I’ve been tweaking my desktop lately in an effort to improve my working efficiency. The new writing gig has meant that I’ve had to stop being lazy when it comes to layout, so with the help of LifeHacker and Google I’ve made some changes.

First off, yes, I’m a Windows user. Macs are pretty and what not but from an economic viewpoint they are an expensive hobby. Aside from the hardware cost there would be the need to replace Office, Photoshop and other things I’d need to function on a daily basis. Money permitting I’ll consider a Mac when I’m next looking for a computer, but it won’t be tomorrow.

Having said all of that though Mac users do know about layout. Introducing my more efficient Windows desktop (image pops):

desktop

I’m using a 22″ widescreen LCD monitor so there a pile of space that can used. Having said that though I want to use my space efficiently as well.

Left Hand Side: Google Desktop

I don’t get desktop widgets, sure they’re pretty but how often do I go to my desktop for information? never. Google Desktop provides widget functionality in a handy sidebar. I only include the things I need on it, Date and Time since I’m not showing the Windows Taskbar, CPU/ Memory widget (handy for knowing if Firefox is about to have problems), email widget that lists incoming email from Outlook, a RSS widget that displays the latest news from Techmeme and TechCrunch, Top headline on Digg, a little widget that plays online radio stations (first preset for me is ABC News Radio) and finally a widget called gdShutdown that actually does a much better job of shutting down Windows than Windows does itself…no “this program can’t be closed” error messages, when I tell it to shut the system down it does just that 100% of the time.

There’s a growing number of widgets available for Google Desktop and there is also a Mac Version. Sure, it’s not as pretty as Yahoo Widgets but it’s the sidebar delivery that works best for me.

Footer: RocketDock

rocketdock

I originally started using RocketDock back in February, although it was used primarily for short cuts at the top of the screen. Since removing the Windows Task Bar I’m now running it middle and centre. Yes, this is just like a Mac, however I’ve found it even more flexible. I hate that on a Mac your bottom quick launch thing is always quite large and impedes over applications. Rocketdock can be sized so it runs small and compact and pretty much where ever you want it. The new version also supports Mac style window minimization, capturing any window I minimize. Program access: Launchy

launchy

Another find care of Lifehacker, Launchy provides Alt+Space access to all programs. Simply type in the name and it finds it for you. Combined with Rocketdock it means I never have to use Start again.

Twitter: Twitbin

There’s any number of Twitter clients around, but having a stream of conversations going on in the background doesn’t work for me. Twitbin delivers Twitter to the left hand side of Firefox. I’ve found since using it I’m not only Twittering more often but I’m also getting a lot more out of my friends/ contacts as well.

Logitech LX710

It helps to have a keyboard/ mouse combination that works well. My new logitech mouse has two buttons behind the scroll wheel that are by default set to browse forward and back in a web browser however the software allows for customisation. I’ve mapped the left (back) button to Alt+Tab and the right button to Tab, meaning that I can scroll through my open programs without having to take my hand off the mouse. It’s a very handy feature, I’ve been an Alt+Tab user for years anyway in preference to the Taskbar but doing it via mouse is something special again.

There’s a pile of Firefox addons as well, I’ll keep those for another day and post 🙂

Vale Technorati

admin —  May 23, 2007 — 1 Comment

Vale Technorati. The much loved blog search engine is no more, reborn as…well….something that isn’t a blog search engine any more. Steve Rubel suggests that Google killed Technorati but I’m sure he’s mixing this up with the Ask $100m algorithm campaign. The only one going to get killed there is Crispin, Porter + Bogusky when IAC’s Barry Diller wakes up to the fact that a search engine with next to no brand awareness needs a campaign that builds brand recognition and not some smart-arsed attempt at a viral campaign. The Algorithm might be great but it makes no difference if no one even knows who Ask is.

But back to Technorati, if it isn’t a blog search engine and it isn’t a Google style search engine, what is it? There’s a lot to like in the new layout and functionality even if I’m lost for words in trying to describe it. My only advice: who ever thought of a ticker, take my advice and fall on your sword now! 🙂

Wallstrip/ CBS buy confirmed

admin —  May 22, 2007 — 4 Comments

Looks like the post I made on TechCrunch March 13 about CBS acquiring Wallstrip is confirmed. Thanks to my “source close to the deal” for giving me a heads up on it, you know who you are but would like to thank you none the less. Dollars aren’t publicly confirmed at this stage but given my source + Jossips I’m confident the $5m was correct.

