Five Best Online File Sharing Services [Hive Five]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerMarch 28, 2010 at 12:00PM

Five Best Online File Sharing ServicesWhen you want to share a file with a friend but don’t want to hassle with email attachment limits or running a home server, very little beats a fast online file sharing service. Here’s a look at five of your best options.

Photo by WebWizzard.

Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite tool for online file sharing to update our treatment of the topic from two years prior. (A lot has changed.) Now we’re back to highlight the top five contenders. The following five services take your files to the cloud so you can easily share files with anyone.

Running a home server is a nifty way to share files, but it’s not for everyone; it puts the burden of maintenance, uptime, and speed on your shoulders. In fact, How-To Geek recently walked through how to easily share large files and media with friends by running a dead simple home server using Opera Unite, and while it’s a great solution, online file sharing services are perfect when you want to let someone else handle the logistics.

Drop.io (Web-based, Basic: Free, Premium: From $19/Month)

Five Best Online File Sharing Services
The drop.io service is available in two primary flavors. The free service supports “file drops” which can consume up to 100MB of storage. Premium services start at $19 a month and expand the available storage from 100MB to 10GB and up, depending on how much storage and how many drops you’d like. Drop.io’s “file drops” are where it really stands out compared to other file-sharing services. File drops are active pools of files to which you can add batches of files, share with others, allow other people to add files and collaborate, and view the media directly from drop.io’s media viewer.

MediaFire (Web-Based, Basic: Free, Premium: From $7/Month)

Five Best Online File Sharing Services
MediaFire offers multiple tiers of file sharing. At the most basic you can upload as many files as you want, limited by a 200MB cap per file. Free accounts will hold files for 30 day from the last time they were downloaded. Premium accounts start at $7 a month and boost the file cap to 2GB per file, enable site-to-site transfer to your MediaFire account, enable embeddable Dropbox folders, and offer direct file linking—no MediaFire splashpage when you share a link to a file. The folder-based organization of MediaFire makes it simple to share entire batches of files with others, like vacation photos or project files.

Dropbox (Web-Based/Windows/Mac/Linux, Basic: Free, Premium: From $10/Month)

Five Best Online File Sharing Services
Dropbox has won over many users by combining online file sharing with local storage and syncing. You can use Dropbox exclusively as a web-based file sharing tool to upload and organize files in folders, easily sharing them with yourself or friends. Grabbing the Dropbox client, however, allows you to share any file from a folder on your computer. Files stored in a local Dropbox folder are automatically synced to Dropbox on the web—useful for all sorts of tricks like syncing your OneNote notebooks among computers or keeping your password keyrings up to date.

RapidShare (Web-Based, Basic: Free, Premium: From $9/Month)

Five Best Online File Sharing Services
The RapidShare service has multiple layers of user accounts which, at first glance, can be quite confusing to a new user. Without signing up you can upload a single file of 200MB, and your file can then be downloaded up to 10 times—perfect for just sharing a file with a few friends. When you upload files, you’re offered the chance to set up a free “collector’s” account which gives you further options to store and organize your files. Collector’s accounts accumulate points, which you can convert into a premium account—but no clear explanation of the process is anywhere to be found on the RapidShare site. Purchasing a premium account boosts your storage to 20GB and raises your per-file-cap to 2GB.

Megaupload (Web-Based, Basic: Free, Premium: From $10/Month)

Five Best Online File Sharing Services
Megaupload, like other popular fire-and-forget file sharing tools, has three tiers of service. You can share files with no sign up at all—they’ll be limited to 500MB in size, have a 45 second splash page when downloaded, and be given lower priority in the server queue. Signing up for a free account boosts your priority in the queue, raises your maximum file size limit to 2GB, and gives you 200GB of online storage—not bad for a free account. Premium accounts give you unlimited storage, unlimited file size, remove the wait time for downloading, and enable a host of features like batch downloading, password protection for files, and support for FTP and direct HTTP linking.


