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Guide to Flickr Tools

The Internet is replete with sites and services offering to let you organize, manage, and share your digital photographs and Yahoo’s Flickr remains anundisputed leader in the field. Partly, that’s because Flicker offers easy-to-use features and boasts and enormous, active, and tremendously engaged user community. But it’s also because Flickr hashad the foresight to let third-party developers build their own add-ons and supplementary services using Flickr’s data and images. Geeks, programmers, and photo buffs have embraced Flickr’s open APIsenthusiastically, so even if Flickr doesn’t offer a feature you want—or its features aren’t up to your task—odds are good a third-party solution already exists to solve the problem foryou. So, if you’re using Flickr and wondering how you can get more out of it, here’s a quick introduction to some tools and services—from the cool to the geeky—which can expand yourFlickr universe:   Slickr Slickr One of the best things about Flickr is its user community, who have uploaded untold millions of photos tothe site for the whole world to explore and comment upon. But to truly admire those images, you kinda want to set up a cool high-res slide show, don’t you? The problem, of course, is that Flickr’sown slide show is weak and doesn’t let you take even high-res images full screen—and what if you’re offline? If you’re running Windows 2000/XP, consider Gabriel Handford’s Slickr, a combination Flickr-downloader and full-screen slideshow application. Just point Slickr at a group of photos you want to download (say, images you’vemarked as your favorites) and Slickr will pull down the high-resolution versions of the photos. Slickr’s screen saver/full-screen slideshow can display images by tags, users, groups, or just use theimages you have stored locally; it uses OpenGL graphics to zoom and fade between images in a way which is really, well, slick. (Slickr is Windows-only: if you’re using a Mac orLinux—or just want to download Flickr images for an existing screensaver or slideshow application—maybe check out Magnus von Koeller’s Java-based FlickrFaves image downloader.) Before using any utility which can download images from Flickr, check the licenses on the images you want todownload—some authors are fine with you downloading the photo for your own use, but others may not be. Website FlickrStormFlickrStormSpeaking of the millions of great images available via Flickr…how do you find them? Flickr has a searchfeature which wins points for being straightforward, but it’s very literal and offers only a few ways to constrain a search—your own photos, groups, and locations being the most useful. Not tofear: zoo-m.com’s FlickrStorm offers a not only a literal search through Flickr’s enormous image database, but also looks for more than whatyou enter, making it easier to find images that are related to (and perhaps more relevant!) than that strict search. FlickrStorm lets you quickly refine your search with terms related to your initialsearch, constrain your search to photos available by particular license type, and (of course) lets you jump to any of the found images on the Flickr site—but wait, there’s more! FlickrStormkeeps track of your image viewing history so you can go back to images you previously viewed, and enables you to drop photos in a tray so you can download selected images; you can also link back toyour tray in the future to see or download your images. FlickrStorm is a great example of offering great functionality without adding great complication. Website Tabblo Tabblo One of the great things about Flickr is that it presents every member’s photos the same way, implicitly putting themost amateur snapper on the same level as the professionals. And, yep, one of the bad things about Flickr is that it presents every member’s photos the same way! Users can’t dress up theappearance of their sets to commemorate a special event, play off a theme, or make their images stand out from the crowd. Enter Tabblo, a site which can pullphotos from your Flickr photo sets and dress them up in a variety of customizable templates. Tabblo can import images directly from Flickr (saving you the trouble of uploading them to yet anotherphoto site) and gives your photos a permanent URL and privacy protection. Tabblo makes its money by offering its users printed posters, postcards, and (soon) books: printed material is, of course,something you have to pay for, but it’s free to create as many online tabblos as you like. Website SmartSetr SmartSetrIf youmanage any volume of photos via Flickr, you’ve probably tapped into its set-making capabilities, enabling you to create groups of related photographs. Then, maybe ten minutes later, you probablynoticed how annoying Flickr’s manual process of maintaining and adding photos can get. Eric Appel’s SmartSetr offers the ability to create and setsorganized around criteria you enter, and—even better—update those sets for you automatically. You just enter the tags, dates, descriptive text, privacy level, or even the"interestingness" of the photos you want grouped in a set, and SmartSetr does the rest, automatically creating Flickr sets based on your criteria. When you add new photos matching yourSmartSetr criteria, those photos are automatically added to your sets. Eric has committed to updating all SmartSetr sets at least once per day—but you can trigger a refresh manually—andSmartSetr has added the capability to limit the number of photos in a SmartSet can contain, making it simple to create sets of your Top 10 most interesting photos, or the 25 most recent photos ofyour cat. Although you can change the primary photo and reorder SmartSets using Flickr, it’s important to remember that SmartSets should be managed by SmartSetr, or confusion may ensue. Website Rich Text Rich TextOne of the most common complaints I hear about Flickr is "why can’t I use formatting in my text?" Well,Flickr does enable users to include formatting in their text…it just requires users to do all the markup themselves. Fortunately, if you run Firefox (or another Mozilla browser like Flock), you can get rich text editing tools for Flickr using Jason Rhyley‘s Rich Edit script in conjunction with the GreaseMonkey Firefox extension. Install Rich Edit and you can format your Flickr text with links, bold, italics, and quotes to your heart’s content withoutworrying about markup. (Sorry, IE users, you don’t get to play.) (Extra tip: If you’re already into both Flickr and GreaseMonkey, also check out "Steeev’s" Flickr Multi Group Sender which lets you very quickly put images into multiple Flickr groups, bypassing Flickr’s own oh-so-slow group adding feature.)

