Social productivity with Friendfeed

Unlock Your Productivity

I have been mucking around with some social media aggregation sites and my most recent venture is FriendFeed, which I’ve seen around the web and have known about it for a while, but never really got around to trying it. Well, I managed to get there, and here’s what I found.

What’s most striking about FriendFeed is the design, and perhaps this is why I might choose it above others (plus it supports the most sites). FriendFeed has no style. I don’t mean it is distasteful, but it has no style as in it has a header and then you just get a list on a white background. This is a refreshing design, catering to the puritan needs in us. I see this as an absolute positive aspect of the site, I very much enjoy the clean form, allowing me to concentrate on content instead.

Sites supported are also wide and varied, from obvious ones like Youtube and StumbleUpon to smaller sites like Furl and Tipjoy. There is also a lot of variation, for example Library Thing is supported, which is a social Book catalog and discovery tool, but you can also add music sites like Last.fm, and many others, totaling up to 41 great services.

Bloggers will love FriendFeed because it not only allows you to add your blog, but other blogs where you write. You can specify blogs with multiple authors and only show the stories you wrote. Since I do most of my writing on other sites this is a great way for me to showcase this, previously I could only achieve this with a complicated but of php.

You can also create rooms for specific topics, groups and so on, creating and sharing content only relevant to that room. This is awesome for bloggers too to promote the topic of their blog, but also study groups, friends, and so on.

Overall I like FriendFeed a lot. I haven’t made my decision on the best one, but FriendFeed is currently at number 1. Simplicity and number of features make this service one of the easiest ones to use and with the ways you can display it on your blog, possible the most productive too.

Flock - Productive social browsing

Unlock Your Productivity

Flock logoI finally decided to give Flock, a Mozilla based browser a go, and I’m very, very happy with the results so far. You can reap most of the benefits if you’re into social sites like Youtube, Del.icio.us and the bunch, but even if you’re not, it’s basically Firefox, so you can’t really go wrong.

My World

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My World is the default stat page for Flock and works like the Today page for Outlook, basically an aggregation of some of the info inside your browser. It shows you a list of your recently visited favorites, RSS feeds and media feeds. You can also access any of the sidebars and search the net if you’d like. I would say it’s a pretty useful start page, but those of you accustomed to Netvibes or Pageflakes won’t be changing their start page soon.

Sidebars

The sidebar has a central role in this browser because it allows you to view the status of your social network and do a lot of other things you would normally use a web page for. You can choose to view al your accounts, the people associated with them, take a look at your favorites, RSS feeds and manage your web clips.

Accounts and Services

This two pane sidebar shows your registered accounts on the top and available supported social sites on the bottom. Supported sites are the ones that Flock can directly interact with. One site I think should definitely be in there is Digg. It makes no sense that it isn’t, since it’s possibly one of the biggest of its kind. I have a feeling that they will support it, but want to develop some nice interactivity. A green light will indicate if you are signed on to a specific service, otherwise you can easily log out and tel Flock to forget the account. That’s about all there is to this sidebar, the main benefit is that you can easily log on to all your accounts quickly. One huge design flaw is that you can not make the top pane longer. I would like to see all my services without needing to scroll, and since I don’t really use the bottom pane, it would make sense to be able to resize it.

People

people sidebar in flock

The people sidebar is again, a great addition. On top, you can choose between the sites, and after that, you will be able to see the people associated with that account. You can also interact with the sites through here, checking messages, going to the friend request page and so on. The feature most useful for me is notification. If you have a friend request it will be shown right there in the browser, no need to visit the page itself. Similarly with messages and so on.

RSS

The RSS feed sidebar is almost exactly like Google Reader, easy to use, comfortable and conveniently simple. It shows you the number of unread items, and you can set it to makr posts read as you scroll through them. One thing it was lacking was the dynamism in which Google reader treats scrolling. Google Reader marks posts read when they reach the top.The Flock RSS reader marks an entry read when it comes into view, which is not the best for me. Otherwise this is a perfect RSS viewer, I’m even switching from Google.

Favorites

The favorites sidebar is pretty standard, it uses the same beautiful interface as the rest of the app, but as an additional feature it can show you your oinline favorites, from Del.icio.us for example.
web clipboard

Web Clipboard

This is probably the most useful feature for research and general forget-me-not-in-the-short-run stuff. It will increase your productivity a lot, since you don’t need to have an app or another tab open,just drag and drop into the sidebar. It recognizes links, images and text, and displays them in a very convenient list.

Media bar

The media bar is actually a top bar, just like a sidebar, but at the top. It shows you media streams, and will most probably be used for photos and so on. It provides a nice photo slideshow, so you may even want it open when you’re not explicitly looking at it, just for soothing’s sake.

Blog editing

Flock also has a fully featured (sort of) blog editor. I don’t really want to get into this here, but for simple blogging it is definitely enough. Blogger, Typepad and Wordpress users will be able to use it, but it is compatible with some other services as well. You can add photos, write the body, add tags and post it, but I couldn’t get it to choose categories. Perhaps a plugin can take care of that, but as is, it won’t do for me.

