Showing posts with label Gadgets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gadgets. Show all posts

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Weekend Assignment Results: Online Gadgetry


Some of my current Firefox add-ons.

For Weekend Assignment #233: (Virtual) New Toys I asked whether there were any new online toys, gadgets, widgets or gizmos that you've found particularly useful or entertaining. Our response this week was a bit light, but highly informative:

Julie said...

Like Karen, I've tried Twitpic. Kinda cute. Possibly useful. I'm also using a new app called Twhirl, that lets me see my Twitter and FriendFeed feeds on my second display.


Florinda said...

I'm not really an "early adopter" when it comes to new tech stuff, but as far the online world is concerned, I'm willing to give something a whirl if it won't cost me anything and it doesn't require knowledge of coding, so I look for tip-offs on what's new out there. My source of information for new features in the tech products I use most is usually Lifehacker; I'm not sure how many truly essential blogs exist, but this is one of them, if you ask me. In addition, since most of my online life belongs to Google in one way or another, I've found the blog Google Operating System is an excellent independent resource for just about everything Google-y.

(Florinda has a bunch of great tips, actually - take a look!)


Mike said...

Okay, online things. Hmm, I do play around on Twitter, though I am mostly a follower. (That sounds so stalker-ish, I know). I have a Last.fm account now, though I got that for my Ipod Touch and it doesn't seem to be working after the last software update. I have a Flickr account that I will post pictures on occasionally. That is about all that is exciting. The rest of the stuff I have is pretty standard, Google Reader, and...um, e-mail.


Thanks, folks! I know I'll be checking some things out that you mentioned. Meanwhile, I'm tracking something called Widgetbox, which I was invited to by email but haven't tried yet. (It has you classify your blog in one of their "Channels" - e.g. Art, Music, Pets, Women - and so far there's nothing that fits a blog as diverse as this one.) And I've finally dumped FeedBlitz from my sidebar. It was a good idea at the time, but there are so many better alternatives now that everyone has long since unsubscribed from the Outpost on FeedBlitz anyway. Their front page makes it sound still vital and widely-used, even though it's not doing this particular blog any good. If you still find it useful, go for it.

The new Weekend Assignment will follow in an hour or two.

Karen

Friday, September 12, 2008

Weekend Assignment #233: (Virtual) New Toys

If your online experience over the last few weeks has been anything like mine, you may find the new Weekend Assignment a timely one. If not, just fake it!

Weekend Assignment #233: The online world is constantly evolving, to the point where I'm surprised I'm not reading about Web 3.0 by now. Google's service Blogger is just one example of an online resource that's been rolling out new features and gadgets recently. Are there any new online toys, gadgets, widgets or gizmos that you've found particularly useful or entertaining?

Extra Credit: Are there any new online features, gadgets, etc. that you've been disappointed with?


As for me, I've been trying out a number of things lately, most of them related to either Google or Firefox. On the Google front, I've fiddled extensively with their photo organizing and sharing program Picasa, added widgets to iGoogle, and tried out some of the new "Gadgets" for Blogger. For Firefox, I went wild several days ago and installed a number of third party add-ons.

Picasa, as far as I can tell, is basically two programs, an online and an offline one. The offline one, Picasa2, is good for finding out what folders full of photos you have, sorted in various ways to help you get it all organized. From there you can upload to the online service, Picasa Web Albums. If you have a blog on Blogger and have uploaded photos to it, you already have at least one web album, which can be made public if you so choose. Or you can make an album from scratch, copying or uploading photos to it and giving it a name and description. Like this!


Someday I'll be able to take better butterfly pix.

I realize that other people already use Photobucket and Flickr and such, but it's nice to know this one is available, too, and already somewhat integrated with Blogger and Google. It's free, up to a point, but if you upload a massive, massive number of photos, you will need to pay for extra storage. I've been uploading about five photos a night to Blogger for years, and I'm only using 192MB (18%) of my 1024MB of storage.
There's also a more oddball photo sharing service, as I mentioned last night. Twitter, as you probably know, is a sort of mass distribution instant messaging service. Until now, you've basically only been able to enter 140 characters into your "Tweet," including any links. But now there's a sort of spinoff service, TwitPic. You upload a photo, and the link to it goes into your tweet, along with any additional text up to the usual 140 characters. You end up with a photo page (or a series of them really), and your photo has its 15 seconds of stardom on a feed that shows the most recent uploads, appearing and disappearing over a map of where the photos were taken. Neat!

The new Blogger gadgets I haven't fully explored yet. I see there's now an RSS feed thingy, and a "Followers" thing and some other cool-looking stuff. But so far, I haven't been able to figure out how to follow a blog that doesn't have that gadget on its sidebar. (Never mind. It's on the Blogger Dashboard, at the bottom.)

I'm afraid the Firefox add-ons I've tried so far mostly fit into that extra credit question. There's something called BlogRovR, which claims to tell you about the posts you're interested it from the blogs you subscribe to with it. Umm, no. So far, it mostly only wants to tell me about Round Robin entries, and I can't find a way to tell it to look for anything else. There's also something called Yoono, which notifies you of new AIM and Twitter activity, and lets you make little comment notes about web page you're viewing, and supposedly recommends other sites like it. This last bit only seems to work for major sites such as CNN.com or the BBC's Doctor Who site, but it does pick up a few suggestions for Whatever readers. For the Outpost, nada. Well, I didn't really expect anything, but it would be more useful if Yoono actually looked for blogs with similar tags or something. And there's something called Minimap, which I downloaded but haven;t played with yet.

Your turn! Have you come across any online innovations lately that seemed worth trying out? Were they any good? Write about them in your journal or blog, preferably with a link back to this entry, and then come back here and link to your entry in the comments below. I'll be back in a week to share what we've all found. Have fun!

Karen