Everyone loves to get something for nothing. Nowhere is that concept
more appealing than on the Web.
At
PC World, we've spent years scouring the Web
in search of the best free stuff the Internet has to offer. But lately, the
job's been a little tougher. New sites distributing freebies aren't cropping up
as rapidly as they once did, and old ones are dropping out at a breakneck pace
(such as the free ISP service Freei.net, or General Magic's MyTalk voice-mail
service). Some stuff that once was free is now offered only for a fee (like
ThinkFree, a formerly free software suite that's similar to Microsoft Office).
It's a changing Web out there, and it's hard to make a buck when you're giving
away the goods for free (see "Free
Stuff's Hidden Hitches").
For this sixth installment of our annual Free Stuff guide, we sifted
through a lot of dreck to uncover our list of favorites. Forget about those
worthless sites touting free postage and credit reports; we focused on sites
offering something really useful, such as free Internet access, top-notch
office suite software, and cheat codes for computer games to help you get
higher scores--yeah, we know what's really important.
We've broken the sites into three categories: work, home, and play.
You'll find stuff to save you money and time at home, to help you run your
business or small office, and to help you kick back and enjoy your leisure
time. We also rounded up some quick hits of the best sites for free file
downloads, online privacy services, organizing tools, reference works, and
music. As long as they're giving it away, why not take it?
Matt Lake is a freelance writer living in Pennsylvania. When not
writing for
PC World he operates
RegSelect, a shopping-comparison
site for people looking to register Net domains.Illustrations by Glenn MitsuiFree Stuff@WorkFax Facts
JConnect Free
Many sites provide free phone numbers for incoming fax and voice messages, but
J2 has been doing it the longest--for a fee--under its former name, JFax. Now
the JConnect Free service does the same at no cost and asks for very little
personal information in return: name, e-mail address, age, gender, and zip
code. You'll get a unique phone number that forwards messages, in the form of
well-compressed audio and image files, to your e-mail in-box. If you overuse
the service, however, J2 may ask you to limit your usage, and the company may
cancel the account if you don't--a prudent policy, and one that should ensure
JConnect doesn't go the way of other failed free services (although JConnect
doesn't define what it considers "overuse").
Freeservers helps you analyze the traffic to your Web site,
and presents the information in easy-to-read reports.
Site to Be Seen
Freeservers This
domain-registration site will give you 20MB of Web site space free, as well as
a host of terrific features (you don't actually need a domain to have a site
hosted here). For instance, you can import or upload sites wholesale via FTP or
a Web-based tool, or build new pages using easy-to-follow templates.
Freeservers also processes e-mail sent to your domain (if you have one), either
by forwarding it to the account you specify or by storing it in a Web-based
mailbox at the Freeservers site. Its tools for analyzing your site's traffic
are sterling: You can view daily or weekly breakdowns of the pages that surfers
visit, the browsers they use for surfing, and the referral pages that send them
to your site. Not bad, in exchange for letting the service display just one ad
banner.
I Spy
Company
Sleuth Whether you want to keep tabs on your competition or you
simply want the lowdown on companies you invest in, Company Sleuth can help you
keep track of what's going on. You sign up by entering the ticker symbols for
the companies you want to watch, and the site will collect information on
them--culling data from press releases, news sites, job listings, investor
forums, and SEC documents, as well as Net domain and trademark registries. It
can serve up the info in a neatly compiled page or e-mail a regular digest of
what's new with a particular company. Even if the report is just a quote from
someone bad-mouthing the firm in Yahoo's investor forums, you'll still wanna
know about it.
Web Cop
NetWhistle How reliable is the
company you pay to host your domain's Web site and e-mail? NetWhistle's
PersonalWhistle will tell you. This free monitoring service pings your Web site
at fixed intervals to see if it's up. It can also check e-mail boxes at the
same intervals. If there's a problem, the service logs it and notifies you via
e-mail (or by pager, if your paging company has an e-mail gateway); it also
delivers a weekly report card. The service will monitor up to five URLs or
e-mail boxes at specific intervals; to either monitor more addresses or monitor
at more-frequent intervals, you'll have to pay.
