October 2008 Entries



It seems Plastic Logic has shown a demo this fall of their new Plastic Logic Reader, which is a tablet which uses Electric Paper (some refer to as electric ink) which is a monochrome display which is lightweight, flexible and low power.  Here is a little more on their new reader:

 

Would be nice to have, but sure would great to have color!

http://www.plasticlogic.com/product.html




Somehow I have managed to skip the earlier betas of IE8, but yesterday I decided to give it a shot.  While the toolbars a little tacky compared to Vista’s styling, the overall impression is no hardship over IE7.  The download package of IE 8 Beta 2 comes with both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions (for those running Vista 64 or XP 64):

http://www.microsoft.com/windows/internet-explorer/beta/worldwide-sites.aspx?icid=ie8_asdf123

I did read the release notes and it said that this version of IE was incompatible with Netflix Instant Viewing of movies, but on my Vista 64 it worked fine.  You can always remove it if you have problems.

New Tab

When you click to open a new tab, it now has options for you instead of just showing a blank page:

 

ie-newtab

As you can see from the image (click on it to enlarge), you now have options for that page such as “reopen closed tabs” which shows a list sites you have recently closed in another tab and even an option to reopen the sites you last had open when you closed IE, which is great if you ever close the browser by accident :)

Tab Grouping

An interesting feature they have added is “Tab Grouping”:

IE8-TabGrouping

Tab Grouping simply highlights the tabs that you have launched of a a page.  That is, if you are on a tab and open a link into a new tab (hold down CTRL and click a link on a page) it will be highlighted with the same color of tab as the parent.  However, if you manually drag that tab to a new position on the bar, it will lose its grouping color.  It would have been better to have tab grouping such as Vista where it would have them in one tab with a drop-down list.

Searching Updated

Back when Vista Beta came out, I switched back to using IE instead of Firefox.  It had enough features for me along with having a decent RSS feed reader built it thus eliminating the need for an additional program (hassle to maintain, I am browsing, RSS feed browsing complements the experience).

When I made the switch, I hated the quick search box in the upper right of the IE frame as it appeared to be just wasted space to me, that is until I started using it and adding providers (tip, if you do not have answers.com added under that list, visit the site and then select to add that provide, VERY handy to have around).  I spend a lot of my time in that box now and seldom go to a search engine directly anymore.

In this new version of IE, there have been some major upgrades to the search box:

 SearchCompletion

As you can see, it now provides suggestions from the currently selected search engine, based on what you have typed at that point along with a selection of links that might apply from your past browsing history.  Also note that along the bottom of the drop-down menu is a list of icons show the various search providers you have installed to easily switch to a different engine.

Address Box

Similar changes have been made to the address box (where you type in a URL) although it does not appear to be based on the currently selected search engine:

IE8-UrlBox

This also adds possible matching or related links from your Favorites links.  There is also a reminder at the bottom of the keyboard shortcuts you can use one what you have typed so far.

Developer Tools

Also included in this version is an enhanced version of the IE Developer’s Toolbar:

IE8-DevTools

The functionality of this tool if far beyond the scope of this post, but a few features really seemed to jump out there.  First if the “Document Mode” drop-down that allows you to select IE 7, IE 8 and Quirks mode.  By changing this, the current window in IE will be changed to represent that document mode.  This can even be handy for those that are not technical, when the page they are visiting does not display properly.  Next to this feature is the Browser Mode which is similar functionality.

This tool also has a “pinned’" mode that embeds itself to the bottom of your browser window instead of being shown as a separate window (as above).  I personally like the separate window mode myself.

While there are a lot of other features in this new version along with enhancements to the rendering engine, the above features were what caught my attention.  Microsoft is clearly heading in the right direction!

posted @ Tuesday, October 14, 2008 3:34 AM | Feedback (0) | Filed Under: Misc  



tv1956[1]What's on TV tonight? No need to look to a limited cable, satellite or broadcast, why not pull your shows through the Internet?  Your choice, many free or small monthly fee!

NetFlix Netflix has for some time now, offered unlimited streaming video for a low monthly fee (currently only $8.99 per month unlimited online viewing and includes having one DVD out at a time via the mail).  Recently they made a deal with Starz! to offer much more content.  It is only the beginning though, expect to see more deals and more content coming down the road.

logo[1] If you want to watch your shows for free but with commercials, you can look into Hulu.  They allow you to watch many full length shows anywhere from “Chuck” or “The Fringe” down to “Woody Woodpecker” or “Alf”.  All free, but you have to put up with some advertisements.

youtube There are others in the market also, but the new guy on the block appears to be Google with YouTube, which has announced they will soon begin delivering full length shows with advertisements through their network.  For more information their announcement:

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idINN1037791320081010?rpc=44

Choices keep coming and within another year or two, I wonder how many people will have cable, satellite or antennas for entertainment..  It seems we are heading for one large pipe coming in to bring Internet and all other services running through that pipe. One monthly bill with make life a bit easier ;)




It has been a number of months since I checked into browser stats.  After doing the rounds of my sites and found IE is slipping fast and Firefox is closing in on the leading browser.  Here are the stats from one of my non-Microsoft centric sites:

55.45 % IE
37.13 % Firefox
3.08 % Chrome
2.32 % Safari
1.44 % Opera

That is a big shift from the past where IE had 85% of the market.  While Firefox has moved to be the real contender to IE, it is worth noting how in only being available for about a month, Google’s Chrome has already supplanted Opera and Safari.

While different sites had a small variation from the above stats they were still quite close and IE never topped 56% which is a massive loss of market share.  Even with that percentage, almost 30% of those using IE where still using IE 6, which has vast rending flaws.

Microsoft needs to get their heads out of the “clouds” and get to work in making sure IE 8 is ready for primetime or they will find themselves in the minority of market share even though they have the majority by Operating System.