Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools

The explosion of mobile phones has made them a nearly constant companion for many people. It’s only a natural an ever-present device would become a favorite note taking and ubiquitous capture tool. Today we look at five popular note taking tools.

Photo by Alex Segre.

Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite mobile note taking tools. We rounded up the nominations and now we’re back to highlight the five most popular tools Lifehacker readers use to capture their ideas on the go.

Read over the descriptions below and then cast your vote for your favorite note taking tool in the poll at the bottom.

3banana (Android/iOS, Free)

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools
3banana is a capture tool from Snaptic with a strong emphasis on organization and tagging. You can save text, images, links, lists, and more, all while tagging them with hashtags for easy future searching. Accounts are free and offer unlimited storage for all the text and multimedia clippings you create. 3banana is available for both iOS mobile devices and for Android. The Android application has a few extra notable functions like attaching reminders to important notes and the ability to share your notes via Twitter, Facebook, or email.

Simplenote (Android/iOS/Web, Free)

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools
Unlike many of the other contenders in this week’s Hive Five, Simplenote is not a Swiss Army knife of functionality. You won’t find voice-to-text or any fancy bells and whistles. Simplenote is a powerful and efficient web-based note taking tool with an emphasis on mobile integration through Android and iOS applications. If you don’t want or need multimedia capture but you do want a very powerful and efficient tool for capturing and organizing notes, Simplenote is a great choice. You can check out their web site for more information or for an in-house look at Simplenote’s features check out The Holy Grail of Ubiquitous Plain Text Capture, our guide to Simplenote.

Evernote (Android/iOS/Desktop, Basic: Free/Premium: $5 per month)

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools
Evernote is one of the first tools people think of when they think about digital ubiquitous capture. With Evernote you can easily photograph text, enter text in your phone, speak into your phone, and all of that information is made search friendly. Whether it’s notes you pecked out on your phone’s keyboard or notes you photographed off the legal pad you just scribbled them on, Evernote sucks it all up and turns it into an index you can easily search, sort, and tag. A premium Evernote account increases the size of the multimedia files you upload, adds in collaboration tools, and increases the number of file types Evernote will accept and process.

Email/Text Messages (Variable Cost Based on Phone/Data Plan)

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools

While fancy hashtags and indexed-text might attract some people to various capture tools others just want dead-simple and familiar note taking. Both email and text messaging garnered a fair number of votes in this week’s Hive Five showing that sometimes the simplest tool is the best. Whether using their phone’s email client or sending text messages to themselves many Lifehacker readers use a simple “send a note to my future self” style of note taking to capture their ideas. As long as you have a decent data and/or text messaging plan it’s a free or nearly free solution.

Built-In Notes Tool (Free)

Five Best Mobile Note Taking Tools
Most phones have a built-in note taking tool. For many readers this was as complicated as things needed to be. Open the note taking tool on the phone, take some notes, read (and possibly sync/copy them) at home later. Among the built-in note taking applications that received a nod the iPhone’s note taking tool was one of the most popular. When all you really want is to replace your paper notepad with a digital one, the built-in notes tool is more than powerful enough.

Copied from: http://lifehacker.com/5590027/five-best-mobile-note-taking-tools

A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us

A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us

Believe it or not, you can improve your concentration and slow down your day-to-day life with meditation without ever uttering the word “chakra.” Incense, yoga pants, and annoying dinner conversation are also optional. All you need is your breath.

Photo by ‘tess.

Why meditate, especially if you’re not planning to drop everything you’re doing and Google for the closest mountain retreat? If you’re anything like me, meditation will help you realize just how far, and how fast, your mind can wander from what you’re supposed to be doing at the moment. In an age of multitasking, hyper-scheduling, and instant internet distraction, that alone can be a huge help. Beyond just anecdotes, it’s also been suggested that meditation can actually exercise your brain’s “muscles” to increase focus, and has been shown to lower stress and increase forgiveness among college students who take up the practice.

I am far from a meditation expert‚Äîvery, very far, in fact. I’ve only been practicing meditation in a formal group for a few months, and working on home practice since a year ago. I’ve paid brief visits to my mind to try and calm it down in the past, but it’s only recently that I’ve developed an interest in learning more of the “hows” and “whys” available to the non-monastic person. So I’m not a teacher‚Äîjust an “advanced beginner,” as some would have it, and one who’s hoping to share some advice to nudge a few others into considering the benefits of slowing down, taking time to watch what your mind is doing, and following one’s breath.

