RSS Feed Reader for mac
I’ve been a big fan of feedreader on Windows, but I’ve yet to find something comparable on the mac. Obviously there’s the on-line tools, and there’s been a few shareware ones around which were OK.
But, feedreader has a beautiful simplicity. It’s on of those programs that does exactly what you need, and could want and doesn’t try to do anything else. The mac ones I’ve seen either did too little, or fell into that trap of trying to be everything. The elegance and simplicity that using Mac OS X is known for just wasn’t there.
Thankfully, whilst hunting around, I came first across Vienna. A project on Sourceforge that does almost exactly the same thing as feedreader with it’s simple 3 pane layout. You can create groups of feeds, when you click on a feed or group, you get a list of all the blogs in that group in the top right pane. Click on a blog, and you get the summary of that blog in the pane below. Double click on the blog’s title and it opens the full URL in you browser. Everything’s nice a quick, and always accessible. You can change the layout to be horizontal if you prefer. Whenever feeds update, you get a message on your desktop - which you can turn off if you like (amazing how many programs forget to give you that option!).
Then, as if a blessing, along comes another program. Newsgator has just released their NetNewsWire program for free. Working much the same way as Vienna, it has 2 other tricks up it’s sleeve. First off, when you double click the feed, it open a new ‘tab’ in the application showing the full page - you’d be amazed how much difference this little trick makes. And, and this is the kicker, you can connect it to your Newsgator account, synchronising the feeds you add here with those on line, and vice versa. This means all your feeds are available anywhere, any time.
Vienna, great, but NetNewsWire is one step better… Give them a try, you won’t regret it!
March 2, 2008 No Comments
The humble fax machine. Long live the fax machine… An old technology coming back?
This came from having one of those random, geeky office conversations you tend to have for no particular reason. You know the sort… What would happen if you swap the ‘n’ and ‘m’ key round on the new person’s keyboard. Do you remember Dungeon Master on the Atari ST? What would life be like if it were more like a video game? Would the internet of come about quicker if macs were the dominant computer? More to the point, would the world be a better place if macs ruled the PC market?
I digress. This blog is aimed at the humble fax. Our friend. Our enemy. The source of endless cheap printer cartridge refills - which incidentally you need as all the cartridge offers use up the ink! The butt of many jokes (think that classic scene if Office Space).
But a lot’s happened in the world. We now have that amazing thing called the internet. You can send anything - well, anything that can be converted to 0 and 1 - to anyone, anywhere. Add to that, the way that most photocopiers are now attached to the office network, so now you don’t even need your computer to send that file. Just stick the paper in the copier, enter the email address, and hey-presto, the other person gets it - and in probably less time than the fax.
So, with all this technology, why is the fax still going strong? Well everyone, I’ve great news for you! I think I’ve cracked it!
I’ll start with the problem with emails. In the original days of email, it was a special event when you got one. Nowadays, you get so many emails, that, to be honest, you don’t read all of them, often missing vital things. It’s not malicious, but to get your job done, you often have to skim read the title and ignore some of them. About now, some people are saying no I don’t do that. But think about it… Really think about it. I bet you do!
Now, with faxes, you see a lone piece of paper on the fax machine, someone will inevitably pick it up and read it. Even if they don’t finish it, they’ll still pick it up and read it to point. You have to! Faxes don’t have titles do they, so you’ve got to find out what’s on there somehow.
You also have the advantage now that they’ve passed of the spammers radar, so the faxes you generally get are actually useful. Think about that for a second. The one tool we used to curse for the amount of rubbish you got on it is suddenly really, really useful again!
Now, put the fax machine next to the secretary in the office, and suddenly anything really important has an almost guaranteed way to get to you. That’s why we use it for sign-off documents. That’s why anything you have to sign has to use the fax. It is useful and is a prime example of how you shouldn’t dismiss technologies too soon. Email’s still a child in a grown-ups world.
February 25, 2008 No Comments
A plea to Facebook… Stop the decline… You’ve forgotten about making friends
Has anyone noticed that their friends aren’t using Facebook as much now? I don’t know if it’s just me, but the number of messages with update I get from friends has dropped dramatically. When you log in and check, the updates they’ve been making has dropped dramatically too.
It’s a strange phenomena. The theory behind Facebook is superb. Let you and your friends share everything. Put photos up, let them and their friends know they’re in it. Set up events and groups that they might be interested in. Bring them all together in one place. Send your friends messages and videos from sources such as YouTube.
And the way the user interface has been built is a true demonstration of form and function giving you the best user experience of almost any site. The User interface is so polished and simple. It does what it needs to do, and it does it well. There’s no excessive Ajax calls. You see what you need, when you need it, and it’s quick and clean. The essence of Web 2.0.
You can find groups about just about anything. People that walk slowly, how cute cats are, my favourite drink, bring back Firefly. All valid groups and all things we might be interested in. We should be subscribing to them and sharing our opinions.
Then there’s a the Facebook Applications. A brilliant idea! Open up your service to keen people, let them share their ideas and their passion. Bring the people who love similar things together. Let them take quizzes and see which character from the Simpsons or Family Guy you are. All great fun.
I know there was a time when I was very active on Facebook, joining groups left right and centre. Installing applications for fun. But then, recently, I suddenly decided to remove all those applications. Un-subscribe from those groups. But why? I couldn’t figure it out initially.
Then I started looking and talking to other people, and they’ve done the same. Then I started thinking about why. Why did I feel the need to remove all those Applications that once interested me? Because, to be honest, they were fun once, and the fact that every time one of my friends uses the Application, I get told - repeatedly.
I haven’t removed all of the Applications though. Some are still there, like the places I’ve been one, and Wiliam’s RSS feed reader. They seem genuinely useful to me, and something my friends can use to find out useful things about me and keep in touch with me.
So what am I trying to say? Facebook, please, please, please, don’t ruin the brilliant idea you’ve built! Focus on what it did so well originally! Connecting friends and people with similar interests, and not watering down the experience.
It’s hard to put your finger on exactly what’s gone wrong, but if it’s not fixed soon, one of the best websites of recent years will lose the people that it most appealed to originally and end up like MySpace.
February 2, 2008 No Comments

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