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taking joy in the popping of the social media bubble & other web 2.0 silliness

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Tag Archives: FeedDemon

Oh the irony of it all

Posted on June 2, 2007 by Steven Hodson
3 Comments

snicker Don’t mind me as I roll around the floor laughing my ass off at this so-called improvement of Web 2.0 applications being able to work offline. This from a movement that proclaim the death of desktop applications and the superiority of web base applications. This from Web 2.0 proponents who were claiming the death of the thick client environment was right around the corner and that browser based applications would inevitably become the standard always on broadband world.

First we had Zoho with their added ability to work on your stuff locally and sync up with their servers when your always on broadband connection was actually working. This was followed by several other companies and now culminating with the announcement of Google Gears.

Of course because it’s from Google it is now the big darling of the tech b’sphere with posts just about everywhere waxing loving about this newest and greatest from the greatest benefactor to mankind.

Am I the only one seeing the irony of all this here?

Sure as Omar Shahine says in his post much of the offline implementations by thick client software was questionable at best; but it is getting better and uses both Outlook and FeedDemon as prime examples of how it is now being done the right way.

So what do we get for this new innovation? – well we get our data once again being stored locally just as with those supposedly antiquated thick clients, we then store that same data on some-one else server and all the security concerns that go along with that and as an added bonus we get the pleasure of working in plain boring user interfaces both locally and remotely.

Sounds like a great step forward to me.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: FeedDemon, Google, Google Gears, offline, Outlook, thick clients, thin clients, web 2.0

Thumbs up to Nick – you got that right bud …

Posted on March 21, 2007 by Steven Hodson
5 Comments

The joy of a non-cubical world This post by Nick Bradbury of FeedDemon fame made me relearn that lesson about reading and drinking at the same time – keep a towel handy. I don’t normally quote whole posts but to not do it here would destroy the flow so hoping Nick doesn’t mind here is his post on “Don’t try to be cool”

Call it a pet peeve, but it annoys me when I see “cool” applications with ”cool” features that provide little or no value to real customers.  Honestly, there are waayyy too many useless “Web 2.0″ applications that look like they were designed by developers who want A-list bloggers to think they’re cool.

Here are some ways you can tell when a developer is trying too hard to be cool:

  • The product’s UI is littered with buzzwords like “AJAX” and “Web 2.0″
  • The home page brags about how their software integrates with all the popular social networking sites, but there’s no description of what it actually does
  • The documentation contains the word “Micro$oft”
  • They offer tech support on Twitter

“Cool” is fleeting (just ask the Fonz), whereas utility has staying power.  So avoid the temptation to build something just to impress your peers, and instead try to build something that’ll impress end users with its usefulness.  Then customers will think you’re cool, because you just made their lives a little simpler.

The way I see it, if you’re able to give up the corporate world and code at home in your underwear, then you’re already cool.  So stop trying to be cool and focus on building something that’s useful.

Hours later I’m still chuckling – thanks Nick :)

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Categories: Odds & Ends | Tags: cool, developers, FeedDemon, Nick Bradbury, programming

Google Reader – not for me

Posted on March 16, 2007 by Steven Hodson
4 Comments

As a result of my on-going fiasco with Windows Live Mail Desktop (perpetual Beta) that I wrote about yesterday I decided to do a radical shift and start using my Gmail account as my main email client (can you really call it a client when it only exists in a browser window?) and while the jury is still out on that; and not particularly happy with it either, I also decided to bite the bullet and give Google Reader another try. The last time I had done so was when it first was released.

Now I should point out that I am not a river of news type of reader – I love my folder setup. For me it is the easiest way to keep feeds for the three different blogs I write separate and distinct in their own folders within folders. GReader (Google Reader) has no options that I could find to do this – strike one against productivity.

I also like to tag into separate folders items that I want to come back to at a later time in the day or further on after doing research. Again GReader has no options to do this other than giving the post a Star (lame) – strike two against productivity as this lumps all Starred items together rather than the separate areas I want them in.

And I’m sorry but GReader is boring to use. I’m already sick of the pastel colors being used ad nauseam on Web 2.0 type sites. This is not to say that it should jump out at you and throw confetti around while shouting Let’s Party but I don’t want to feel like I should be taking a nap after reading my feeds either.

There is one other thing that gives me an itch that I can’t scratch when using GReader; and by extension this applies to most Web 2.0 apps. I always walk away from them feeling like I no longer own my data. Granted this is a kind of subliminal type of thing but the idea that my personal mail or even feeds aren’t within my physical area gives me a disjointed feeling that I don’t like.

So GReader is a wash for me at least and it back using FeedDemon and/or FeedGhost and being much happier working with applications that do make me more productive and silly or not – in control of my data.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: FeedDemon, FeedGhost, Gmail, Google, Google Reader, RSS

A ghost in the feed reader

Posted on December 6, 2006 by Steven Hodson
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Well not quite; rather a new RSS client is making its way into a crowded field of both pay and free clients. FeedGhost by BinaryComponents Ltd. however is the first I have found that specifically for Vista and XP with the .NET Framework 2.0 installed.

  Also as you can see from the screenshot it is utilizing a variation of the Office style Ribbonbar. I guess that is going to be the next hot trend; however if I am not mistaken FeedGhost was released before Microsoft made the Ribbonbar available to developers and since I didn’t notice a DotNetMagic DLL assembly I have a feeling this was something Lee and Stu have coded themselves. If this is the case my developers hat’s off to them.

Developer talk aside FeedGhost is a very slick looking program and you can tell that a lot of attention was given to the UI right down to the tooltips. On a Vista machine it supports the Areo Glass look but I’m not sure how it is handled on an XP machine.

Feed wise it handled importing my OPML file perfectly so I was basically up and running with my existing feeds in about 5 minutes of installing it. I did notice that it doesn’t seem to support Favicons for feeds if they are available. Other than a few other minor things which I posted to their forums about FeedGhost is client I wouldn’t have any problem recommended to an average RSS reader user.

For me though there was one feature missing that I have come to rely on in FeedDemon; that being the Newsbin feature. This is where I can save post to for later use and I use it daily so for me this was a must have feature and the only thing that is stopping me from switching over to FeedGhost full time.

To their credit we have talked about the feature in emails which started flying pretty quickly after my first post to their forums; which by the way they look to monitor pretty faithfully a plus in my eyes. So my hopes are high that they might have it inplace fairly soon.

Pricing wise FeedDemon is well on par with most non-freeware clients as a $20.00 subscription. The interesting thing about their subscription is that they offer a syncronization of feeds across multiple machines and you are entitled to all updated / new versions of FeedGhost regardless of platform – online version, Smartphone, etc as they come available. this could be a real plus and well worth the yearly subscription.

FeedGhost has taken it’s place as my backup reader for now and I will definitely be keeping a close eye on it so I’ll let you know how it develops down the road as I think this one has a lot of promise.

For more info use the links below:

Main Page http://www.feedghost.com/Default.aspx
Features   http://www.feedghost.com/Detailed.aspx
Screenshots http://www.feedghost.com/Screenshots.aspx
Pricing     http://www.feedghost.com/Pricing.aspx

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Categories: Technology | Tags: FeedDemon, FeedGhost, newsreaders, RSS
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