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Posts Tagged ‘rafe-twitter’

Feedly launches a news site made just for you

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Love RSS feeds but generally unhappy about the structured systems that let you browse them? You might like Feedly, a very nontraditional approach to viewing your favorite feeds that ends up feeling a lot like portal news sites of yore, but with a tight-knit social network built in to help you discover and share new content with friends.

The service, which is currently Firefox-only (how convenient) and requires you to install a small browser plug-in, will slurp up your bookmarks, social networking log-ins, news preferences and an entire OPML file and will organize it on to various news pages. The result is something some have coined as Yahoo 2.0 with each area of interest set up as its own news section–complete with top stories that change throughout the day.

You can read entire articles and feeds without having to visit the source site. For the purists there’s also a simple button you can click to bring up each article in a light boxed window on top of the feed. In fact there are several ways to view content, either with large thumbnails and abstracts, or just headlines. My personal favorite is the thumbnail view, which doesn’t even tell you what the article is until you mouse over it, but will grab graphics from the post and present it on a large grid. Users with big screens will love this.

You can do a host of things from any story of feed you're on, including opening it up in a little light box above the page.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

To me it feels like a very early attempt at helping people categorize the mess that can become a list of bookmarks and feeds in excess of 200 sites–something most are unlikely to have. To that end Feedly’s organization is one of its strong-suits. You can go in and tweak your feeds or services at any time. It’ll also help you out with a feature called “spring cleaning” which will highlight feeds that haven’t been updated in a while–something I really wish Google Reader would do. You can then nix these feeds or simply turn them off with a simple switch. They’re even color coded with yellow, orange and red to mark the severity of the deadness. Nice.

I’m a little wary of the fact that Feedly requires you to install a browser plug-in, but for now it makes sense: once installed you get special contextual menus for content you’re viewing in Feedly. This includes a highlighter that lets you make small annotations and special options to tweak or share that feed with others. It even taps into other sites like Twitter in case you want to share what you’re reading there. My hope is that they find a workaround so that you’ll be able to access all of this from any browser, anywhere without problems.

Personally I find more value in Google Reader’s tightly organized system of viewing feeds, which resembled something a little closer to an e-mail in box, but I can see how people who like to view hot news on a single page would flock to this product. Also, the privacy and user transparency needs some work, because from the very onset you’re sharing what you’re annotating, along with feeds that you subscribe to with everyone else. It also automatically subscribes you to a grouping of feeds in Google Reader, something which is now being turned off after user complaints.

Below is a screenshot of what the service looks like once you’ve pumped it full of feeds. There’s also the three-minute demo provided by creator Edwin Khodabakchian.

Get all your news from feeds and more on one page with Feedly.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

feedly guided tour from Edwin Khodabakchian on Vimeo.

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Feedly launches a news site made just for you

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First Look video: Firefox 3

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

There’s no doubt that the browser wars are back in full swing, with updates in the past week to Opera, Songbird, and a new Flock beta.

The training wheels are finally off Firefox 3, too. If you haven’t checked out the five beta versions and three release candidates because you were worried about stability, security, and the all-important extension compatibility, take a look at the new Download.com review for the world’s most popular open-source browser, for Windows and Mac.

Want something a bit more visual? Hot off the presses, this Firefox 3 First Look video showcases new features for managing add-ons and saving passwords, the controversial “awesome bar,” and why Firefox 3 is the safest version of the browser yet.

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First Look video: Firefox 3

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Problems delay Firefox 3 launch

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Web site problems held up the launch of Firefox 3 on Tuesday.

The Get Firefox site went down near the 10 a.m. PDT launch time. Mozilla, the for-profit subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation that oversees Firefox development, said it was having technical difficulties with the site.

The redesigned Mozilla site was a hodgepodge of Firefox 3 and 2.0.0.14 versions as it crept back online.

(Credit: Mozilla)

Mozilla hopes to set a 24-hour record for most downloads with Firefox 3, but the delay shouldn’t affect that much. “The 24-hour period starts when the site goes live,” spokeswoman Melissa Shapiro said.