One more side note: While much of meditation derives from customs, philosophies, and practices associated with certain faiths (Hinduism and Buddhism, in particular), the practice of what most people know as meditation, or mindfulness, isn’t indelibly tied to religious practice. In other words, meditation is an integral part of many faiths, but those faiths are not an integral part of meditation alone. Yoga exists in a similar sphere. Keep an open mind.

What You’ll Need

  • Nothing: This is a fact. Meditation requires only a willingness to concentrate on what’s happening and, in most cases, slow your mind down and follow your breath. You can do it lying down, in a chair, or using equipment and spaces you’ve set aside for such practice.

Optional:

  • A quiet, still place: For beginners, especially, a quiet room without a lot of sensory distractions is a big help. You’ll likely practice with your eyes closed, but visual clutter can still feel imposing and draw your mind elsewhere as you try to settle in. Music is not at all necessary‚Äîin fact, it can be distracting at first‚Äîbut could be a helpful exercise later on.
  • A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us
  • Sitting gear, if you’d like: In the Zen tradition of meditation, one sits on a pillow, or zafu, while you and the pillow are on top of a larger mat, or zabuton. You can find all kinds of comfortable sets all over, made from various materials and colors. You don’t need to learn how to sit in a leg-stretching position. Beginners without great flexibility (yours included) and exercise in sitting can sit seiza, or on your knees, or even sit in a regular chair‚Äîthough you’ll likely want a pillow to more evenly distribute your weight and relax your feet. Photo from Zen Mountain Monastery.

For more on the practice of sitting and achieving a comfortable rest, I recommend the Zen Mountain Monastery’s Zen Meditation Instructions. It’s particular to the Zen/Zazen tradition, but I’ve found its general advice on posture and sitting to be universally helpful.

The Basics: Following Your Breath

There are many ways to meditate. Some seem like complete contradictions‚Äî”Keep your eyes open and focus on an object or light piece of music” versus “Close your eyes and try to focus on nothing.” Whatever you tend to believe brings you to a relaxed state, following and steadying the breath is the most universal of meditation techniques.

In The Miracle of Mindfulness, a classic text that introduces the thinking and practice behind meditation, Thich Nhat Hanh lays out a thoughtful case for how the breath is connected to the mind, which controls the body. By actively watching one’s breath, and evening it out, one can bring their entire being to what some call the still point. Written less floridly, you’ll be focusing on just one very important thing, and teaching your mind how to engage one thing fully. Sounds like a skill your boss would really value, no?

From early in the book, Nhat Hanh writes:

The instant you sit down to meditate, begin watching your breath. At first breathe normally, gradually letting your breathing slow down until it is quiet, even, and the lengths of the breaths are fairly long. From the moment you sit down to the moment your breathing has become deep and silent, be conscious of everything that is happening in yourself.

A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us

For some of us, that’s easier said than done. You start focusing on your breath, and after a brief victory, in comes the growing wave‚Äîoh shoot what about getting cash out for lunch I totally forgot to tell Dan that I’d be late wonder if Susan replied to my email. Hanh offers the simple, straight-ahead counter:

If (following the breath) seems hard at first, you can substitute the method of counting your breath. As you breathe in, count 1 in your mind, and as you breathe out, count 1. Breathe in, count 2. Breathe out, count 2. Continue through 10, then return to 1 again. This counting is like a string which attaches your mindfulness to your breath. This exercise is the beginning point in the process of becoming continuously conscious of your breath. Without mindfulness, however, you will quickly lose count. When the count is lost, simply return to 1 and keep trying until you can keep the count correctly.

Hanh goes on to suggest that controlling the breath is useful in many situations beyond the quiet moments of meditation. I’ve found it helpful in the moments before having to do any kind of public speaking, when feeling overwhelmed at the sheer number of RSS items to read through on a Monday morning, and whenever I can catch my brain trying to seek my opinion or action on 12 different matters at once. The concept of “mindfulness” is also discussed at length in Hanh’s book, and it’s very related, but it requires a lot more space and different consideration. Photo by lululemon athletica.