Misc awesomeness

There are a lot of jewels hidden inside Flock. One such example is that it natively supports simultaneous bookmarking to multiple online sites. When you bookmark a page in Flock, you can choose to add it to one or more of your online services like Del.icio.us, Magnolia and so on. All your tags and comments will be migrated as well, I tested mainly on Delicious and it works like a charm.

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There’s a great system for helping first time users get acquainted with the browser. Drop down alerts (like the pop up alerts in Firefox) drift into view when a Flock-type action is available. For example, if you log in to your Youtube account, it will ask you if you want to add it to your Flock browser. It also shows you a drop down notification every time you encounter and RSS, but thankfully you can disable all further notifications. There are three buttons next to the URL bar that light up when specific options are available. The first highlights when a media stream is present, the second one shows RSS feeds, and the third one shows search engine. Whenever you land on a page with a search engine in it, it you can add it to Flock to be able to search through that engine directly in the search field. There are numerous such little things that I am finding constantly that make my life that bit more easier and productive or organized. I’m sure I will stumble on to many more.

Interface

If you’ve been using Firefox, the interface will feel like home. The skin is pretty nice, for once I chose not to change it. The biggest difference is the toolbar position and style, which looks and acts great. The toolbar on the left is the default Flock toolbar with access to places like My World, Accounts and so on (more on this later), and the toolbar on the left is the bookmarks toolbar. What I found really useful was that I could integrate buttons and toolbars right into the default Flock toolbar, like my Stumbleupon toolbar and FireFTP button. Not a huge deal, but I was surprised at this flexibility.

Final verdict

I know it sounds weird, but I am now using Flock instead of Firefox. It has everything Firefox does, plus a LOT more, especially if you use social sites. It looks good, has great added features and is a joy to browse with. Firefox plugins of course work seamlessly, and I mean, I haven’t had so much fun browsing in ages. There are some things that could still be in here natively, like Stumbleupon and Digg support, a cool FTP client, the blogging tool could be developed (especially with Flickr being so readily available) and a lot more, but these would be just the cherry on top, the foundations are amazing. I recommend Flock to anyone and everyone.

Duly Noted
Before domain name registration, confirm the efficiency of the easycgi service. Not all who claim are dedicated servers. Only go for names like ipowerweb.

Getting in touch

Unlock Your Productivity

radio telescopeTo make it super easy for you guys to get to know me and the blog, I’ve created a load of accounts. This allows me to manage my life easily, and also to get in touch with all of you. Here is a list of some social and other sites I am a member of. Most of these accounts have just been opened, so I don’t have a whole lot to share yet, but bear with me. Feel free to add me as a friend if you drop by! I am also listing my instant messaging accounts, you can also add me there if you want and we can talk in person if you have something nice, or something horrid to say to me.

I am planning on some more accounts, I’ll keep you all updated, if you want to see me on a service I haven’t listed, let me know and I’ll sign up if I like it.

IM and Email contact

I am signed on to three accounts, MSN, AIM and Yahoo. If there will be many people contacting me through here, please excuse my inability to remember people, I’ll do my best. I have obscured the emails somewhat, for MSN and AIM you should use properly formed addresses, don’t just copy paste. Also, if you want to contact me in a personal matter, use the danielpataki email address, if you would like to say something about Hack Your Day, please use the hackyourday one.

Personal Email: dan [at-sign] danielpataki [dot-sign] com
Hack Your Day Email: daniel [at-sign] hackyourday [dot-sign] com
MSN: dan [at-sign] danielpataki [dot-sign] com
AIM: dan [at-sign] danielpataki [dot-sign] com
Yahoo: danipataki

Flickr

My Flickr account is pretty empty at the moment, but it will be updated. I do have a Picasa account as well, but I will move everything to Flickr, so you should be able to view my photos in a week or so. I enjoy “professional” photography, as much as personal, meaning that I like to experiment and try to make nice pics, as opposed to just click-click-click holiday shots.

Del.icio.us

Del.icio.us will aggregate all my favorites, including Hack Your Day articles and websites I liked. You will find everything related to Hack Your Day under the tag “hackyourday”, and all other stuff under “personal”. You can see additional categories, take a look if you have the time. Also, if you want to recommend a page or a story either for my personal interest, or for being featured on Hack Your Day, just bookmark it on your del.icio.us account with the tag “for:danielpataki” and I will take a look at it.

Facebook

I have finally set up a Facebook account too, please do take a look and don’t be afraid to add me as a friend.

Orkut

I’m quite new to Orkut, but just as with everything else, I will be updating my Orkut profile regularly, so please do add me as a friend

Youtube

Yes, I also have a Youtube account, with videos and all. I have two actually, but I’m only linking to one. I hate my user name, but since I have so many views on this, it seems a waste to scratch it. Please do subscribe, I’ll get to updating with more videos eventually.

Hack Your Day theme by Daniel Pataki from Blogtastique, content ©2008 Hack Your Day