Opera 7.5 knows RSS

Interesting. Opera 7.5 knows RSS. Pretty cool.

Opera Wins the RSS Browser Battle.

Go ahead. Download the 7.50 demo. Then, click on an RSS feed. Watch what happens. Looks like I ve got a new tool to recommend for all syndication n00bz. Yes, Robin just posted about it in this very channel, but you ve gotta see it to believe it. Mozilla and Microsoft need to pick up on this MAJOR clue.

By chris@pirillo.com (Chris Pirillo). [Lockergnome s RSS & Atom Tips]

More on OneNote and OPML

If you’re willing to install the preview service pack for OneNote, you can do this now. I’ve been running the preview SP1 for a week or so now with no problems, so I’ll be pusihing this higher on the priority list.

Say what you will about Winer, but from this user’s perspective he shows deep wisdom on the long term competitive value of supporting a small number of formats that are simple and that work. It’s so easy to fall into the lazy trap of trying to build your strategy on creating proprietary formats and trying to “lock in” your customers. If you want to understand why that’s a dumb idea, track down and watch the recent Michael Porter interview on Charlie Rose. Then think about what Porter is saying.

A picture named opml.gifWow, this is cool. The next release of Microsoft’s OneNote will import OPML outlines. Very good. Of course it should export them too. The old Microsoft would never have done this, in fact there’s an old Microsoft guy running around the syndication community, he’s one of the biggest advocates of reinventing everything just for the sake of revinvention. It takes a lot for a big company like Microsoft to adopt a format developed outside, esp one not developed at another BigCo. Thanks for setting a great example. Google, please pay attention to this. You lose nothing by keeping the number of formats small, by building on other people’s work instead of undermining it, by not being evil. You already knew that, at the top, but perhaps some of the new guys don’t understand what it means. It’s in the company prospectus. So I hope you won’t mind if we hold you to a higher standard. I assume that’s why it’s there. [Scripting News]

OneNote and outlining

More good stuff on connecting OneNote and other outlining tools and concepts.

Filling the outliner gap on Windows.

I was recently reminded of the gap on the Windows platform in really good outlining tools. I am a long-time OmniOutliner user on my Mac, and haven t really found a good, cheap, lightweight tool for managing structured outlines on Windows. According to this thread on Outliners.com, the leading candidates are probably Inspiration and NoteMap. NoteMap knows about hoisting, and Inspiration allows for some unstructured brainstorming in addition to pure outlining. But it s not apparent that either has one of the elegant simple features I would need: the ability to convert an outline into a structured to-do list (which is desperately needed for our house projects).

Enter OneNote. I ve had this app installed since I got Office 2003 but hadn t really played with it until the last few days. It uses a notebook metaphor, automatically saves notes, allows for placement of multiple text and graphics blocks on the page, and has some really good outline features, including quick and intuitive numbering mechanisms and the ability to set to-do checkboxes. No hoisting and no ability to create columns on outline items, but otherwise pretty nice.

Miscellaneous links: Andrew May has a draft MSDN article about new import features in OneNote 1.1; Josh Allen wrote an OPML importer that works with the preview of OneNote 1.1; Omar Shahine writes an RSS to OneNote PowerToy that basically allows you to easily copy items from RSS feeds to an outline for later reading.

[Jarrett House North]

Expanding the ActiveWords community

Marjolein continues to do great work with her new ActiveWords blog, AWesome. She’s started a webring for those of us who are fans of that productivity tool.

Two-fold Boost. The WebRing and my self-esteem got a boost today. Three experienced ActiveWords users were added to the WebRing. Please take the time to join too. Soliciting and organizing all this does take quite a bit of my time (my cute… [AWesome]

The 46 Best Free Utility Programs

I’m always on the lookout for useful new tools to add to my mix. This looks to have several tools I wasn’t aware of

The 46 Best Free Utility Programs.

TechSupportAlert.com provides a great list of the 46 best free utility programs.

Let’s face it, nobody likes to pay for software when no-cost alternatives are available. I can second the recommendations for several of these programs and have added a good number of programs from this list to my “must try” list.

[DennisKennedy.blog]

Waiting for Tinderbox 2 for Windows

I’ve been watching Tinderbox for a while now, even though it’s a Mac program. I once used StorySpace from EastGate and Tinderbox looks like an interesting tool for my work. I’m looking forward to the Windows version.

Tinderbox 2.2.

Tinderbox 2.2 is out. You can download a free demo. The upgrade is free if you bought Tinderbox in the last year. If not, you can get another year of free upgrades for just $70.

This is primarily an infrastructure release, paving the way for Tinderbox for Windows. But there’s plenty of great new stuff here for everyone:

  • Quick lists (like this)
  • Much faster interactive spell checking
  • Lots of new, advanced HTML export features
  • Support for richer syndication formats — both RSS and Atom

[Mark Bernstein]

Technorati macro for Radio

Something to add to my “Radio” setup here. Matt Mower up to his usual tricks. Thanks Matt and thanks Lilia for passing this along.

Technorati macro for Radio.

For Thomas and others: Radio macro to get Technorati cosmos for a post (see this post in browser for an example).

From Matt Mower via IM:

I also edited macro to display “Technorati cosmos” instead of “What other blogs are saying about this post”, you’ll find it easily in the text.

[Mathemagenic]

World's greatest Wi-Fi signal finder

Innovation continues. I have both the Kensington unit and the WFS-1, which I prefer of those two. This looks to be a definite improvement over the first generation products.

World’s greatest Wi-Fi signal finder. Glenn Fleishman got his hands on a prototype of a new, tiny, Wi-Fi signal finder, and he likes it a lot. There’s a video clip of it on his site.

Chrysalis previews their WiFi Seeker, a keychain sized device for instant Wi-Fi signal finding: Chrysalis sent me a demo unit of its just-unveiled WiFi Seeker, which they designed to differentiate 80211b/g networks from other devices. Two previous Wi-Fi signal finders fell short in ways the Seeker does not.

Link [Boing Boing]