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While the Iron is Hot
This method seems to keep me paying attention better, though, the thingy vs the website.
As for Thingy, the font is too small. English messages is barely OK. Chinese message is unreadable. Thus I won't use it if I can't adjust the font size.
You'll be surprised at some of the added functionality.
It looks a lot like twirl. I'm installing at the moment, so we'll see how it goes.
The utility aspect is great, no doubt.
Visually, it could maybe use some work. Kind of hard on the eyes.
Not using it (yet?) myself, but then, FriendFeed is blocked for me during the regular work day. (Yes, I tried explaining to the powers that be that it's just a feed aggregator, and if we block FriendFeed, we should block xxx and yyy and zzz (used by the security guys) all to no avail.)
we've automated this system and created filters, but the human nuanced tough is missing, which is the reason for things like Mahalo.
My husband and I were talking about the changing nature of libraries, and whether printed journals will eventually be passe. As much as I like being able to search for books and source material in automated databases, or ordering them online from Amazon, nothing has the same "person feel" as wandering the stacks at a library or bookshop, and finding that the neighboring books around our target may be even more interesting or on point than the target. The neighborhood/company you keep factors are as important as the laser targeted computer one when doing research.
(and frankly I always find things that surprise me in good ways in this search method, taking me well beyond the boolean information search alone).
For some things, the human brain, making connections (and intuitive leaps) factor shouldn't become totally absolete.
I think the Internet in general, especially with Wikipedia, StumbleUpon, and of course, Google, is conducive to exactly this sort of serendipitous discovery of new and interesting things. And that's me at 29. I see plenty of younger sorts to whom this sort of learning and discovery is second nature, and I'd bet they'd find your form of discovery to be just as disconnected as their own.
question - who outside the echo chamber has the time?
Love Adobe AIR apps!
I could get to know several people I already know, better through Alert Thingy/Friendfeed, while acquainting myself with many people new and old through Twhirl/Twitter. So then where does this leave Facebook?
http://shegeeks.net/alert-thingy-friendfeed-des...
Is she right or wrong?
Overall, I see this making FriendFeed more accessable to me. Instead of one of dozens of tabs in my browser, it sits side-by-side with Twhirl on a second monitor. Nifty. ;-)
Thanks for the tip Chris.
So, inspired to do it TODAY by the lovely Darren Rowse ... thank you! Your posts are always interesting and often directly useful, and your generosity in sharing your experience is much appreciated.
As a hero of mine for a while (am even more impressed having checked out your linkedin profile!) it really made me smile to see you in my followers on Twitter, so thank you for that too!
Have a lovely week!
:o)
@Whitney, there is nothing more thrilling than the library or bookstore. While I use Amazon to buy and browse books for convenience and Google and other search engines to browse for info, it's just not the same. @Andrew you are right. I'm 44 and many baby boomers remain loyal to our old fashioned ways.
Grabbing my rocker to read a book. ;-)