it so that my friends won't waste their time, but I'm hoping that I can spread the word about some of the things that I think are cool on the web. I'll link to my del.icio.us posts and you can see the stuff as I find it, even before I post on it.
TTFN
TTFN
11.10.2006
Website of the Week

For those of you obsessed with celebrity fashion, www.like.com searches based on pictures to find similar items. You highlight an item that you like from the picture (shoes, handbag, etc.) and like's search engine will find it. Just opened today, with free shipping for the first 10,000 customers. Soon, it will have other items and will search Ebay.
10.11.2006
Ergonomic Workspace

People who know me know that my neck has been bothering me for almost 3 months. Nothing on the MRI, but part of it is because of sitting all day and driving for 3 hours or more per day (ridiculous commute). I'm going to use some of these tips for an ergonomic workspace that I came from Macworld via Lifehacker.
9.21.2006
Tavis Smiley Laughs Too Damn Much
What the hell is wrong with Tavis??? I'm trying to understand why in the world he was laughing through the ENTIRE Kat Williams interview I heard on podcast today. I mean, Kat would say, "My name is Kat," and Smiley would break out into these loud guffaws for a few minutes like the shit was funny. I understand laughing when something is really funny, but Tavis reminded me of Tom Joyner forcing out giggles every time J. Anthony Brown opens his mouth.
Listen: just because they are comedians doesn't mean that every word out of their mouth is funny and that you have to laugh for 5 minutes. Ya'll need to listen to that foolishness. Go to iTunes and download Tavis' podcast interview with Kat and see if you aren't annoyed in the first 5 minutes (or less).
Listen: just because they are comedians doesn't mean that every word out of their mouth is funny and that you have to laugh for 5 minutes. Ya'll need to listen to that foolishness. Go to iTunes and download Tavis' podcast interview with Kat and see if you aren't annoyed in the first 5 minutes (or less).
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