Mar 02

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Startpage Mash-up!
The most comprehensive startpage review available…

To continue the weekly series reviewing, exploring, and living Web 2.0… Last week we introduced startpages.

Quick Note for those who feel left out: Web-based startpages(aka AJAX/Flash homepages) are nifty sites aimed at making your web life easier by putting most-needed services on one page. Check out my entry last week describing them. There are lots of them and they’re all free.

Go to the winner list…
Go to the reviews of the top 3…
Go to the score chart…

There are so many different options for what you can use for a startpage. In fact as I explored the list I gathered together last week, I discovered a few more. Some have big names with them, but surprisingly (or not) it doesn’t seem to guarantee quality. The startpage market has come into its own as something distinguished. I looked through 20 different options, which exhausts the lists of other older comprehensive reviews I found. For the sake of information, feel free to check them out: 14 Personalized Homepages Compared, Feature by Feature (June 2007); Top 12 web-based Startpages Compared. The winner is… (February 2007); and Alpha Geek: Start-page showdown (March 2007). My research even dove me into the world of easy-to-make webpages (now finally taking advantage of AJAX) and so I decided to draw the line of this review at the specific mention of startpage or a clear adherence to the concept. You can catch links to these page builders at the end of this entry. They do though provide a highly customizable option to developing a startpage.

To come up with a fair way to judge I had to come up with categories and an appropriate scoring system. I tried to think of the things most important to a startpage user. The categories I decided on are: user friendly, basic functions, looks, site layout, RSS handling, tabs, widgets, speed, a useful community, and an extras category. The overall scores were determined via an averaging of scores in all categories, you can view these at the end of the entry. The category winners were determined by which had the highest score in the category. If there was a tie, it was broken by which had the highest overall score.

Each was scored on a scale from 0-5. Zero - zilch worthwhile in the category. Five - I couldn’t have asked for much more in fulfilling the category.

User Friendly - How initially intuitive the functioning of and interaction with the site is.
Basic Functions - Whether or not basic functions expected from startpages are included. I considered RSS, email, calendar, todo, notes, and a few other things that my mind more than likely took note of.
Looks - Did it catch my eye or cause an eye-sore? Mainly, would I want to see it opening up in my browser every day.
Site Layout - Taking a close look at if the structure of the site made sense, displayed well, and felt like an asset to the functions offered.
RSS Handling - First, is there something to manage RSS feeds. Second, how worthwhile is it?
Tabs - Are they there? Also, looking at the functionality of them; if they drag, are easily created, and etc. or not.
Widgets - Variety, quality, number, organization, and integration were key factors in evaluating widgets.
Speed - Simply how fast it seemed to load and how quickly the site responded to user interaction.
Useful Community - Looking specifically at if there is a built-in community and how useful it is. Also, I wanted to see if there was any effort for one community to share/interact with another. Finally, I took into account permanent or shareable links to created startpages and their tabs.
Extra - This was a section to give extra points for unique features, overall site impression, and anything else that was hard to account for in the other categories.

The Winners!

Overall: Netvibes

And by category…
User Friendly: yourminis
Basic Functions: Netvibes
Looks: yourminis
Site Layout: yourminis
RSS Handling: Netvibes
Tabs: Netvibes
Widgets: Netvibes
Speed: iGoogle
Useful Community: Pageflakes
Extra: Symbaloo
Continue reading »

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Feb 23

To continue the weekly series reviewing, exploring, and living Web 2.0

So slow I am to get you content! Well at least this weekly gig has me getting to the keyboard.

This weeks word is startpage. I most often see it written as one word, despite the battle my spell check (one word too?) is giving me. This is a more specific subcategory to homepage (which I guess is recognized as one word). A homepage is the page that first loads when you access a website. On the personal level, it’s the website you direct your “home” button to in your web browser. Nowadays, there are actually websites designed for the sole purpose of being your customized homepage. These startpages are available to be personalized, integrated, and be a true home on the web. Web 2.0 technologies used to its fullest, thanks to ajax technology. Some are dirty, some are clean, and some are both. I’ll explore what is best for you.