Mantras, Guided Meditation, and Other Practice

A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us

HowStuffWorks provides a great overview of getting started with meditation, including a shorter summary of following breath, and some pointers toward other techniques:

Seek inspiration: If you are inspired by Eastern spiritual traditions, you might reflect upon an image or icon of the Buddha. You can also use a flower, crystal, or other object that has meaning for you. Lightly allow your attention to sit there, quietly and peacefully.

Recite a mantra: A mantra literally means “that which protects the mind.” So reciting a mantra protects you with spiritual power. It is also said that when you chant a mantra, you are charging your breath and energy with the energy of the mantra. Again, choose something with meaning for you within your spiritual tradition: recite the Rosary, for example. Tibetan Buddhists use a mantra for peace, healing, transformation and healing.
Do a Guided Meditation: Guided meditation is akin to guided imagery, a powerful technique that focuses and directs the imagination toward a conscious goal. (Think of a diver imagining a “perfect dive” before he leaves the platform.)

Photo by Theresa in MS.

You’ll find a lot of guided meditations, mantra suggestions, and other resources, both free and for sale, around the web. Stick to the freely offered tools, as they tend to be more authentic and less confusing in intent, given the nature of those practicing mindfulness.

Zencast.org, previously mentioned in a post about a podcast introduction to basic meditation and mindfulness, offers a wealth of meditation instruction for all levels, and it’s generally provided with a mind toward all faiths and traditions.

A Guide to Meditation for the Rest of Us

Of particular interest to the Lifehacker set might be Zencast’s meditation timers and reminders. The first set is a collection of Flash-based and download-able audio files that help you time your meditation sessions. The second is a collection of Windows, Mac, and iPhone software that, basically, rings a bell or other sound on a regular basis, to remind you to bring your focus back to one thing‚Äîto collect your thoughts, if they’ve scattered. There are, most likely, many other tools for computer workers that can replicate this simple attention exercise.

For examples of specific meditation techniques put into practice, check out Ryan Irelan’s “Blue Energy” technique to beat insomnia, or a 10-minute dark room meditation technique that’s ideal for office lunch or coffee breaks.

All of these meditation techniques are just that, of course‚Äîtechniques. They don’t guarantee you’ll achieve a peace of mind that strengthens your focus and resolve, but simply help you try and get there.

Copied from: http://lifehacker.com/5591576/a-guide-to-meditation-for-the-rest-of-us

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker’s World

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

Many jobs in the contemporary workplace actually require that you’re online all the time, constantly connected to your coworkers‚Äîand to a mind-boggling ocean of distractions. Here’s how to stay focused.

Picture by Asher Sarlin

Set Regular Times to Get Off the PC

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

When you do all of your work online‚Äîespecially if you work from home‚Äîit’s be tempting to sit in front of the PC whether you’re working or playing, and the lines quickly start to blur between work and goofing off. The worst result of this blurring: You’ll find yourself spending more time in front of your computer every day, but you’ll get a lot less done. That’s no good. Photo by ihtatho

Set up regular breaks and stick to them. The first step to countering this problem is to make sure that you setup regular breaks to actually walk away from your computer to do something else. It doesn’t matter what else you are doing, just as long as you step away from your normal working spot. The same rule holds true for anybody in any working situation, of course‚Äîtaking regular breaks is always important. Whatever your most common online distraction, consider batching those distractions to you break time so you can take care of them during your breaks.

Draw a line between where you work and where you play. As much as you possibly can, you should also make a point of doing your computer work in a different location than you spend your computer goofing off—for instance, if you normally sit in the living room while browsing, make sure you sit at a desk when doing your work, or maybe even in a different chair. Just try to keep the two worlds separate—and make sure to get off the PC once in a while. (This applies more to people working from home, but even if your work bleeds over into your home from time to time, keep that work in a separate area from your play.)

Deal with Constant IM Notifications and Other Distractions

imdistraction.jpgAn unnecessary instant message is an instant productivity drain. You finally manage to get into the groove and start getting something done when out of the blue one of your IM buddies wants to talk about pottery. Your zone is shattered, you’ve lost your train of thought, and it’ll take you that much longer to get back into the flow again.

