Folder-to-Drive Alchemy With Visual Subst

No, it won’t really turn your folders gold, but Visual Subst does deserve a medal. It’s little more than a GUI frontend to the Windows prompt’s subst command, but if there’s one thing we like more than commands that save repetitious typing it’s pretty graphical systems to utilize them.
What subst does is create a symbolic link - assigning any folder on your system its own drive letter. Most of us aren’t even close to using up all 26 letters, so why not set up a few of them as ridiculously short routes to get at our commonly used folders?
Visual Subst makes the process ridiculously simple, just choose an available drive letter, browse to your folder, and click the green plus. Just like that, your new virtual drive shows up in My Computer. Now getting at the temp folder is as easy as windows r, t:, enter. Simple. Check the box at the bottom, and your new drives return after a reboot.
For a 110k application, Visual Subst is a no-brainer. You’ve got to have it, we swear!
One of the only features some of us here like about Windows is that you can alt-ctrl-del and look at the open tasks and programs running at any given time.
Memeo’s new Share application is designed to make the process of sending high-resolution photos a little easier, by sending them directly to another users desktop or putting them in an RSS feed they can look at in iPhoto.
Making a point-by-point comparison chart is a pain in the butt. It requires fiddling with spreadsheets, formatting lots of individuals cells and hoping the results are easy to read. Tablefy takes all the mess out of comparing things. Just put in your data and it’ll do the rest. You can even embed pictures and YouTube videos with little fuss.
Pidgin doesn’t officially support Facebook Chat (yet?), but it can be customized with useful add-ons like the new Facebook Chat plug-in. Once installed, the plug-in allows Pidgin to log-in to a Facebook account, pull the buddy-list, and send/receive messages. 
If you love writing, but hate the grunt work of blogging - like inserting relevant links, tags, and images, Zemanta might be for you. It’s available as an add-on for Firefox or Internet Explorer, and a plug-in for Wordpress or Movable Type, and it automatically adds some useful stuff to your blog posts in progress on most of the major blogging platforms. It suggests links and applies them to the relevant words in your post with one click, and it also provides tags and a gallery of Creative-Commons-licensed Flickr photos you can drop in. 