Software602 offers Microsoft Office-compatible word processing
and spreadsheet programs without ads.
Good-bye to Office
Software602 Want to break free
of your Microsoft cage? Software602's free word processor and spreadsheet
program, 602Pro PC Suite 2000, is comparable to Office and compatible with it
as well--the suite handles Word 2000 documents with several layers of tracked
and highlighted changes in them and Excel documents laden with statistical
formulas. You may never have to call on Microsoft again. Software602 also
throws in a decent photo-editing tool that supports over 15 graphics formats.
The 14.5MB program has no ads and no subscription fee. The company hopes to
make money by selling you feature upgrades such as a thesaurus, as well as LAN
and fax software. But its free offering is excellent and stands alone.
City of Bytes
AppCity For
companies looking to dive into the Web-based software phenomenon and throw away
their shrink-wrapped boxes, AppCity is a great place to try out some online
programs. Download its 9.09MB AppPlayer, and you'll be able to run programs
from AppCity's site immediately. The site offers tools for expense and time
tracking, sales force automation, and project management, as well as others to
help you track employees and memberships. Better yet, the site's AppZapper lets
you easily create a custom application using drag-and-drop features. Certainly,
there are more-sophisticated programs available--but not ones that are free,
customizable, and Web-based so that you can access them from any PC.
Intranets simplifies company communication by letting
employees schedule meetings and share files.
Internal Affairs
Intranets.com Corporate
intranets are great for organizing internal communications and helping to keep
your workforce well informed and up-to-date on company news. Intranets.com
provides an intranet for free--complete with a calendar for scheduling group
and personal appointments, and a file-sharing capability that tells you who was
the last person to work on a document. After you set up an administrator's
account for your password-protected site, you can add participants at will.
Employees can post messages to your intranet's home page, participate in
discussion groups in the threaded messaging forums, vote simultaneously on
projects and ideas in the polling section, and even share internal
instant-messaging services.
Free Stuff@HomeSurfer Sam
SurfSaver
2.2 Your browser has a File/Save option, but it's not ideal for
trying to save online content to your hard drive to read offline--formats
disappear, and text gets jumbled. That's where AskSam's SurfSaver 2.2 comes in.
This 5.5MB download lets you save entire Web pages--including any linked pages
connected to the page you're saving--in a single step. It retains the page
formatting even when frames are involved so that you see the data exactly as it
appeared online. It also creates a searchable offline archive of all the Web
pages that you save, and lets you organize these pages by dragging them into
separate subject folders. You can even annotate the saved pages with comments
to highlight information that you want to stand out.
On Call
Net2Phone
In the past year, countless freewheeling Net companies have turned coat and
started charging for their one-time gratis services. Net2Phone, however, has
gone the opposite route, turning its fee-based service into a free one. After
installing the company's 860KB download, you can make free PC-to-phone and
PC-to-PC domestic calls to anywhere in the United States. For PC-to-PC calls,
the recipient must first download the Net2Phone program. Net2Phone also lets
you send free voice-mail messages to anyone in the world via e-mail. The
recipient receives brief instructions about downloading the software to hear
your message. In addition, the site offers a free answering service in the
United States and Canada that lets you hear incoming phone messages through
your PC's speakers, and while you're still online. However, the feature uses
your existing telephone line and your phone company's "forward on busy"
answering service, so you'll have to pay your phone company for that extra
service.
Copernic's shopping tool culls prices and other product data
to help you comparison-shop online.
Personal Shopper
Copernic
Shopper Want to save money when you shop? Copernic adapts its
well-established search engine to its new program, Copernic Shopper (a 2.87MB
download), to poll shopping-comparison sites in 13 categories. Enter the name
of a product you want to buy, and Copernic Shopper searches dozens of different
sources, serves up the best prices from various e-vendors, and lists the
shipping costs and product availability. Click one of the results, and you'll
arrive at the corresponding vendor's site where you can order the product
online (Copernic accepts a commission from sites that offer a referral fee, but
the company says this doesn't determine which vendors it includes in its
service). Copernic Shopper also throws in a currency converter as well as a
search-history function to save you from doing search replays, and it updates
itself automatically to keep your results current.
