Delete Your Account Shows You How to Remove or Recover Online Identities [Online Identity]
In: Coding
4
Feb
2010
Ever want to delete a rusty online account but don’t want to navigate a maze of unfamiliar preferences to do so? If you’re drowning in social networking, blogging, and other sites, web site Delete Your Account shows you how to extricate yourself painlessly.
Signing up for “just one more” social networking site always seems like a good idea at the time, but pretty soon it becomes yet another thing sapping our energy and attention. Delete Your Account helps you dig yourself out from under the time suck and get your life back.
When you’re ready to cut the cord from sites like Digg, MySpace, FriendFeed, Hotmail, or a menagerie of other sites, just jump over to Delete Your Account and look for it in the alphabetical list. You’ll get a quick link that takes you right where you need to go on individual sites to nuke your account. You’ll even get a couple of handy pointers for each site to make sure you get it right.
Delete Your Account is a huge time-saver when you want to un-register yourself from one or several web sites but don’t want to waste time poking around each one to figure out where to delist yourself. If you get wistful and start missing sites where you were connected, hit up Delete Your Account for how to resurrect your registration (if it’s possible—because sometimes it won’t be).
Have you been considering ditching some of your online identities? Are you ready to make the leap, and does knowing you might be able to get your account back make it easier to dump it? Talk about it in the comments.


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2 Responses to Delete Your Account Shows You How to Remove or Recover Online Identities [Online Identity]
theycallmewendy
March 19th, 2010 at 8:21 am
Unfortunately, if you're trying to record while on a stage, you're dooming yourself to some ghastly echoes and flat tones unless you have professional (and expensive) equipment. If you're really looking for "low cost" as in "listen later to find out what I did wrong," any $30 microphone hooked up to a cheap tape player/recorder should do the trick. If you want something good enough to send in as a demo tape, you're better off going to a recording studio (which can be $50-$200 for a vocal recording, if you don't expect them do to a lot of electronic mixing), or you can get your own microphone and software and do it on your home computer. This is cheaper in the long run if you're doing more than one recording, but will probably cost you about the same as using a recording studio.
Check your phone book – no matter how rural an area you're in, there is probably at least one recording studio in any town of 50,000+.
Animal
March 22nd, 2010 at 2:18 am
I have been looking for that too!!!!!! I think they stopped making the program, but im sure of you did some searching on youtube and google you would find a free play game of it somewhere, but probably not a download. if you find it, could you please message me?