Via Chris Pirillo, Jericho has been cancelled by CBS in the US.

To quote Jake from the end of series 1: nuts!

I watch very little TV, but I’ve enjoyed every minute of Jericho, even if I’ve had to watch it away from my TV set as Channel Ten in Australia hasn’t shown the second half of the first series.

For those who support the show, there’s a petition here and a YouTube Channel as well.

It’s a long shot, but here’s hoping they bring back one of the only half-decent shows left on TV.

 

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I tossed up writing about this over the weekend but it’s too bizarre not to share.

So we decide Friday night that we’d go out for dinner. The golden child is impartial to pasta so we head to Uncle Vinnies Eaton for a cheap and cheerful meal (when I say cheap I mean BYO + under $20/ meal). We order, food comes out quickly. I ordered the “Vinnies Special” chicken dish, some sort of cream sauce on chicken with mushroom, bacon and sun-dried tomato thing and it came with a side of salad.

So I’m eating the salad, and I spot what at first appears to be a mussel, I like seafood but I hate oysters and mussels, so I put my fork under it to remove it. And up pops a snail!

It gets better. The snail wasn’t dead. So I flick it up then drop it in shock, it lands on top of the salad and starts blowing bubbles!

I should have taken a picture on my mobile. I’ll never forget the image in my head as long as I live.

Suffice to say the meal was replaced and I didn’t have to pay for it, but I couldn’t bring myself to eat the replacement salad, and she who must be obeyed didn’t eat hers either. The golden child on the other hand thought it was the most hilarious thing he had ever seen (mind you, 4 year olds think everything is funny) and continued to talk about it for hours to come, even going so far as telling me this morning on the way to school how he was going to tell his teacher about it, some 3 days later!

I don’t write this out of anger towards Uncle Vinnies Eaton, it was an accident and they did everything they could to repair the situation, and yet they might be better of switching to French Cuisine, they’ve certainly been practicing it.

Supermarket 2.0

admin —  May 19, 2007 — 1 Comment

via Graywolf on Jaiku, very clever 🙂

Joined Jaiku

admin —  May 17, 2007 — Leave a comment

Enough is enough with Twitter. If you’re on Jaiku let me know http://duncanriley.jaiku.com

Hopefully will see a lot of my Twitter contacts appear shortly, still love the idea and the conversation, but I can’t handle Twitter’s downtime.

Bugs in Google Reader?

admin —  May 15, 2007 — 4 Comments

I made the switch from Bloglines to Google Reader a while back, but I’m noticing a couple of things that are starting to become annoying.

First is slowness in listing new posts. I notice it most with my own posts on various sites, I’ll post and it won’t appear in Google Reader for 2-3 hours, and yet Google Desktop’s feed reader (I’ll share that in another post) picks them up fairly promptly.

Second is the refresh/ Ajax feature that shows what you’ve read. Sometimes it marks the content off as I read it, other times it doesn’t without clicking the refresh option.

Is it just me? It took me over 4 years to leave Bloglines so I’m not about to change away from Google Reader, but I’ve got wonder, after all I use a feed reader to stay up to date, not get stories 2-3 hours after the fact.

WallStrip sells for $5m

admin —  May 14, 2007 — 3 Comments

Congrats to Fred Wilson on the deal.

It’s been a couple of hours since I wrote the post at TechCrunch and as much as Lindsay Campbell has bigger and better things ahead of her, the $5m figure still doesn’t make sense. CBS isn’t buying for the revenue, and yet Campbell isn’t worth $5m either. What am I missing?

Michael Arrington writes at TechCrunch that Yahoo moving to upgrade MyBlogLog. Yawn. Too little, too late.

They had a product that had a huge amount of buzz and penetration. Just about every site I regularly visit was using the service and yet today I’m actually surprised when I see one of their sidebar widgets. With security, privacy, spam and performance issues MyBlogLog was a bubble that burst far more quickly than others. From the company that bought Flickr I guess I expected better. MyBlogLog could well be for Yahoo what Dodgeball was for Google.

 

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