Why do you need a startpage? The web is overwhelming. This of course is after information had already became overwhelming. So take a bit of internet-prozac and simplify. Too basic? The great thing about a startpage is, when your ready, most can become as big as you’d like.

What is out there (that matters):
Netvibes, iGoogle, Webwag, Pageflakes, MyYahoo!, Protopage, yourminis, Schmedley, Eskobo, Windows Live, Favoor, Gritwire, Inbox, It’sAStart, MyHQ, Symbaloo, Only2Clicks, YSP, Linkedfeed, Flock’s My World

Definitely NOT worth your time: YSP

First off, don’t invest to quickly. The best strategy is to look around, test ‘em out, and then decide. Customizing the perfect startpage can take many hours (worth it), but you don’t want to do it multiple times over.

Most are customizable. Color, movement, tabs, and content, it’s all up to you.
So lets take a look…
The link goes to a slideshow with screenshots of each of the startpage services (in the same order as above).

Next week I’ll switch into review mode and hopefully nab you a favorite. Take a look, read a book, and add me to your newest startpage. They range from simple to snazzy. Some will put all of Web 2.0 in one place before you are ready and others will share resources. Either way, you’ll have a new homepage soon.

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Jan 06

Looking for a great moment of traveler’s glory? Always forgetting your books at home? Look no further than Amazon’s Kindle, the new electronic book reader.

The good: Excellent high-contrast screen does a great job of simulating a printed page; large library of tens of thousands of e-books, newspapers, magazines, and blogs via Amazon’s familiar online store; built-in free wireless “Whispernet” data network–no PC needed; built-in keyboard for notes; SD card expansion slot; compatible with Windows and Mac machines.
- CNET.com Review

Now has come the days where technology might begin to actually save you time and money, instead of just claiming to do so. The Kindle is a one of a kind book reader that begins to have the consumer in mind. With access to web content and a selection of over 90,000 reasonably priced (less than most print copies) books and periodicals, it’s a device that has the ability to actually change the way we do things. Look at the review and you can purchase it here.

So where are gadgets now?

They are here to serve you, more than ever, but also here to serve the companies that make them as well. Herein lies the problem, corporate self-interest instead of corporate cooperation. It seems they often times ignore the very things that make their products popular; openness, ease of use, and social development. In an age of social networking, products sometimes emerge out of openness. Like the mp3 player and the ever popular iPod, which were forced to keep some part of their wares open to what made them big in the first place. Even so, the iTunes Store purposely holds your hand and requires certain things for certain content. This is a fine line and as I await my new Nokia N810 Internet Tablet, I hope the open-source software surrounding Linux leaves me free. I’m still stuck trying to re-manage the GPS as they try to lock me into a $130 subscription for full use of the service. It is though, my first big step in going Web 2.0. Goodbye locally based software! Woe is me. Woe is us.

The direction products move as we enter this age of Web 2.0 will be worth watching. 2008 is the year to watch. The Consumer Electronic Show (CES) upon us (coverage here), now is a better time than ever to begin this topic on JustinFenwick.Net

How are you interacting, making this technology yours? Do you think we will win or is it the companies’ game? In other words, are we going to feel stuck in Apple land, Amazon land, Google land, or Microsoft land instead of our own, a land of shared standards and content?

Turn your iPod into a book reader
1) iPod as ebook reader
2) Read Ebooks on Your iPod with Ebook to Images

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Oct 05

I’ve updated the search method on my site. You can now use Google to search both my site and the web, instead of the separate internal and Google web searches I had before. Hopefully this will help people use the site and find what they need on the web as well.

Something to look forward to…There is a function to change the web search so that the results are guided by my site’s content. I’m going to wait until there is some more content throughout the site and then we can test it out together. This is exciting because it’ll be a web search unique only to JustinFenwick.Net! Hopefully giving all of us a better focus on some of the results we’ll want when looking for something online.

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