Here's how Web 2.0 would look like if it were a subway:
http://www.informationarchitects.jp/slash/ia_trendmap_start.html
What is Web 2.0? Wikipedia (a prime example) says it "refers to a perceived second generation of web-based communities and hosted services — such as social-networking sites, wikis and folksonomies — which facilitate collaboration and sharing between users."
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Monday, May 28, 2007
Your Files Anywhere
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Monday, April 16, 2007
Do the Taskbar Shuffle

Taskbar Shuffle is a nifty little program that allows you to rearrange your open program icons in your Taskbar simply by dragging and dropping them. I want my programs lined up in a particular order in my taskbar for easy location - my e-mail program is usually first, then my contacts, then Firefox, etc.
So, do the shuffle - no spyware, ads or banners. Keep life simple.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
The Future is Virtual

These days choosing an OS (Operating System) is like choosing an ice cream flavour from Baskin Robbins - so much to choose from, so little time! Whether you're best pals with Bill (Windows XP, Vista, Server 2003, Longhorn, etc.) or a FOSS advocate (Linux, but which flavour?), there are a myriad of flavours from which to choose. Now, what if you can run all of them from one box? You can, with virtualization.
"Virtualization allows multiple virtual machines, with heterogeneous operating systems to run in isolation, side-by-side on the same physical machine. Each virtual machine has its own set of virtual hardware (e.g., RAM, CPU, NIC, etc.) upon which an operating system and applications are loaded. The operating system sees a consistent, normalized set of hardware regardless of the actual physical hardware components."
Right now, the best virtualization software out there is from a company called VMWare. They have a whole suite of products from which to choose. You can run, VMWare Server, for instance, from your PC (reasonably fast, pack it with lots of RAM), and switch back and forth from Windows to Linux to your heart's content. The best part of it is - it's free! Well, except for the Data Centre and Enterprise products, of course. But the free VMWare Server should give you a pretty good idea how virtualization works.
Not to be outdone, Microsoft is also getting into the fray. It is offering Virtual PC 2007 for free as well. Alas, their Virtual Server isn't free but you can download a trial copy.
Want to run XP on your intel Mac? Well, you can boot-camp or you can run Parallels. The latter will set you back $79 and the former is still officially in beta.
So, go ahead, virtualize your world. Choose any flavour, any computing experience that suits you. With virtualization, you don't need to choose sides. Welcome to the future!
Thursday, April 5, 2007
A Smug Mug

There must be a gazillion photo upload sites, but Smugmug is unique. First, you can upload an unlimited number of photos. Second, you can organize your photos through tagging. The most clever feature though, I think, is their "Geotagging" where you can associate your photos to Google maps. The site is not free but the $39.95/year admittance price gets you more features than other photo sites.
Friday, March 30, 2007
Simplicity Rules
Say you want to send a 100 MB file to your buddy or business associate. You can't e-mail it (it's too big) - most e-mail inboxes (corporate ones, anyway) only allow 5 to 10 MB. What do you do?
You can senduit!

I haven't seen a simpler site that does what it needs to do with just a few clicks. You browse for your file (hopefully you compressed it), select an expiry time (from 30 minutes all the way to one week). Click upload and then you get a link that you can copy and paste to an e-mail to send to your intended file recipient. Simple.
And that's why this site gets the very first Bravo! award.
You can senduit!

I haven't seen a simpler site that does what it needs to do with just a few clicks. You browse for your file (hopefully you compressed it), select an expiry time (from 30 minutes all the way to one week). Click upload and then you get a link that you can copy and paste to an e-mail to send to your intended file recipient. Simple.
And that's why this site gets the very first Bravo! award.
The Obligatory First Post
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

