Five Car Apps That Can Save You Bucks

With $3-plus gas prices as the new normal, traffic showing no signs of slowing while parking shortages are on the rise, driving can be as expensive and stressful as ever. Fortunately a number of handy car apps can save you time, money and maintenance. And they’re all free. Here are the top five: 

UnknownGasBuddy: True to its name, GasBuddy searches out the cheapest gas stations in your vicinity based on your location or by plugging in city/zip/postal code. This app relies on its user community to chime in on discrepancies and station details, all in the spirit of banding together to combat high gas prices. As with airline miles and credit cards, you can earn points and awards by participating (read: win free gas). The app cannot always distinguish between cash and credit prices, however, as many gas stations charge additional fees if you use a credit card. 

MetroMile: MetroMile monitors your driving stats in order to make better road decisions. You can figure out the best times for the fastest commutes and plan gas-efficient routes, check engine status, and receive reminders of where you parked. For this app to work, however, you’ll have to order a Metronome, a gizmo that plugs into your car’s diagnostic port under the dashboard (available in California, Oregon, and Washington to drivers of post-1996 vehicles, free of charge). Some reviews claim the stats are unreliable, so this app may be a work in progress. On its site, MetroMile sells insurance based on the number of miles driven, aimed at drivers who log in less than 10,000 miles a year. The app is available only on iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.

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New Media Expo 2013: Four Quotes to Remember

Aside

NMXNow in its seventh year, the annual New Media Expo (formerly Blogworld  & New Media Expo) convened in Las Vegas last week for another of round of socializing on social media, where clever takeaways and pithy bullet points were posted, tweeted, liked and Google+’d at rapid-fire. For those not in attendance, here are four quotes to remember, lightly paraphrased:

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#AskObama: History-making or ho-hum?

President Obama types his first tweet on Wednesday, July 6 as Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey looks on.                        Photo: Dana Ritter/CBS News

President Obama, whom admirers tout as our first social media president — much like Bill Clinton was once touted as our first rock n’ roll president — decided this week that a Town Hall meeting could be micro-blogged.

Put another way, Obama read pithy questions off a screen in front of a press gaggle rather than take lengthy questions from a press gaggle. At least that’s how it looked via livestream.

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