Kill Bugs Dead
PC
Pitstop;
HouseCall;
Security
Check When it comes to virus protection, there is no better
solution than installing a solid scanning program on your system and updating
it regularly. But in the absence of such a program, these companies offer you a
Web-based virus scanning tool for free. PC Pitstop, in addition to its virus
scanner, offers a disk analyzer, an Internet connection monitor, a tool for
analyzing your PC's configuration and making recommendations for better
performance, and a diagnostic tool that tells you if unwanted ActiveX controls
are lurking in your PC. HouseCall, Trend Micro's free online scanner, is easy
to use and effective, and it will not only find viruses but also remove most of
them. Symantec's Security Check finds viruses (but won't eliminate them),
analyzes whether your PC is vulnerable to hacking, and tells you if your
browser is feeding your personal information to Web sites.
Hands-Off Browsing
HandsFree
Browser The problem with browsing the Net is the carpal
contorting that clicking on hyperlinks demands. Edumedia's HandsFree Browser (a
2.47MB download) takes care of tedious click-work by using plug-in and
voice-recognition technology (but it works only with Internet Explorer, not
with Netscape). When you run the browser, it automatically checks all the links
and forms on the current Web page, and jumps to a link when you say its
name--just remember to enunciate. You can also fill in Web forms with such
information as your name, address, and phone number using a single command.
Free ISPs
NetZero;
BlueLight;
Freedomlist Free Internet
service providers are an endangered species, but they're great to use as a
backup in case your paid provider goes down. While two other free ISPs keeled
over as we were writing this, NetZero and BlueLight seem to be holding strong.
And they can save you over $200 a year in access fees if you forgo a paid
service altogether. Sure, you pay indirectly for these services by having to
endure large ad frames placed on your screen while you're online. The companies
also record your surfing history to serve you targeted ads, and they limit the
amount of time you can be online (BlueLight locks you out after 25 hours a
month, NetZero begins charging you after 40 hours). What's more, there's no
guarantee these services won't go the way of other free ISPs. But if they do,
you can always search for alternative free ISPs (and access a list comparing
their features) at Freedomlist, which also keeps track of the latest ones to
bite the dust.
Atomica's dictionary tool will help you find definitions for
words appearing in any of your Windows programs.
Reference Guru
Atomica
Ever find yourself without a dictionary when you need the definition of a word
quickly? Atomica for Windows can deliver the meaning of a word appearing in any
Windows program (e-mail, browser, word processor, or whatever). You simply hold
the
Alt key while clicking on a mystery word,
and a definition pops up. The slight 945KB download is a subset of a larger
knowledge bank from a company formerly known as GuruNet. The program draws on
definitive Web sources, dictionaries, and encyclopedias from its server; the
only drawback is that you have to be online to use it.
Free Stuff@PlayThe Game's the Thing
MSN Gaming
Zone;
Heat.net;
GoCheat;
Pogo.com So
you like to play games, do you? Well, of the many sites where you can face off
against a live foe in Quake II or Jedi Knight, two stand out. MSN's Gaming Zone
has 100 free or free-trial games that range from checkers and cards to wilder
offerings like Magic & Mayhem and Monster Truck Madness. Heat.net has 115
online multiplayer games, including Warcraft II and Diablo. You do have to
download game software, so during setup be sure to select only the games you
want. While you're at it, check out GoCheat for workarounds to game rules.
What's that you say? You like to play by the rules? Well, hard-core gamers know
that cheat codes can help them gain unlimited lives, sneak around the interface
the back way, and generally lord it over wimpy weekend gamers. GoCheat offers
codes for PCs and game consoles and catalogs them in easy-to-navigate lists.
