Jul
31
2008
0

BrightKite: First Impressions

I finally got my invite for the web 2.0 application BrightKite, so here are my initial impressions.

BrightKite is very much like Twitter, where you can post little notes to people on your friends list as well as the general public. Its main feature is the ability to also encode ‘where’ your posts are coming from. For example, if I had a GPS-enabled phone and I sent an update to BrightKite, not only will my post show up on the site but it will also show where I posted it from. Of course there are several privacy issues here (beware the stalkers!), but the site does provide a good amount of privacy features. What’s also pretty neat is you can view the public stream based on where you are, so you can see recent posts that originated from your area. For those of us without GPS-enabled devices, the option to add places manually on the site is there so we’re not completely left in the dark.

I can definitely see the coolness of using an application like this, especially when a lot of your friends get into it (with this being a social networking site and all…). You can set it to automatically update your Twitter with your BrightKite posts as well as add locational information to it, so you won’t need to message two different places if you have Twitter account too. Unfortunately, you can’t text message updates yet if you’re not in the US, but I imagine this will be rectified when it comes out of beta. I guess I have even more motivation to upgrade my phone now…

Check out my BrightKite profile here.

Written by Ian in: Computer | Tags: ,
Jul
15
2008
0

Wordpress updated to 2.6!

Just updated my Wordpress to 2.6. For those of you who run Wordpress blogs, I recommend the Wordpress Automatic Upgrade plugin. It makes life so much easier.

PS. I’m looking into changing my Wordpress theme, so if you know any good themes or theme sites, let me know.

Written by Ian in: Uncategorized | Tags:
Jul
09
2008
1

Drop It In The Box

I’ve gotten a bit of time to try out Dropbox and so here’s my little review of it.

For the uninitiated, Dropbox is a web 2.0 application that lets you sync files between multiple computers quickly and painlessly. It also comes with a nifty web interface to organize your folders and content. Although this sort of technology isn’t exactly new (to those of us in computer science or just in the know with code repositories general), it certainly manages to be easy enough to use and maintains a good amount of flexibility.

Basically, after installing the Dropbox application, it creates a little folder where any file inside it will be automatically synced to folders on other computers that are linked to the same Dropbox account. The install process itself very straightforward and fast, and the application itself seems very lightweight and memory-friendly.

I’ve been using it for the past couple of weeks now, mainly for keeping things like photos, documents and guitar tabs synced across both my laptops. It excels at syncing your content very quickly between all linked Dropbox folders and updating the web interface. Since the Dropbox application (which runs constantly in the background) is set to check your folder at very frequent intervals, dropping your file in the folder results in an almost instantaneous sync between the folders on other computers. A neat little feature I’ve used a bit is that any file you put into the public section of the folder gets a download link associated with it, so that you can share links directly with friends to the content in that folder.

One of the features I’ve yet to fully investigate is the “shared” folder, where you can share a folder between multiple Dropbox users and have it set to sync to all of their folders. As well, I haven’t played around too much with revisioning changes to files, but I imagine it works just fine.

Ultimately, it’s a very neat little application to have and is a godsend to those of us who find repositories such as Subversion a little too complicated to set up. Much like Twitter, I think it becomes much more handy to have around when more of your friends are using it, however it is very usable if you just want to share files across multiple computers. Dropbox is currently in private beta and is invite only.

PS. I’ve written this entire entry using the Qumana blog editor, which is a pretty neat free Mac blog editor. Here’s hoping it looks good on the site!

Written by Ian in: Computer | Tags:

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