11 June 2009 - 10:31
Spent a couple of days with
Opera 10 beta, and I have to say it's looking good. A few observations:
- The new Mac theme is serviceable—and therefore a vast improvement over the old one—although it helps if you switch the colour scheme to anything except 'None'.
- The built-in mail server works fine, almost to the point of tempting me away from my current client of choice, Postbox. If only I could figure out how to set up some rules…
- The integrated spell-checker is an essential addition; the lack of one has turned me away from Opera more than once.
- The graphical tabs are nice, but the screen estate they take up renders them almost useless to me—in contrast to OmniWeb's implementation, which places them more efficiently on the left or the right.
- I haven't yet managed to achieve full marks on the Acid3 test, on 99%. Not sure what I've got set wrong, but there you go.
- As billed, facebook runs very smoothly.
There are so many things I love about Opera: integrated ad-blocking, mouse gestures, speed dial, the ability to reopen closed tabs, and even the mail, but in the end I always end up going back to Safari / Webkit. Opera has just never felt particularly Mac-like, and that's always been disconcerting, a friction between myself and the internet. The missing dictionary was a case in point: when every single app can access the Oxford dictionary built into OS X, an app which has no dictionary access whatsoever feels unbelievably crude. Opera 10 beta has gone a long way to overcoming this, and I'm looking forward to seeing
where it goes next.
__________
Tags: internet, technology
09 June 2009 - 08:22
Snow Leopard includes the Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus second edition. New features help differentiate between easily confused words, find the right shade of meaning, provide context to select the correct word, and give you background on words through the voices of well-known authors.
As a teacher, this is one of the things I'm looking forward to most in
Mac OS X 10.6. The first edition—which is already included in 10.5—is pretty cool, but this sounds awesome.
__________
Tags: Apple, technology
25 February 2009 - 15:02
And hot on the heels of
Safari 4 beta comes the news that
OmniWeb will now be free, as The Omni Group admit that it is no longer under active development. Those of us who have been using OmniWeb for years and hoping for a radical update have suspected this for some time, and it's good to finally have it out in the open. Still, it's a great shame: OmniWeb was, and probably still is, my favourite browser; feature rich like
Opera but streamlined in a way that the latter could hardly dream of being. But the recent development made it feel more than a little sluggish; I switched back to using Safari (
Webkit, really) as my main browser some time ago, seduced by the speed and standards compliance.
I can't help thinking that maybe it would have been better if OmniWeb had just been retired completely, like Panic did with
Audion.
__________
Tags: technology, internet
24 February 2009 - 20:42

The hot issue in the Apple world is today's release of Safari 4 beta. And a cracker it is too. Fast, stylish, and standards compliant—I ran it through the Acid 3 test a few times, and it clocked in at somewhere around 1.4 seconds. Okay, I had to remove all my plug-ins to get it to launch (I've heard many people say that the problem is with the excellent Glims), but having done that it even works with the nightly builds of Webkit (at least on Mac), which is awesome to say the least.
And it's full of new features... which I can't help feeling I've seen before. Tabs on top? Most people are comparing this to Google's Chrome, but surely I've seen it before in Opera? The top sites screen? That reminds me of Opera's Speed Dial. Full page zoom? Er... Opera? Cover flow-based history search? That's History Flow from SafariStand this time. The smart search field? Glims, and the infamous Inquisitor (which I won't link to). And there may be more, but I've only be playing with S4B for a short while.
Now, I think that all of these features are great additions to a great browser. But you really do have to wonder whether imitation is the sincerest form of flattery... or something else.
UPDATE: Jason Snell on the same.
__________
Tags: technology, internet, Apple
15 February 2009 - 18:48
Finally finished reading
Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky:
Young people are taking better advantage of social tools, extending their capabilities in ways that violate old models not because they know more useful things than we do but because they know fewer useless things than we do.
and:
My students, many of whom are fifteen years younger than I am, don't have to unlearn those things, because they never had to learn them in the first place.
Unlearning is the key.
__________
Tags: internet, technology
13 February 2009 - 17:48
In the debate about whether 'bucket' applications are a
good thing or not, I'm inclined to think that computers are really just big buckets in general. I know that a tidy desk is supposed to represent a tidy mind, and I appreciate the idea that if I keep all my files organised, my productivity will increase because I'll be able to find things more quickly. Fine. But what I want—and what things like
Spotlight or
Hazel give me—is the ability to dump things somewhere, anywhere, and have the computer sort things out for me.
Take Hazel as an example. I don't use it to anything like its full potential, but I do have it set to clean up my desktop. I dump something on the desktop because I want to use it right now; after it's been there for a couple of weeks—time enough for me to file it away manually if I want—Hazel deposits it in a folder of similar files (jpgs, pdfs, and so on). Sure, organising files by type may not be the best solution. I'm sure I could spend some time with Hazel's preferences and have it tidy up more effectively. But the files
are stored logically, and I now have a tidy desktop.
In the end, the more proficient operating systems and applications become at sorting out our mess, the happier I'll be.
__________
Tags: technology, productivity