If you need to be online to talk to coworkers, make a point of setting you status appropriately, and telling your friends and family that when you are marked as busy to not bother you. This can sometimes help, but you might also consider going another step: create separate buddy lists for work and only sign into that one during the day. (If IM distraction is commonly a big problem for you, check out our previous IM survival guide.)

For all your constant non-IM distractions—the email notifications, the push notifications on your iPhone or buzzing notifications on your Android—consider flipping the kill switch on those notifications as often as possible unless you truly need them.

Do Your Research Online, Then Get Offline to Work

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

When you’re doing work that requires doing research online, it’s far too easy to get lost in the labyrinths of Wikipedia or other reference sites while you are supposed to be working. From a distraction perspective, you’ll be much better off if you bookmark or save all your research so you can read it offline, using something like Evernote, Instapaper, or Read It Later, and then unplug from the net to do the actual writing.

If your willpower is low, you can use something like Freedom, a free application that temporarily disconnect you from the internet for a specific period of time and requires a reboot to bypass that block early. If that sounds like overkill, you can always practice a little self-discipline and unplug on your own.

Alternatively, if you are an iPad owner, you might find it to be a great distraction free editing environment using a solution like Simplenote or Evernote—our editor does all his long-form writing in plain text with a little help from Simplenote, and this writer does the same thing, but with Evernote.

Create Separate Browser Profiles for Work

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World
Having quick access to Facebook, Twitter, and all your favorite time-wasters is an undeniable good time, but it’s also like taunting yourself with ice cream while on a diet‚Äîyou will be far more likely to waste time online when you’ve got easy access to all the fun.

Our solution is to create separate profiles for work and personal browsing, and only use one or the other during the day. You can easily create multiple Firefox profiles and use separate shortcuts to launch each one. You can either install the handy ProfileSwitcher Firefox extension for easy management or use the -profilemanager command-line switch to create the new profile, and then create a new Firefox shortcut to launch the profile like this (read our full guide for more details):


firefox.exe –P profilename

If you’re a Google Chrome user, you can also create multiple profiles using a custom shortcut trick, or you can use ChromeDeck to make the process simpler. Once you’ve got your separate profiles created for work and home, make sure that your work profile is setup with only the things that keep you productive.

A Little Help to Stop Time-Wasting Browsing

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

If you really want to prevent yourself from wasting time online, you can use a browser extension like Leech Block for Firefox, or StayFocusd and Chrome Nanny for Google Chrome, to prevent you from accessing certain sites during certain times of the day.

You can setup the extensions to completely block certain time-wasting sites for particular times of the day, or you can set them to only allow you to access those sites for a certain number of minutes—which can be a very useful tool for sites that you might otherwise lose track of time while browsing.

If you can’t or don’t want to install an extension, previously mentioned web site x.minutes.at lets you set hard limits for browsing a specific web site, counts down your time remaining in your browser tab, and alerts you when your time is up. (It’s still up to you to quit browsing.)

Monitor What You’re Doing

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

If policing yourself only means your brain finds new ways to goof off, consider tracking your time with a tool like RescueTime. RescueTime tracks every window you’ve got open on your screen and tells you exactly what you have been spending your time on. You’ll then get reports broken down into categories that lay out what you’ve been spending your time doing, including what sites you’ve been browsing the most. You may be surprised at just how much time you’ve been looking at cute kittens on the internet.

Keep a Daily Log to Track Accomplishments

How to Deal with Distractions in a Web Worker's World

Tracking your time using an automated software will only show broad patterns in what you are doing, but doesn’t really help you know whether you’ve been productive or not. This is where a daily log comes in, which you can use to track your actual accomplishments instead of just what you have open on your screen.

You can keep a daily log any way you prefer, even using notepad, but the general idea is that you write down all of the things that you actually accomplish each day. The goal of the daily log is to help keep you on track and actually getting things done rather than embroiled in busy work that doesn’t result in anything. You won’t want to see a log that has nothing in it, and seeing that you haven’t accomplished anything can be a powerful incentive to get to work.

Copied from: http://lifehacker.com/5593523/deal-with-distractions-in-a-web-workers-world

This Is How To Get Your Free Bumper

This Is How To Get Your Free Bumper

While some bumper refunds had already started being processed yesterday, Apple’s iPhone 4 Case Program‚Äîwhich gives out free cases to those who haven’t purchased one yet‚Äîhas just launched in earnest. And they’re doing with an app.

