May. 4th, 2008

hand on head, default

After Quicken?

Web-forward people, particularly iPhone users, what’s the next thing after Quicken? Mint? Wesabe? Quicken online? I’ve tried all of these, and I have some complaints about each. Quicken no longer affords me the convenience it used to before I had an iPhone, when I used Pocket Quicken on my Treo to record expenses as I transacted them and could sync them up back at my laptop whenever. Now I have a stack of receipts piling up and no motivation to do anything with them, but I miss the granular visibility I used to have into my finances when that system was working well for me.

So what now?

Originally published at The Bee Hive. You can comment here or there.

Mar. 16th, 2008

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This blog now iPhone-ready

beehiveblog-iphonetheme.pngThanks to the fine folks at ContentRobot, this blog is now equipped with an iPhone-ready theme. If you view www.honeybowtie.com/blog from an iPhone, it will automatically show up in a minimalist iPhone format.

And thanks to Dan Dickinson’s simple explanation, the whole honeybowtie.com site now has a custom webclip icon if you add it to your home page.

Whee!

Originally published at The Bee Hive. You can comment here or there.

Sep. 6th, 2007

treo, palm

Schadenfreude: Palm shuts down Foleo

From Palm's own blog (emphasis mine):

In the course of the past several months, it has become clear that the right path for Palm is to offer a single, consistent user experience around this new platform design and a single focus for our platform development efforts. To that end, and after careful deliberation, I have decided to cancel the Foleo mobile companion product in its current configuration and focus all of our energies on delivering our next generation platform and the first smartphones that will bring this platform to market. We will, of course, continue to develop products in partnership with Microsoft on the Windows Mobile platform, but from our internal platform development perspective, we will focus on only one.


It's a good move, really, since neither I nor anyone I regularly read could make any sense of what purpose the Foleo was really supposed to serve.

From Valleywag:

For years now, Palm cofounder Jeff Hawkins has been promising his company will come up with "a new product category" -- some leap of the imagination, akin to the original PalmPilot handheld organizer, that will define an entirely new submarket of gadgets. The Treo smartphone was, genuinely, such an advance. And the way Hawkins talked up the Foleo, the lightweight, underpowered Linux laptop he revealed at the D: All Things Digital conference earlier this year, you'd have thought it, too, was a real breakthrough. Hawkins may have fooled himself, but he fooled no one else, including, at long last, Palm's own management.


Sucks to be Jeff. I mean it. Palm did genuinely innovate with the Treo line, which RIM countered by adding phone capabilities to the Blackberry line. And then Apple comes along with the iPhone and seals the deal.

But if Palm is saying they need to focus on one platform only, I do hope it's Palm OS. I've never gone in for the Windows handheld devices, and if Palm abandons its own operating system, they might as well marry this early adopter and longtime loyal customer off to Apple.

ETA: Treehugger weighs in with a differing perspective.

Aug. 31st, 2007

hand on head, default

Image resizing technique

This is a really cool demonstration of a technique for image resizing that respects what is designated as the main focus area or areas of an image. Some of the illustrations get a little freaky, in the sense that this is just not how we’re used to thinking about visual scale. But it’s clear that there could be incredibly useful applications of this approach in any kind of content delivery — especially those that are platform-agnostic, like news and media web sites, as well as e-commerce.

Anyway, check it out.

Originally published at The Bee Hive. You can comment here or there.

Nov. 11th, 2006

hand on head, default

Standalone news reader for Windows?

Originally published at The Bee Hive. Please leave any comments there.

On my Mac, I use NetNewsWire for all my RSS needs, and I love it. I’ve tried a few RSS reader plugins for Firefox on my work-issued PC, but I don’t like any of ‘em. Can anyone recommend a free or inexpensive standalone news reader for Windows, ideally very similar to NetNewsWire?

hand on head, default

July 2008

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