Name one thing



Probably my computer, doing everything on a phone would slow me down serious.
 
The list is so long.
Those I remember now:

NetBeans IDE (everything: PHP to Java, Android, XHtml and Javascript)
Axure RP (wireframes and mockups)
FlashDevelop (my ActionScript tool)
Sun VirtualBox (vitualization)
FusionDesk Pro (all my projects managed in this app)
ActionMachine (GTD)
MarketSamurai (SEM)
ColorImpact (color schemes creator)
Putty (SSH-SFTP)
Keepass (password manager)
Firebug
iMacros
 
all you guys naming 'physical' apps, that's some dangerous stuff.
hdd crash, notebook stolen in real life [under force?] and you lose EVERYTHING
my setup is quite unique. desktop pcs in the office, but personally i only have a notebook. this notebook's hdd is perpetually EMPTY, as everything goes from boot OS -> RDP into actual OS in 3 countries -> all data that needs to be persistent is saved to USB.

yeah, this means i can't exactly play video games. i also need to buy new usb storage every now and then because they do wear out from constant read/writes. but it's fkn amazing knowing your data and drives are so safe, even if someone grabbed my notebook from a restaurant table in real life, 30 minutes later they'd have a notebook with Empty harddrive while all my work is uninterrupted and intact [as it happens on dedicated servers in closeby nations via RDP]

i can't imagine having a computer with physical, hard-coded stuff being persistent on it all the time.
 
all you guys naming 'physical' apps, that's some dangerous stuff.
hdd crash, notebook stolen in real life [under force?] and you lose EVERYTHING
my setup is quite unique. desktop pcs in the office, but personally i only have a notebook. this notebook's hdd is perpetually EMPTY, as everything goes from boot OS -> RDP into actual OS in 3 countries -> all data that needs to be persistent is saved to USB.

yeah, this means i can't exactly play video games. i also need to buy new usb storage every now and then because they do wear out from constant read/writes. but it's fkn amazing knowing your data and drives are so safe, even if someone grabbed my notebook from a restaurant table in real life, 30 minutes later they'd have a notebook with Empty harddrive while all my work is uninterrupted and intact [as it happens on dedicated servers in closeby nations via RDP]

i can't imagine having a computer with physical, hard-coded stuff being persistent on it all the time.

Wickedfire thanks you for your insightful contribution.
 
I feel like I just discovered the internet all over again. God I love these threads.

Whats the difference between Dropbox and Evernote? And why would you need both?
 
I feel like I just discovered the internet all over again. God I love these threads.

Whats the difference between Dropbox and Evernote? And why would you need both?

Dropbox is file sync between multiple computers. Evernote is a way to assemble ideas and snippets in an organizable and search-able fashion.

They both work in the cloud so they're very efficient for guys on the go like myself.

BTW: Evernote + Screengrab FF Plugin = Total WIN
 
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