Tuesday, 25 March 2008

Some snow in the Netherlands ..

and the country comes to a complete stop ......

This morning 800+ Km of traffic jams (126) .... and the Netherlands are only 200 x 300 Km :-(.

Traffic_3


Saturday, 22 March 2008

Mozilla CEO says Apple's Safari auto-update 'wrong'

A lot of people appear to be bent out of shape about Apple using its auto-update service to distribute the Safari Web browser on Windows. The CEO of Mozilla, which makes the rival Firefox browser, calls it bad business.

In a blog on Friday, Mozilla CEO John Lilly criticized Apple's practice, uncovered this week, of offering iTunes and QuickTime users Safari 3.1 on Windows through the Apple Software Update pop-up.

Lilly says that automatic updates are a good way to ensure people have the most recent and secure versions of software. It's a practice that Mozilla uses with the Firefox browser.

What's different in what Apple is doing is that it is adding a product to the auto-update list that users never requested. That means they could very easily install software unintentionally, he argued:

Apple has made it incredibly easy--the default, even--for users to install ride along software that they didn't ask for, and maybe didn't want. This is wrong, and borders on malware distribution practices.

It's wrong because it undermines the trust that we're all trying to build with users. Because it means that an update isn't just an update, but is maybe something more. Because it ultimately undermines the safety of users on the Web by eroding that relationship. It's a bad practice and should stop.


Easy for users or a breach of trust?

(Credit: CNET Networks)



An Apple representative issued an e-mailed statement on the matter to Information Week: "We are using Software Update to make it easy and convenient for both Mac and Windows users to get the latest Safari update from Apple."


Meanwhile, my colleague, Tom Krazit, in a post on Friday argues that people should become more aware of the software on their systems and think before they install.

View Original Article

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Test with mail

Test with mail

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Friday, 7 March 2008

Tip: Syncing Google Calendar with mobile devices

Google Calendar

Google Calendar

(Credit: Google)

Google Calendar is probably one of the most successful web-based calendar tools to hit the Web 2.0 scene, and no wonder. It has a very clean and easy-to-understand user interface, GMail integration, the ability to share calendars with others, SMS notification reminders, and like other web-based calendars, immediate accessibility regardless of what computer you're using (Well, as long as you have net access). But perhaps the most useful aspect of Google Calendar is that you can carry it with you on your mobile device, as long as you know how.

Google Calendar Sync lets you sync your Google Calendar with your Microsoft Outlook calendar.

(Credit: Google)

There are basically two ways to access or sync Google Calendar with your phone. The first is to sync Google Calendar with the calendar software on your computer, and then sync the calendar information to your phone, essentially utilizing the computer as an intermediary. If you use Outlook to sync up calendar information, Google has conveniently offered a Google Calendar Sync tool for use with Outlook that allows 2-way syncing. Aside from Google's own syncing tool, there are other third-party Google Calendar syncing applications like OggSync, Jotlet, and Calgoo, though many of them aren't free. From there, you can sync Outlook with your phone, and you're ready to go. For the Mac, I personally have had great luck with Spanning Sync, a third-party application that will sync up Google Calendar with iCal. Similarly, you'll then have to sync the calendar information to your phone via the computer.

Then there's the second method of accessing Google Calendar with your phone, and that's over-the-air. The most obvious way to do this is to just head to http://mobile.google.com/calendar using the phone's built-in browser. From there, you can add and remove events just as you normally would, but with a scaled down user interface. If you have an iPhone, you'll be treated to a specially formatted mobile Google Calendar page with a user interface optimized for the iPhone's touch screen display. However, this doesn't always work if you don't have a reliable Internet connection, plus it can be painfully slow. Thankfully, there's a way around this as well, and that is to sync Google Calendar with the built-in calendar on your phone.

Google Sync for BlackBerry

Google Sync for BlackBerry

(Credit: Google)

If you have a BlackBerry, Google has developed an application called Google Sync for BlackBerry, which will sync Google Calendar with the BlackBerry's own built-in calendar. And if you have a Windows Mobile phone, third-party applications like OggSync for Windows Mobile/Pocket PC will work as well. However, if you're one of many thousands of people with just a regular phone, GooSync is probably your best bet when it comes to over-the-air synchronization of your Google Calendar and your phone's built-in calendar. GooSync offers a free as well as a premium service (The premium service is $39.50 a year and offers multi calendar support, a contacts manager, and more), and supports a wide variety of phones. You should still check out their Supported Devices page to see if your phone is on the list though.

As with any of these applications, your mileage may vary as to how well they work, depending on the kind of phone you have, your net connection, and so forth. If you have any more ideas on how to sync Google Calendar with your mobile device, let us know in the comments!

