• Computing
  • Mobile
  • Lifestyle
  • PC Guides
  • Reviews
  • Tech Explained
    • Windows
    • Linux
    • Mac
    • ChromeOS
    • Android
    • iOS
    • Gadgets
    • Productivity
    • Smart Home
    • Social Media
    • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Tech Explained
  • News

More from us

  • Reviews
  • Cheatsheets
  • Buying Guides
  • Deals
  • Newsletter

Pushbullet: Push Links and Files From Chrome or Firefox to Your Android Device

Sending content from desktop to Android is not as easy as it seems. An extension called Pushbullet for Google Chrome and Firefox makes this task easier.

By Kim Barloso – Mar 23, 2014

Internet Censorship: How Countries Block Their Citizens from Entering Websites

Some countries carry out Internet censorship and block their citizens from entering websites. How do they do this? Here’s the answer.

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Mar 21, 2014

What You Need to Know About Future Web Standards (That are Making the Internet Better)

The Internet started 40 years ago and many things have changed since then. Let’s take a look at the future web standards and how they improve the Internet.

By Manish Singh – Mar 19, 2014

Prevent Blank Tabs from Opening When Dowloading Files in Firefox

How to Set Up and Use Mozilla’s Firefox Accounts

Firefox Sync is getting better in the new nightly version of Firefox. If you have not setup your Firefox account, here is how you can do so.

By Alan Buckingham – Mar 18, 2014

Using the Google Drive Form Feature as an Organizational Tool

Google Drive has a hidden function with Forms, and while it creates great surveys and quizzes, it can also be used as a useful organizational tool.

By Laura Tucker – Mar 17, 2014

7 YouTube Channels Where You Can Find Computer Help

If you find video content more gripping, there is a gamut of YouTube channels that are waiting to help you solve your technology woes. Here are 7 of them.

By Manish Singh – Mar 14, 2014

Is the Era of Privacy Over?

The governments have been using various measures to get hold of our information. So, have we left the era of privacy behind us?

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Mar 7, 2014

Do Sentences Make Better Passwords?

One proposition that security experts made recently was to use short sentences as passwords, rather than a complicated string of characters. Let’s see if this is a more secure method.

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Feb 28, 2014

5 Great Sites That Help You Build Creative CVs

Your resume is an important part of your professional life and it doesn’t have to be boring. Here are 5 of the best sites to build a nice and creative CV.

By Diogo Costa – Feb 22, 2014

How Does ICANN’s Relationship with the US Affect You?

You’ve probably heard on the news something about ICANN and its “cozy relationship with the United States.” So how does that affect both you and me?

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Feb 17, 2014

How to Check Your Network Connection With Chrome Connectivity Diagnostics

If you need a simple and easy-to-use tool to check your network connection, Chrome Connectivity Diagnostics by Google is the best tool you can find.

By Shujaa Imran – Feb 15, 2014

How To Play Flappy Bird on Any Phone, Tablet or Computer

Flappy Bird is no longer around in the App store, but if you just want your old game back, there’s also a HTML5-based clone edition of Flappy Bird.

By Shujaa Imran – Feb 13, 2014

How to Fix Chrome’s Extension Security Problems

Some of the extensions in Chrome store are using hidden adware to make money off of you. Here are some fixes for you to tackle the extension security problems.

By Alan Buckingham – Feb 11, 2014

Clef: Log In to WordPress Without Any Password

Tired of typing your username and password everytime you want to login to a site? Clef is a password replacement app that allows you to login without password.

By Damien Oh – Feb 4, 2014

Skrill, a Trustworthy PayPal Alternative

Paypal may be the biggest online payment platform, it is definitely not the best. Skrill is a good Paypal alternative that is available in 200 countries.

By Diogo Costa – Jan 31, 2014

Light – A Lightweight and Speedy Firefox Alternative

Light is a lightweight browser built with speed in mind and is ideal for old machines. It is a Firefox alternative with several non-essential features removed.

By Diogo Costa – Jan 23, 2014

Still Need a 2014 Calendar? Make One Using Pically

Are you still looking for the perfect 2014 calendar. Pically is a free program that you can grab and use to create beautiful calendars using your own photos.

By Alan Buckingham – Jan 21, 2014

Understanding the Various Copyright Licenses

Copyright licenses are complicated. If you want to distribute your work, you will want to find out more about copyright licenses and which one you should use.

By Diogo Costa – Jan 16, 2014

How to Import your Instapaper Articles into Pocket

If you are planning to import Instapaper articles to Pocket, the procedure to is extremely easy and shouldn’t take more than a few minutes. Here’s how.

By Mahesh Makvana – Jan 6, 2014

6 Alternative Uses of WordPress, Other Than Blogging

You can be sure of one thing, Wordpress: it’s not just for blogs anymore. Here are 6 alternative uses of Wordpress that aren’t blogging.

By Shujaa Imran – Jan 3, 2014

Pagination

<1…979899100>

Trending

Intricate network of tree roots and moss on a forest hillside, showcasing nature's resilience.

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots

Jun 10, 2026

Close-up of glowing jellyfish swimming gracefully in deep green ocean waters.

A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.

Jun 10, 2026

Octopuses possess roughly 500 million neurons distributed across their body, with two-thirds located in their arms rather than their central brain, meaning each arm can taste, problem-solve, and react to stimuli independently of whatever the octopus is otherwise paying attention to.

Jun 10, 2026

Explore the historic Roman bridge in lush Salamanca, Spain captured beautifully in daylight.

The Roman aqueduct at Segovia, built around the first century AD without mortar, still carried water into the 1970s, its 167 granite arches held together by nothing but the precise weight distribution of stones cut to fit each other within fractions of a millimeter.

Jun 10, 2026

In 1843, Ada Lovelace described a brass-and-punched-card engine that could act on symbols as well as numbers, even composing music if harmony could be reduced to rules, inside seven translator’s notes three times longer than the paper itself

Jun 10, 2026

Bright modern laboratory with computers and technical equipment for research and analysis.

ARPANET sent its first message on 29 October 1969 from a lab at UCLA to a machine at Stanford, and the message was supposed to read ‘LOGIN’ — but the system crashed after the L and the O, meaning the first word ever transmitted over the network that became the internet was, by accident, ‘LO’.

Jun 9, 2026

More Posts >

Affiliate Disclosure: Make Tech Easier may earn commission on products purchased through our links, which supports the work we do for our readers.

Uncomplicating the complicated, making life easier

Make Tech Easier provides tech tutorials, reviews, tips and tricks to help you navigate the complicated world of technology. We aim to uncomplicate the complicated, making your life easier.

  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • RSS Feed Terms

© 2026 Uqnic Network Pte Ltd.
All rights reserved.