Here’s how it works:

1. Download the iPhone 4 Case Program app from the App Store.
2. Launch the app on your iPhone 4 and sign in using your iTunes Store account or Apple ID.
3. Select your Bumper or case.

For iPhone 4 purchases made before July 23, 2010, you must apply no later than August 22, 2010; otherwise, you must apply within 30 days of your iPhone 4 purchase. To qualify for this program, you must purchase your iPhone 4 by September 30, 2010.

You can apply for a bumper (the only available color is black) or any other qualified case, all of which are free if you’re eligible. It’s a 3-5 week wait for delivery, because nothing in life is quite as easy as it should be. [Apple]

Copied from: http://gizmodo.com/5594596/apple-iphone-4-case-program-starts-right-now

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS

You’ve hacked your Nintendo DS for easy backups and single-cartridge playback. Now it’s time to install some awesome homebrew software, capable of playing back music and video, organizing to-dos, playing emulated and homebrew games, and a lot more.

Photo a composite of images by Lecate and daveynin.

Why put homebrew on the Nintendo DS? It’s portable, has dual screens including a touch screen, and it’s as powerful as any previous-generation smartphone or PDA. If you already have a DS, homebrewing is a great way to get more out of your device than just fun and portable game play.

What do you need to dabble in DS homebrew? If you followed our guide to easy Nintendo DS backups, you’ve already got everything you need for Nintendo DS homebrew: a DS unit, a flash cart, a microSD card, and a card reader. If you don’t have those things, make sure to check out our previous guide and refer to the “Why Back Up and What You’ll Need” section. Even if you’re not interested in backing up your games and just want to run homebrew, read over the first half of the backup guide and you’ll be up to speed on how flash carts work and which one you should consider buying.

A small note before we continue further. The point of this guide is to highlight great homebrew applications that can make your Nintendo DS do more than simply play games. The point of DS homebrew is to expand the utility of your Nintendo DS, not to replace other bigger, more expensive, and more capable devices.

Installing Homebrew Applications

Installing homebrew applications is easy-peasy. Unless the readme file or the web site for the homebrew app in question provides specific instructions on how folders should be organized and arranged, you can just dump the homebrew app anywhere on your SD card. As long as all the files that came in the package you downloaded stay together in the /whatever-homebrew-app/ folder, you shouldn’t have any issues. Make sure to read the readme.txt, if included, to double check!

Homebrew Applications

It may have been designed as a tiny and single-purpose device, but the Nintendo DS has a surprisingly diverse homebrew community. DS homebrewers love pushing the limits of the device and coming up with new ways to squeeze a little extra life out of it. Though you may need to do some heavy searching in Google, you can find NDS applications for nearly any task you can think of‚Äîthough many of the homebrew apps are highly experimental. We’ve collected the following homebrew applications to showcase their utility, novelty, or both.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Colors!: One of the most polished homebrew applications for the DS is Colors!, a homebrew application that has been ported to nearly every portable device around. The video above is a demonstration of the sketchbook capabilities of Colors! Not only can you create images in Colors!, but you can replay the entire process as a video. If you’re only going to play around with one homebrew application on the DS, this is a great one to show off how great homebrew can be.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
MoonShell: MoonShell is a fantastic multimedia player for the DS. It supports MP3, WMA, OGG, MIDI, and low-bit rate AAC among other audio formats, JPG, BMP, PNG, and GIF image files, and video files. Unfortunately you can’t just plop your AVI files on a microSD card and be done with it. You’ll need to convert any movie files you want to watch on your DS into the native DPG format it supports. MoonShell includes a basic converter, DPGenc, or you can download third-party tools like BatchDPG. Since the official MoonShell page is in Japanese, you’ll probably want to read up on it at Wikipedia and DS-Extra.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
DSOrganize: DSOrganize is an ambitious DS-based organizer and collection of tools. It has a web browser, file browser, address book, to-do list, notepad, calculator, a database of homebrew applications—a perpetual work in progress—and an image/audio player that supports popular formats like JPG, PNG, MP3, WAV, and more. If Colors! is the most polished homebrew application out there, DSOrganize is by far the most feature packed.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DSInstant Messaging and Social Networking: You’ll find no shortage of homebrew tools for connecting to social networks and sending instant messages. The following list will take you to the instruction manuals for the applications courtesy of the homebrew site DS-Extra, when available.

