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A Caramel Breeze

Google, Google, Google
Saturday, July 01, 2006

Google are taking over my life. Well, on-line at least.

While they seem benevolent enough compared to that big monopoly that everyone loves to hate (me included), I'm not sure I am entirely comfortable with that. I've always blocked their cookies on the search engine - maybe I'm paranoid, but I always think the less info out there about you the better, and I don't like the idea of anybody owning my search history.

Of course I have had to allow cookies to use some of the other services now on offer, but one of the (many) advantages of living in Australia is that I can block cookies to google.com.au (which is where searches go) , while allowing them from google.com (where everything else is - for now).

Still, I now find myself using:-

Blogger - erm... you're standing in it.

Calendar - for the social diary. Sharing calendars with T (my partner in life) works well. I have also found useful public calendars that others have made available (e.g. ASNSW calendar)

Notebook. Excellent for capturing bookmarks, text snippets and images while researching something.

Browser Sync. Finally! - a way to synchronise the work and home browser. Its a shame though that the favicons aren't copied along with the bookmarks. I very quickly stopped it syncing bookmarks and went back to another Firefox extension Bookmark Synchroniser SE for that.

Maps/Earth. I was a subscriber to Keyhole before Google bought it. Its great that Australia is better covered now, but when will we be able to find addresses and get directions?

Picassa. A pretty good organiser/viewer for your digital photos. I haven't tried the Web Albums yet, and probably won't. I already have a hosting package with plenty of space, and I run Dalbum for photos. Its not that sophisticated, but its clean and uncluttered.

Desktop. The jury is still out on this one. I don't like the sidebar taking up screen real estate and earlier versions slowed down the computer too much. The recently out of beta version 4 seems better, but its too early to tell. It does however seem to slow down opening files on network drives a lot! It might not last on my work computer because of this. Sadly, that's where I would find it most useful.

Gmail. Got an account, but don't really use it. I prefer a mail client rather than web mail. They way they have implemented POP is weird. It won't download onto more than one computer. If they allowed IMAP, I'd be there!

Spreadsheets. Can't say I use this much (I don't use any spreadsheet much). It may not be that sophisticated, but - Wow! This is the future, right now. This is the browser as the universal application platform. We won't be buying software and installing it in the not too distant future, but subscribing to it and using it anywhere.

Other Google products I've tried, but didn't take to:-

Reader - I prefer Firefox's live bookmarks for RSS.

Pages. Could be useful though for less technical people.

Bookmarks - although T finds this useful.

What is Google's plan? I can see how Gmail can make money by placing ads, but what's in it for them with the rest of the things. They are providing storage and services for nothing - except perhaps more information about me.

As AJAX applications such as Google Spreadsheets get better, I can see a subscription or pay-per-use model working, but otherwise their strategy seems to be to just throw it all out there and see how much sticks.

posted by bj @ 11:13 am,




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