For tamer games, Pogo.com offers card and board games, bingo, and casino
games.
@ the Movies
AtomFilms;
The Sync
Got a couple of hours to spare--or just a couple of minutes? Take in a movie
from the comfort of your office chair at AtomFilms or The Sync. Both showcase
excellent shorts in RealVideo and Windows Media formats. AtomFilms boasts the
winner of the 2000 Oscar for best live-action short film (My Mother Dreams the
Satan's Disciples in New York), short works with cameos by Jennifer Aniston and
George Clooney, and a series of stop-motion animation shorts from Aardman
Studios (the team behind the Wallace and Gromit films and Chicken Run). The
Sync's offerings are more self-consciously edgy, though it also provides
full-length, must-see classics such as Nosferatu (1922), The Cabinet of Doctor
Caligari (1919), and Reefer Madness (1936).
The Puzzlers
Yahoo Games:
Crosswords;
PuzzleDepot Okay, so you made
short work of crossword puzzle editor Will Shortz's efforts in the New York
Times during your coffee break. Now where will you turn for your puzzle
challenges? Yahoo Games features daily stumpers that are archived for two
weeks. And no pencil required. Oh, and if you need a helpful clue,
PuzzleDepot's word pattern-matching tool can help you fill in the blanks. For
those lazier days, the site also provides free online crosswords that aren't
that tough to crack.
Art Museum's amazing 3D exhibit of van Gogh's works lets you
"enter" two of his paintings.
Ears to You
Artmuseum.net If the Net had
been around a century ago, van Gogh might have made a fortune on EBay. Vince
died in utter poverty, but you can still enrich yourself with this amazing
virtual tour of his works, which actually lets you "walk into" 3D
representations of two of his paintings. Presented by Intel and the Van Gogh
Museum in Amsterdam, the tour includes a 3D stroll through the museum
accompanied by an audio narrative and a spectacular zoom-in function that lets
you see brushstrokes almost as clearly as if you were a nose-length from the
actual painting. The program is 12MB and is best accessed using a broadband
connection, since your computer has to connect with a server in
Reykjavík, Iceland (don't ask), to produce the art. But even if you
don't have a speedy connection, you can still visit the site's other great
exhibits on Andy Warhol (parental discretion advised), and the Whitney Museum's
fascinating retrospective of twentieth-century art and culture.
Junior Sings the Blues
Junior's Juke
Joint A compendium of all things Delta (Mississippi, that is)
and all things blues, this interesting site, run by a self-described redneck
anthropologist, combs the Deep South to bring the fading culture of southern
juke joints to the masses. Part VH1, part travelogue, and part Martha Stewart,
Junior's Juke Joint attempts to preserve a lively and colorful roadhouse music
tradition that is becoming nearly as rare as A&Ws and Dairy Queens. The
50-something "Junior" travels the American South in his 1983 Chrysler
"bluesmobile" to bring you living history and colorful yarns about the people
and cultures of the region. The site includes short stories, a write-up about
each juke joint that Junior has visited, and tips for pulling off a successful
pig roast (hint: It's best done while under the influence of moonshine). No
sign yet, however, of the promised recipe for barbecued 'coon.
Watson on the Web
Crime
Scene This site should come with an addiction warning because
you're bound to return to it again and again--like a criminal to the scene of
the crime. Satisfying the armchair detective in you, Crime Scene lets you
follow the investigators of Yoknapatawpha County (the fictional setting of
William Faulkner's books) as they troll through the unseemly underbelly of
society to solve the mystery behind grisly murder cases. You can either
participate as an observer for free--which means you can examine evidence such
as crime scene photos, surveillance videos, interrogation transcripts and
tapes, and lab reports--or for $5, you can sign up as a case detective and ask
the investigators questions about niggling details or offer them your own
ingenious theories about the crime. The site notifies you by e-mail when new
evidence is available for viewing. Cases can string along for weeks, but it's
fascinating to watch the evidence unfold.