  • DSTwitter – If tiny Twitter updates aren’t a perfect match for the little DS, what is?
  • Fb4nds – Simple Facebook browsing and updates on the DS.
  • Beup Live – Access MSN Messenger on your DS.
  • CIIRC – Old school IRC chat on your DS.
  • JabberDS – Chat using Jabber-based server, like Gchat.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DSDS Weather Report: DS Weather Report is a little weather reporting application for the DS that downloads weather data via Wi-Fi. It supports over 40,000 locations worldwide and gives a current detailed report—including sunrise and sunset times—and an overview of the next five days.

DSWiki: What homebrew community worth its salt would skip over porting the entire Wikipedia library to their device? DSWiki requires a microSD card with 4GB free to store the copy of Wikipedia, but once you’ve got it on there you can search, bookmark, and browse links and sub-pages just like you can from your computer.Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Remote Touch: Remote Touch allows you to control your PC from your NDS. As the video above demonstrates it isn’t a remote VNC tool, it’s more like the popular phone-as-touchpad applications for iOS and Android phones. You can control your interface, media players, and even games.

AirScan: AirScan is small homebrew app that turns your NDS into a Wi-Fi sniffer. Don’t expect a pretty GUI like many phone-based sniffers have, but do expect lots of great information, like what type of security the access point has, latency, and other useful tidbits.

Emulators

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Building emulators for the Nintendo DS, already a gaming system with a comfy directional pad and buttons built in, was a no brainer. You can find emulation apps for most older consoles and even some novel—but not very practical—emulators for old computer systems like the MacOS.

Although we’re sure you’ll have fun with all the emulators available, we sorted the following list in order of how smoothly the emulators loaded on our test system‚Äîin fairness, however, they all worked remarkably well. As with any kind of emulation, you should expect odd quirks from time to time, like strange-sounding background music or sprites that layer or fill in oddly.

  • NesDS: If you’re craving some old-school Mario Brothers action, NesDS turns your Nintendo DS into a 1980s-era NES.
  • Lameboy: Why limit yourself to the stable of current generation portable Nintendo games? Lameboy emulates the Gameboy and Gameboy Color on your NDS so you can finally catch all those Pokemon.
  • SNEmulDS: SNES emulation on the NDS isn’t perfect but it’s pretty darn good. Expect occasional issues like weird music playback and background textures that don’t fill in all the way.
  • jEnesisDS: Playing Sega Genesis games on your Nintendo portable? It might have been sacrilege back in the day, but now it’s downright awesome.
  • NeoDS: No way you could have ever afforded a Neo Geo system in its prime? Now’s your chance to take it for a spin.

Homebrew Games

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
If you’d prefer to skip over the legal murkiness of playing emulated games on your Nintendo DS, you’ll find no shortage of great homebrew games. The NDS homebrew gaming community is actually more bustling than the application community, a natural extension of the NDS’s primary function as a gaming platform. We hardly have the room to highlight all the great homebrew games out there, but we’ve rounded up a few of our favorites to share with you.

  • Quake2DS: A well done port‚Äîseen in the screenshot above‚Äîof Quake II. Note: The Quake II port requires an inexpensive memory card in the slot-2 of the DS or DS Lite. See the Quake2DS web site for details.
  • MegaETK-TD: Fun Mega Man clone for the DS.
  • 15th Floor: A mystery game in the vein of Myst and Hotel Dusk. Compelling gameplay, hard to believe it’s homebrew.
  • Jelly Blocks: Remake of popular flash games like Bejewled and other touch-the-colors type games.
  • Super Smash Bros Rumble: A homebrew version of the popular Super Smash Bros franchise. Plays like an SNES version of Super Smash Bros.
  • DS DOOM: Can any homebrew-enabled platform be considered serious without a port of DOOM? Relive the classic on the DS.

For more homebrew gaming fun, check out the homebrew games directory at Filetrip.net and DS-Extra.

Copied from: http://lifehacker.com/5594640/supercharge-your-homebrew+hacked-nintendo-ds