Update 10:51 a.m. PDT: Mozilla said in a blog posting that the site should be available “shortly.”

“The outpouring of interest and enthusiasm around Firefox 3 has been overwhelming (literally!). Our servers are currently feeling the burn and should be back to normal shortly. Download day will officially commence once the site goes live,” Mozilla said.

Update 10:57 a.m. PDT: Popular projects are tough to bring to the Web for mass download.

Mozilla is trying to set a record for Firefox 3 downloads. Site problems hampered the effort.

Mozilla is trying to set a record for Firefox 3 downloads. Site problems hampered the effort.

Ubuntu’s Feisty Fawn version of Linux was run over by Intenet traffic when it launched in 2007. Likewise, Sun Microsystems couldn’t keep up when it released the source code for OpenOffice.

Red Hat has used BitTorrent to try to distribute download pain among many interested users of its Fedora version of Linux. That’s not a great solution if you want to track your download record, though.

Update 11:17 p.m. PDT: The download page was back up for me, fleetingly–but it only showed the link for Firefox 2.0.0.14.

Update 11:20 p.m. PDT: The site is up, and the download link is working for me. Let the record attempt begin.

Update 11:30 p.m. PDT: Whoops! The download I’m getting from the download pages is still for version 2.0.0.14. I guess there’s still some work to be done.

The Mozilla page redesign has a crazy combination of Firefox 3 graphics but Firefox 2.0.0.14 files, but at least the Web site is crawling back.

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Problems delay Firefox 3 launch

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Lance Armstrong launches health and fitness site, sort of

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Lance Armstrong, the champion cyclist who was everybody’s hero until he dated Mary-Kate Olsen, is taking his LiveStrong brand to the Web much in the way that MC Hammer did with DanceJam.

Armstrong has formally partnered with Demand Media to launch LiveStrong.com, which debuted in full on Tuesday. It’s a site for keeping tabs on fitness, wellness, and weight-loss goals, along with discussion forums, editorial content, and videos–other sites in this space are Wellsphere and SparkPeople.

It’s a for-profit spinoff of Armstrong’s nonprofit Lance Armstrong Foundation, or LiveStrong.org, the cancer awareness foundation best-known for those bright yellow bracelets that were ubiquitous in the summer of 2004. Armstrong himself survived testicular cancer before going on to win seven Tour de France titles.

LiveStrong.com is operated by Demand Media, modeled off The Daily Plate, a site the company already runs; Armstrong and his charity have stakes of an undetermined amount in the new site.

The Santa Monica, Calif.-based Demand Media also owns several domain-naming services, a handful of knowledge sites like Answerbag.com, and eHow, as well as health and fitness sites like Trails.com, Run The Planet, and entertainment sites like Cracked and a number of online gaming titles.

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Lance Armstrong launches health and fitness site, sort of

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Firefox 3: Join the chat

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

The non-beta, non-release-candidate, real version of Firefox 3 is launching today. It’s an important product: The browser is not just a frame for static Web pages anymore, and hasn’t been for a long time. The browser is a platform for Web applications. For a growing proportion of users and developers, the browser is more fundamental to their use of technology than the operating system.

So I am not surprised by the interest in this new version of Firefox, and I will not be surprised at all if Mozilla meets its goal of pushing out 1 million downloads of the product. That is, if Mozilla can keep its servers up and running.

I’ve opened a Meebo chat room below for people experimenting with the new Firefox today. If you want to connect with other folks in real time about your experiences with the download or the product itself, drop in and chat.

.mcrmeebo { display: block; background:url(”http://widget.meebo.com/r.gif”) no-repeat top right; } .mcrmeebo:hover { background:url(”http://widget.meebo.com/ro.gif”) no-repeat top right; } Create a Meebo Chat Room

More: See all of CNET’s Firefox 3 coverage

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Firefox 3: Join the chat

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