Seven years ago today, I signed up on my first message board.
I had been on the internet for about a year before then, but this is the day I hold up as the date I really joined the internet.
Seven years ago today, I signed up on my first message board.
I had been on the internet for about a year before then, but this is the day I hold up as the date I really joined the internet.
Best Feeling by Keller Williams
[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/kw2007-07-24.c42.flac16/kw2007-07-24t13_64kb.mp3]
Follow up to GUpdate and Don’t Be Evil
So I’ve been using Google for nearly five months now, and it has replaced most apps I used to use on a daily basis. I’ve been extremely satisfied with it: GMail now handling 7 different email accounts; Google Documents handling both business, school, and personal documents; Google Reader consolidating 36 feeds into one place; Google Calendar keeping me on the same page as my business partners; and iGoogle displaying all that and more when I open my browser. But again, what makes it all worthwhile is that they work with each other and can be accessed anywhere with an internet connection.
I’m posting this update now (likely the last, I doubt I’ll become suddenly unsatisfied with it, unless they go and lose all my shit) because Google Reader has added the one feature that I’ve been longing for. A search, so I can run through my feeds quickly for something specific.
If you haven’t tried using Google’s slew of online apps, you should.
This is Web 3.0, and its here now, and its wonderful.
After Midnight by moe. w/ John Medeski, Trey Anastasio, Sam Bush, and Jennifer Hartswick
[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/moe2005-02-10.DPA4021s-splt.v3.flac16/moe2005-02-10d3t06_64kb.mp3]
Follow up to Don’t Be Evil
So for about a week now I’ve been using Gmail for all of my email (5 addresses, one place to get em all), Google Reader for my RSS feeds (34 of them), Google Calendar for events (there isn’t much happening, so there is very little there), and Google’s startpage as one stop for all of that. Google has some other nifty services, but either I already used them or I don’t need them (like Google Earth and Maps, which I’ve used since they came out).
As a startpage, Google works pretty well. I’ve got semi useful widgets and links to places I want to go. One cool little thing they’ve added is page themes, which actually change with the time of day. I like that.
Gmail is incredible. I don’t know what more I can say about it. That’s untrue: I recieve email from 5 different email addresses (three of which Google checks and recieves via POP3, the other two are fowarded), automatically sort them with filters, and can search through them easily. I can also send email from each one of those email addresses, including my uconn address. And all this is available to me anywhere with an internet connection. I only wish I had done this earlier.
Reader is another story. Google Reader needs more work before I can sing its praises. It does adequately replace Sage (the firefox extention I had previously used to view RSS feeds), lets me organize feeds into folders and allows me to read more posts quicker than before. But it is in sore need of some features. I’d like to see a search, so I could find specific things in my feeds quickly. Maybe even a smart folder feature (a la OSX).
But my main complaint about Reader is one that I’ve already complained about before. I feel even more distant from the sites I’m reading. Even more so than when I was using Sage. As a result I read my feeds less. I don’t know what Google could do to help this, or if there is anything they can do. But that doesn’t make it any less of an issue.
Google Calendar seems nice, but I haven’t had too much of an opportunity to play with it, being summer and all. It will be tested more in the fall.
As for the other services Google offers, they mostly don’t do anything for me. I don’t use blogger because I’ve got a blog that I can hack here, I don’t much like Picasa (viva Flickr!), and although SketchUp is fun, I have no use for it.
I’ll make new posts concerning this as things change.
I’ve also tussled a little bit with the Google Apps Suite. Since that is a bit more niche, you’ll have to check the extended to read about that.
All hail BoingBoing for bringing these links to the light of day.
First, In Praise of Idleness, which is an excellent, if a bit lengthy, essay defending doing nothing. I may reread this article for the rest of the week so I can be sure to absorb everything he has said.
Second, a more recent article which looks into what people who hang around towns during work hours are actually doing. I really wish I could just camp out on a city block for 24 hours, and see how the world around me changes. I may do just that in the future. You can thank this article for that notion.