Now that you’ve had a chance to look over the top contenders, it’s time to cast your vote in the poll below:

Which Online File Sharing Service Is Best?survey

Have a favorite file sharing service that wasn’t highlighted here? Know a trick or two to share about a service we did highlight? Let’s hear about it in the comments. Have a great idea for the next Hive Five? Shoot us an email at tips@lifehacker.com with “Hive Five” in the subject line and we’ll see if we can give it the lime light it deserves.

AVG Rescue CD Cleans Your Infected Windows PC [Downloads]

By The How-To Geek, LifehackerMarch 26, 2010 at 04:00PM

AVG Rescue CD Cleans Your Infected Windows PCThere’s any number of great antivirus tools that help protect your PC from viruses, but what about when you encounter an already-infected PC? Your best bet is a boot CD, and the free AVG Rescue CD cleans viruses easily.

The AVG Rescue CD comes in two flavors: an ISO image that can be easily burned to an optical disc, or a compressed version that can be installed to a bootable flash drive. Once you’ve done so, you can simply boot from the drive of choice directly to the AVG menu, where you can scan for viruses, edit files, test your drive, or even edit the registry. Since the bootable CD is based on a version of Linux, you can also access a number of common Linux tools to make changes to your system and hopefully make it bootable again.

The AVG Rescue CD is a free download for anybody, cleans viruses from Windows or even Linux PCs, and is a great addition to your PC repair toolkit. If you need some help setting up the bootable USB flash version, check out the Guiding Tech tutorial for the full walk-through.

McAfee Stinger Removes Hard-to-Tackle Malware and Pesky Fake-Alert Programs [Downloads]

By Erica Ho, LifehackerMarch 26, 2010 at 03:30PM

McAfee Stinger Removes Hard-to-Tackle Malware and Pesky Fake-Alert ProgramsWindows only: McAfee Stinger banishes malware from your Windows PC, including those hard-to-get fake alert programs and their variants. The last thing anyone needs is malware masquerading as helpful.

Fake alert programs are always nasty little buggers to remove. We recently examined how to remove XP AntiSpyware, one such piece of malware, by going into the Windows registry and using Malwarebytes Anti-Malware. While it doesn’t appear to support that particular piece of malware, McAfee’s Stinger is another free alternative that aims to do the job for several other fake security malware a bit more easily.

McAfee Stinger Removes Hard-to-Tackle Malware and Pesky Fake-Alert ProgramsThe program is pretty straightforward, and comes with a list of malware that it can remove without too much effort. It sports basic options to tweak sensitivity, including what and where to scan. Windows XP and Vista users should note that they might have to disable System Restore to use it.

McAfee Stinger is available as a free download for Windows only.

Clean XP Antivirus and other fake alert infections with McAfee Stinger

By Lee Mathews, Download SquadMarch 26, 2010 at 12:02PM

Filed under: ,

Malware infections are the most common problems I see on my workbench. While there are plenty of different kinds, fake alerts and rogue antivirus programs seem to be the most widespread. They end up on my customers’ systems with many different names — Antivirus XP, Personal Antivirus, Spyware Protect, XP Antivirus — and they’re all major annoyances.

If you’ve fallen victim to one of these nasty bits of malware, a big repair bill doesn’t have to be in your future. There are plenty of great, free, programs you can download to remove fake alert infections. A good one to start with is McAfee Stinger, which they’ve updated to clean this kind of malware.

Stinger is a free download and doesn’t require you to install anything. Save stinger.exe to your desktop, double-click the icon to launch the program, and run a scan. Once it’s done, remove any files it detects and reboot your system. That’s it! Stinger currently detects and removes more than 1,300 types of malware (including most of the common ones I remove at my day job).

It’s a good idea to double-check with another program when you try to clean up an infection like XP Antivirus (or its hundreds of variants). I highly recommend using Malwarebytes — another free program — to make sure the malware has been removed.

