Tag Archives: Google Chrome

Tips for managing your Google+ stream…

Over the past few months, I have moved most of my social networking from Twitter to Google+. I like the longer, more graphical posts provided by the Google+ format, and while people are sharing a lot of links, they are also writing extended commentary on those links that the Twitter character limit doesn’t allow. Because the comments are right underneath the post, it is also possible to have extended conversations about a post. But Google+ doesn’t seem to have the detritus, the meaningless conversations or the commercial flotsam of Facebook (at least not yet). You can follow me on Google+ here.

However, as more people have joined the network, I have noticed how much harder it is to keep up with all the content flowing in. You can add people to circles divided by subjects of interest, but all that content is still pumped into your main stream. If you follow any particularly prolific posters, it can soon become overwhelming.

That’s why I was glad I discovered the Plus Minus extension for Google Chrome. This handy tool lets me control via simple checkboxes which circles contribute content to my main stream. Whenever I log onto Google+, only the posts that come from the people who are most important to me show up on the main page. Another useful tool provided by Plus Minus is the ability to “shrink” posts, so that I can hide what I’ve already read or what I’m not interested in just by clicking an arrow.

Now that I can control the firehose of posts going into my main stream, I found that it was also necessary to control my reading. Otherwise, I’d browse Google+ all day and never do anything else. I created circles around my primary interests, such as news, geeky stuff, cooking, politics and books. I assigned each circle a day of the week, and on that day, I only pick posts from its corresponding circle to read. This helps me focus on the reading rather than feeling like I have to wade through an ocean of content.

As for posting, I try to post one or two public items per day so that potential followers know what kind of content I’m sharing. For the rest, I try to confine posting to that circle of interest. Personal posts typically are limited to friends and family. This takes advantage of Google+’s most powerful feature: circles. If you are in my Geeks circle, you’ll only see my science and tech posts; you won’t be bothered by cooking or political content. Of course, many people occupy multiple circles. Fortunately, when I shrink a post in one circle using the Plus Minus extension, it stays closed across all circles, so I don’t see it multiple times.

With Plus Minus, Google+ has become more fun and more manageable. I definitely prefer the content I’m seeing there to what can be found on Twitter, which isn’t meaty enough, or Facebook, which usually isn’t relevant to me. Of course, if I still want to share on other networks, there is a service for that: Plusist. It automates posting of public Google+ items to either Facebook or Twitter, or both.

Google is still taking over the world…

My husband recently opted to get the Android phone over the iPhone. He loves it, especially how it integrates with all his other Google stuff. Now he can email me, chat with me on Google Talk, snoop on my Google calendar, all from his phone. He hasn’t looked at me since he got it. He sends me tweets from the same couch I’m sitting on. I think he wants to marry his phone.

The point is, Google keeps doing neat-o stuff and releasing it for little dollars, and that means that Google is slowly taking over the world. We’ll wake up one morning and find that Google has awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to itself. And we won’t care, as long as Gmail is up.

I personally use iGoogle as my home page, Gmail for email, Google Talk for chat, Google Calendar to manage my schedule, Google Reader for reading websites, Chrome for web browsing and Google Docs for all my documents. I have set up my Google Profile so people can find my online stuff easier. Google even helps me track the swine flu. Once the Chrome OS comes out, I will strongly consider ditching Windows. Google Wave does not seem like it will be the game changer everyone thought it would be, but it’s probably a nifty little program that I would definitely use if I actually collaborated with anyone. All in all, Google owns my ass.

And I don’t care. Should I? I’m not sure. Google messes up occasionally, as they did with the iGoogle redesign last year, and as far as I can tell, they do not believe in customer support, at least not for their non-paying customers. But all of their software does a good job, it’s free, it’s easy and it plays well together. By the time we figure out the downside, it will probably be much too late…

P.S. LifeHacker offers up seven easy ways to integrate your Googled world and free tools to back up your Googled data.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Say hello to my little friend…

Isn't it shiny?

Isn't it shiny?

So I recently bought me an Asus EEE netbook, one of the cool blue seashell ones. I don’t know about you, but whenever I make a major purchase (major meaning > $100), I first like to list the goals that I hope to accomplish with said purchase. That’s just how I roll. Here were my goals for the netbook:

  1. Primarily for reading blogs, email, Twitter, Facebook — check
  2. Lets me shop online or aimlessly surf the web from the couch — check
  3. Sits on the kitchen table for most of the day without running out of battery power — check
  4. Is easily schlepped around — check

Yes, the EEE meets all these goals admirably. Especially the battery thing. I haven’t dipped below 85% remaining yet, as far as I know. It kicks my old HP’s battery to the curb. That old thing couldn’t even play one YouTube video without gasping for breath.

Because the EEE is so teeny, and therefore RAM and hard drive space are at a premium, I made several modifications out of the gate, which I highly recommend. First, I immediately upgraded the RAM to 2GB. It is handy if you have a computer geek friend with a collection of tiny screwdrivers for this task, because that little door on the bottom of the computer is not easy to get off, let me tell you. I saw an immediate improvement in blog loading and especially video playing time once the memory was increased, so I would say this is a necessary step.

I only intend to use the netbook for web applications, so I also uninstalled all application bloat that I know I wouldn’t be needing, like Internet Explorer and the Microsoft Office trial. Here’s a nice checklist for optimizing the EEE. I did everything except compressing the hard drive, since it seemed like opinion was divided on whethere this was worth doing in the EEE forums.

I wanted a lightweight browser, so I selected Google Chrome, which does a good job of maximizing screen space and not overloading memory. Chrome has a few quirks, though. If you customize the XP desktop, checkboxes in web pages disappear, for one; also, there is no one-click subscription to RSS feeds in Google Reader for some insane reason. But I quickly found workarounds to these.

All in all, the EEE was a good purchase that meets my specific needs. I will not be using it as my primary computer for tasks like writing, managing my finances or editing photos, and I think anyone who tries to do those things on a netbook will quickly become frustrated. But the EEE finally lets me surf unplugged, and that is well worth the price of admission. I don’t even mind that it shows every single fingerprint.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]