Power up your tech game this summer with Dell’s top deals: Upgrade for a bargain
Dell Techfest and best tech on sale featured.

One of the best times to upgrade your tech stack, be it your desktop, a new laptop, or some high-resolution monitors, is when great deals are to be had. Well, I'm here to share that thanks to Dell's top deals, you can power up your tech game and have most of the summer to make it happen. Maybe you're happy with your current system or setup. That's excellent, but you're likely considering upgrading somewhere, and that's precisely what these deals are all about. Dell has a smorgasbord of deals on laptops, desktops, gaming desktops, monitors, accessories, and so much more. We'll call out a few of our favorite deals below, but for now, know that you should be shopping this sale if you're interested in anything tech-related.

 
What summer tech should you buy in Dell's top deals?

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I love the MacBook Pro, but this Windows laptop came surprisingly close
Apple MacBook Pro 16 downward view showing keyboard and speaker.

There are some great machines in the 15-inch laptop category, which has recently been stretched to include the more common 16-inch laptop. The best among them is the Apple MacBook Pro 16, which offers fast performance for tasks like video editing and the longest battery life.

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 is aimed not only at other 16-inch Windows laptops but also at the MacBook Pro 16. It offers many of the same benefits but at a lower price. Can it take a place at the top?
Specs and configurations

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How to set an ‘Out of Office’ message in Microsoft Teams
Person using Windows 11 laptop on their lap by the window.

Many people use Microsoft Teams regularly to communicate with colleagues both inside of the office and remotely. It is considered one of the most efficient ways to ensure you can stay in contact with the people on your team, but what if you need to let people know you’re not readily available? Microsoft Teams has a method for you to set up an "Out of Office" status for your profile to let staff members know when you’ll be gone for the afternoon, for several days on vacation, or for an extended period.
Where do I go to set up my ‘Out of Office’ status for Teams?
It is important to note that your Microsoft Teams and Outlook calendars are synced. This includes your out-of-office status and automatic replies. So, whatever you set up in Microsoft Teams will reflect in Outlook. Similarly, you can set up your out-of-office status in Outlook, and it will be reflected in Teams; however, the former has a more straightforward instruction.

First, you can click on your profile icon in Teams and go directly to Schedule an out of office, as a shortcut. This will take you to the settings area where you can proceed. You can also click the three-dot icon next to your profile icon, then go to Settings > General, then scroll down to the bottom of the page. There, you'll find out-of-office settings and click Schedule.

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