Clean XP Antivirus and other fake alert infections with McAfee Stinger originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 11:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ZeuApp Downloads 82 Awesome Open Source Apps [Downloads]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerMarch 26, 2010 at 11:30AM

ZeuApp Downloads 82 Awesome Open Source AppsWindows: If you’re setting up a new system or helping a friend to see how much great free and open source software exists, ZeuAPP is a portable installation tool for nearly a hundred applications.

ZeuAPP is essentially an installation dashboard for 82 applications. You can navigate to application types like CD Burners, P2P apps, Office apps, and more. Under each tab are applications for that category with a “Download” and “Visit Website” button which allow you to download the application and automatically launch the installer or visit the web site for more info.

ZeuAPP is freeware, portable, and Windows only. Looking for something that’ll also quickly grab and install your favorite non-open source apps? Check out previously mentioned Ninite.

Start A Garden With The Help Of The Internet

By Tim Lenahan, MakeUseOfMarch 25, 2010 at 05:31PM

how to plan a gardenWhen spring is upon us, the time has come to make our way back to the backyards.  Most of us have been cooped up in the cold and are ready for some fresh air and a project to keep us busy.  Why not start that garden you’ve been meaning to get to?  With the help of the Internet you can have that green thumb you’ve always wanted.

There are several types of places on the Internet that can help you in your gardening pursuits such as online garden planners, social networks of like-minded gardening types, informational sites, and more!  Let me share some sites and tools that should help.

Garden Puzzle – Create Your Design In 5 Minutes

Mentioned in the MakeUseOf Directory, Garden Puzzle is an online tool that makes designing your garden simple.  In 4 easy steps you’ll have a design that will help you figure out how to start a garden.  Just upload a photo of your garden area, indicate what kind of climate and soil conditions you are dealing with, choose plants you want to add (they also suggest some for you), and create visuals for each season you deal with.

how to start a garden

Garden Planner

Unlike Garden Puzzle, Garden Planner gives a blueprint-type aerial view giving you a good view of the layout.  In fact, it is very similar to a blueprint home design program.  There are many plants and objects to choose from and you can even even download it as a program to your Windows desktop (the desktop version is a 15 day trial).

how to start a garden

iBotanika – Discover, Connect & Share Your Life In Green

iBotanika is a site for anyone from the beginner gardener to the profession botanist.  It is a place to catalog your gardening progress, find needed information and connect with other plant enthusiasts.  Unlike some of the larger social networking sites, iBotanika is a focused community that is specific to plant growers.  You can upload pictures of yourself and your plants, indicate the location of your plants and get your own greenhouse (virtual).

how to start a garden

MyPlantID

My wife and I just bought a house and this spring will be the first time we will be working on the yard and the gardens.  I can see MyPlantID being useful as we seek to find out what plants are already planted.  This site offers a user generated database which helps in the identification of plants.  You can either search for your plant on the site or submit a photo of your plant for other users to help in the identification.

how to plan a garden

Here are a few more sites that can help you with your gardening needs:

And even more from the blogosphere:

See, the Internet can be useful for the every day things such as gardening!  You can find tools, sites and even blogs that help you with every part of the gardening process from plant identification, to gardening social networks and even blogs to follow and gain advice from.

Since the Internet is so large, I am sure there are more tools, sites and blogs that other people find useful in their gardening pursuits.  If you have a site, tool or blog that you often consult when gardening, please do share them with us.

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WhiteyBoard: An Instant Whiteboard For Your Instant Office

By John Biggs, TechCrunchMarch 25, 2010 at 05:00PM

While I’m not sure what I think about the name, I do like WhiteyBoard’s game. WhiteyBoard is an “instant” whiteboard made of plastic that weighs less than two pounds and slaps right up on your wall without screws. Instead of those standard, crazily heavy and expensive whiteboards you’re used to, you simply buy a 18-inch, 3-foot, or 6-foot WhiteyBoard, slap it up, and start brainstorming.