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Friday, 29 February 2008

From ReadWriteWeb: 35 Ways to Stream Your Life


It's
a pretty good bet that if you're not making a Twitter or Facebook
application, you're probably making a lifestreaming application. Okay,
so not everyone is into lifestreaming, but it is one of the hottest
areas for development out there, and there are an overwhelming amount
of services offering a way to aggregate all the little bits of your
online life (which, for the purpose of this post, is the definition of
lifestreaming that we'll use). Richard MacManus wrote an excellent primer
on lifestreaming in January, but we touched on just 5 such services.
The purpose of this post, rather than to review, is to just list the
various options out there.


Lifestreaming apps generally fall into two categories: those that
help you keep track of and display your own lifestream and those that
help you keep track of your friend's lifestreams (or both). For the
sake of clarity, we've focused mainly on the former for this list.

 

  • Tumblr - Tumblr is a microblogging application that also allows the inclusion of activity streams from other services.
  • Onaswarm - Onaswarm, which is in private beta, is a dedicated lifestreaming app that supports a wide variety of other services.
  • Jaiku - The chief function of
    Jaiku, as a presence app similar to Twitter, is enhanced by letting
    users aggregate activity from outside services.
  • Lifestrea.ms - Lifestrea.ms -- in closed beta -- is a dedicated activity stream aggregator that quotes our review in the company line by calling itself a "standards based nerve center."
  • Soup.io - Similar to Tumblr,
    Soup.io is a microblogging application. It also supports outside status
    updates for 11 services and any RSS feed.
  • FriendFeed - Due to being
    founded by a bunch of ex-Googlers, FriendFeed might hold the crown for
    most talked about lifestreaming app. It supports nearly 30 web sites.
  • MyBlogLog - MyBlogLog, which specializes in creating ad-hoc social networks around blogs, just got into lifestreaming with an update last night.
  • Profilactic - Profilactic supports 135 sites. Yes, 135 sites.  As well as the ability to add your own.  Have fun.
  • iStalkr - iStalkr is a hub
    for your social media activity and that of your friends and family,
    with a unique approach to lifestreaming that puts your life on a
    timeline.
  • Correlate.us - Correlate.us
    creates a river of activity for a handful of supported sites, and
    graphs which sites you use the most, all with the design sensibilities
    of del.icio.us.
  • ProfileFly - Focused on social
    networks, ProfileFly creates a replacement profile that mashes up
    status updates from your existing social profiles.
  • Second Brain - Second Brain
    takes takes a slightly less automatic approach to life streaming by
    asking that you categorize and group your activity into collections.
    See our review.
  • Explode.us - Explode.us is a social media search engine that also offers "a profile to consolidate your various online presences."
  • liveZuu - A lifestreaming application that supports 28 networks and offer a Facebook app.
  • OneSwirl - A newer dedicated lifestream aggregator that celebrated its first public release today.
  • Socialthing! - Currently in
    closed beta, Socialthing! is a promising lifestreaming service that
    offers a nifty-looking iPhone optimized version. They're planning to
    release the service at SXSW.
  • iminta - iminta keeps you up-to-date on what your friends are "in to" and lets you share your own activity stream.
  • Plaxo Pulse - Most famous for helping to get Robert Scoble temporarily banned from Facebook, Plaxo's Pulse product lets you aggregate activity from a wide variety of third party services.
  • Identoo - A fairly standard social streaming site.
  • Escaloop - Escaloop is a
    free-form lifestreaming app that lets you combine up to 20 RSS feeds
    into a single stream (yeah, there are other RSS mixers out there, but
    Escaloop is notable on this list for specifically targeting
    lifestreaming).
  • Hictu - Hictu is a video microblogging app that supports importing activity streams from outside services.
  • Life2Front - Life2Front's LiFE-Line activity stream feature is a functional activity stream aggregator, if not the most attractive.
  • 30Boxes - The online calendar app also has lifestreaming capabilities.
  • Readr - Readr mashes 21 different sites into a single profile feed.
  • Suprglu - Suprglu pulls content from the web services you use and then republishes them in blog format.
  • Where is me? - A lifestreaming app that pulls from 11 services or RSS feeds.
  • Slifeshare - Lifestreaming via a Mac OS X application (Windows promised soon).
  • MovableType ActionStreams - For do-it-yourselfers, MovableType offers a lifestreaming plugin for their blog platform.
  • SimpleLife - More for the DIY set, SimpleLife is a lifestreaming plugin for Wordpress.
  • WP Lifestream - Another lifestreaming plugin for Wordpress.
  • RSS Stream - You guessed it, a third lifestream plugin for Wordpress.
  • oneConnect - Yahoo!'s oneConnect mobile service includes activity stream aggregation features.
  • Facebook (?) - Rumor has it that Facebook will be opening up the news feed to outside service updates.
  • Socialstream
    - Nothing has come out of it yet, but this Google funded academic
    project at Carnegie Mellon University into lifestreaming has garnered a
    ton of press attention.
  • Jeremy Keith's Lifestreaming Script - Jeremy Keith's lifestreaming script was one of the first and inspired some of the services on this list.

Are there any we missed? Which is your favorite?  Let us know in the comments below.