Bookmarks for February 6th through February 14th

These are my links for February 6th through February 14th:

Bookmarks for February 2nd through February 3rd

These are my links for February 2nd through February 3rd:

Bookmarks for January 30th through February 2nd

These are my links for January 30th through February 2nd:

Bookmarks for January 24th through January 27th

These are my links for January 24th through January 27th:

Bookmarks for January 12th through January 13th

These are my links for January 12th through January 13th:

Bookmarks for January 12th from 11:52 to 22:42

These are my links for January 12th from 11:52 to 22:42:

Bookmarks for March 1st through March 4th

These are my links for March 1st through March 4th:

Google Wave – Fully Integrated Social Tech Networks

Watch this video. There is a lot I could say, but it’s best to watch the video. Google Wave covers most of my vision of how communication should work, but extends it further in directions I haven’t considered.

  • Inline replies
  • Simultaneous online interaction 
  • Wiki like behaviour
  • Data interface linking.
  • Drag and drop.

The whole agent/robot functionality is very exciting.

Chrome

I’ve been playing around with Chrome from Google for a short while and what I’ve seen so far I like.

Best feature to me so far is the seperate memory spaces for each tab – I actually like this idea. Firefox is a real PITA when it comes to memory. Especially on a laptop with long running firefox processes, and being able to kill a tab and see the memory completely go is good. I’m not sure how exactly Chrome works – but if the application code is cached and only the data specific to each tab is in separate process and memory space then it is probably efficient enough.

It will be interesting when more of the plugins from Firefox get portable or written for Chrome. I’d also like to see a portable version.

Check out the Chrome Book at Google Books – has some useful information.

For now I think I will be using Chrome and Firefox together. Chrome is definitely a very good replacement for Prism which still suffers from Firefox issues. Running Gmail in Chrome with application shortcuts is very easy. And the method is uses to load links from Gmail and GReader in the main window is very cool.