Lastly, an episode of This American Life which also explores the Secret Life of Daytime. The episode is an hour long, but all five acts are extremely interesting, and very worth listening to. If you find yourself short on time, just listen to act one, but do yourself a favor and make time for the rest of the show later.
While all of those links are in my linkroll, they were so incredibly cool and interesting that I thought they deserved special mention. It is rare that so many good things appear on the internet at once. So it shouldn’t surprise you that I have one more link to share.
Bonus, from Neatorama (which for those of you who don’t know, is like BoingBoing in its subject matter, but has a different, and in my opinion more appealing, way of presenting it). The Strangest Disaster of the 20th Century. This doesn’t have anything to do with the aforementioned links, but is a damn good read.
That last story is from one of Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader series, which are amazing. This story is proof. If you need more, I have several editions in my bathroom, which I’ll would gladly share. If you want them.
I spend a lot of time on the internet. That’s no secret.
I like to think that I’ve optimized and streamlined everything as much as possible. I’ve fiddled with Firefox and gotten it to do exactly what I want and need it to do, to the point where it is the most important application on my computer.
Backtrack, it is July 2004 and I’ve just registered for GMail. I’m really pumped about this, because I’m a huge nerd. I use it frequently until the end of highschool, and for that time it is a great tool. Then I stop using it. I honestly don’t know why, maybe I forgot about it, maybe something else, whatever the case, I didn’t use it anymore.
Now some two years later, I logged in to one of my GMail accounts. I’ve used my Google ID for a couple of their other web apps like docs.google.com (which I used to write a couple papers this last semester), but I hadn’t actually signed in to GMail. So I did that today.
No, this isn’t about the messages I found from years ago (which were pretty fun to read) or the spam that somehow got in there. What drove me to write this post is how incredibly tight Google has tied together all of its apps. I’ve paid attention over time as Google churns out nifty web app after web app, but I hadn’t taken the time to see how they worked together, and that’s what makes them valuable. Lets move back to my original point.
I’m considering a massive shift in the way I use computers. I can do this with Google Apps. Google Reader replacing Sage (Firefox plugin for RSS feeds). GMail replacing Thunderbird. Google Calender replacing 30boxes (I like 30boxes well enough, but the integration with Google is so handy). Hell, even iGoogle replacing my homepage. I’m not sure about Picasa replacing Flickr, but I’ll play around with it.
Yes, I’m a bit apprehensive about putting all of my information in the hands of one company. But their privacy policy and terms of service are solid, so I think it should be alright.
I think I’m going to try and go through with this. I’ll keep you posted on my progress.
From PostSecret:
—–Email Message—–
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2007 11:45 PM
Subject: Five Dollar BillI work at a bank and upon counting my five dollar bills the other day I stumbled upon this one.(picture attached) I couldn’t have found it at a better time as that was exactly how I was feeling that day.
I just want to let whoever it was know… you’re not alone in trying your hardest and still not feeling good enough. Your secret now hangs in a frame in my room. Thank you for sharing not only your secret but also my secret. It feels good to know that I’m not alone.
~Still trying
Floodlights by the Disco Biscuits
[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/db2006-05-26.early-dpa4027.flac16/db2006-05-26early-dpa4027d1t02_64kb.mp3]
Word Source (word.sc) is an online dictionary which, unlike other dictionaries, is advertisement free. It is also pretty simple to manipulate the url (word.sc/[insert word]). Users can upload photos, rate words, all sorts of useless things.
Seventy-Four by Quagmyre
[audio:http://www.quagmyre.ca/music/seventyFour.mp3]
As the internet gets more advanced, it seems to become easier to get content from more websites faster. Instead of going to each individual site, I just check its RSS feed. While this does make things easier, it also disconnects me from a website I enjoyed. I was thinking about this when I was grabbing a bunch of podcasts from NPR. Instead of listening to the radio to listen to these shows, I can just listen to them out of context. That context provides some interesting additions, which add to the original show.
On the O’Reilly Factor:
On the Colbert Report: