Archive for the 'software' Category

Goodbye Facebook

Not that long ago I cut off my short relationship with MySpace and switched to Facebook. I’m glad I did; my experience was much better.

I jumped on the Facebook bandwagon without really knowing how I would use it. Everyone was buzzing about it—so I joined for no better reason than to see what the fuss was all about, and to have an excuse to cancel the MySpace account.

A few weeks into it, I realized what it was good for. I could follow closely as friends and family went about their everyday lives—which was especially important for those without blogs or Twitter accounts (or those who don’t update them… ahem). It was also a great way to get back in touch with old friends from high school and college.

I used Facebook applications to import all my non-Facebook content: photos from Flickr, updates from Twitter (“What are you doing right now?”), links from del.icio.us (work and personal), blog posts as “Notes”, and events from Upcoming. It really seemed kind of silly at that point—anyone can get that data directly from those other places, so why repeat it?

A few more weeks into Facebook another pattern emerged: the people whose updates I was most interested in weren’t active enough to show on my radar. In contrast, those friends who weren’t high on my interest list updated incessantly, which got annoying fast—even with the custom News feed settings.

As for those old friends that had come back into my life… well, I like you guys and want to keep in touch, but maybe I don’t need to know all the daily details? I copied all your contact details and won’t lose them this time (I promise!).

I decided to cancel my account even before news of the Beacon catastrophe hit the interwebs, though that exposure certainly helped sealed the deal. As Jeremy Keith pointed out in Facebooked up, “the Beacon ickiness has added to my overall discomfort with Facebook.” My thoughts exactly.

Deleting the account was simple—I just followed the instructions on WikiHow. The key is to register a new Facebook account with the same email address that you used for the first one.

What did I learn from this experience? Facebook allowed me to connect with old friends, but it didn’t do enough that I couldn’t live without it. If you are on Twitter, Upcoming, Flickr, del.icio.us, or have a blog—I’ll find you and follow you. If you aren’t, drop me a line and I’ll help you get started.

Hello Facebook, Bye MySpace

Everyone needs a social life, right? I signed up for a MySpace account earlier this year, but never updated it or customized it much. To be honest, I probably was just too busy. But, it also wasn’t inviting, compelling, or easy to use, so that contributed to my mostly ignoring it besides putting up two pictures and accepting three or four friend invites.

This week I signed up for Facebook, another insanely popular (if less so) web-based social application. It’s like night and day—so much better! On MySpace, 9 out of 10 friend invitations were spam; Facebook’s invites have been mostly legitimate. The interface to add your details and customize your settings is clear and simple.

Facebook also made a great move recently by allowing third-party applications to synchronize with your account. In less than 5 minutes I had my Flickr account showing 15 random photos and Twitter updating my status. I really like the idea of reusing data or media that you have already worked hard on somewhere else (blog, photos, etc).

So, today I deleted the MySpace account permanently. No. Looking. Back.

Ubuntu

One nice thing about having a MacBook Pro, or any Intel-based Mac computer for that matter, is the ability to run multiple operating systems. Using the amazingly wonderful Parallels virtualization software I currently run Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Ubuntu-flavored Linux (all at the same time).

Last night I loaded the latest Ubuntu release and was up and surfing the web within 10 minutes with the Firefox browser within Ubuntu. Email, image editing with GIMP, you can do it all right there.

Then I came across a hilarious cartoon on xkcd.com, and had to link to it here. Hilarious!