Monthly Archive for May, 2006

Krun.ch your heart out

Thank God for these stubborn farmers back in the 14th century, who no longer wanted to be ruled over by some decadent Austrian Lords. Today they constitute Switzerland, and their Latin name, Confoederatio Helvetica, not only makes for a nice international license plate code (CH), but also for a nice top level domain (.ch).

To this stroke of luck we owe Krun.ch:

krunch

We don’t of course owe Krun.ch to the fact that Switzerland exists, but there’s a good chance that the service would have had another name, were it not for the great .ch TLD of Switzerland. Which is my cue to actually start telling you what the service is about, and quit talking crap about my dear neighbours.

Well, Krun.ch is all about compressing and uncompressing files. Which until now always was a service strictly confined to the desktop. Krun.ch lets you upload a compressed archive and the uncompress it, or upload a few files and then compress them into an archive.

zip

But, and if you may please excuse my use of this buzz-word, the killer-feature is Krun.ch’s compressing and uncompressing of files found on the Internet. Yes, that’s right, just locate a compressed archive of files, or files you’d like to compress, point Krun.ch to them, and voila, it’s all compressed or uncompressed, right there in your browser.

krunch webfiles

There’s a 10MB and 10 file limit on archives, the supported compressions are .zip, .rar and .tar.gz, the compressed or uncompressed files will be available for 24 hours after you’ve done the krunching, and, when signed-up and logged-in, you can actually have them mail you your krunched files.

All in all it’s a really solid affair, as it’s not only hugely helpful for some quick compression work (especially of stuff online), but also simple enough so everybody and their grandma will know how to use it.

This service really should be included in ITRedux’ Office 2.0 list. Krun.ch is exactly what Office 2.0 apps should be like. Lean, mean and immediately usable.

Fo.rtuito.us

Yet another chapter has been added to the neverending story of dotted startup names:

fortuitous

Fo.rtuito.us
not only jump into that market (which can be quite profitable, if you’ve decided to call your startup del.icio.us), but try to munch off the cake that’s social networking as well. Their idea? Well, it’s summed up nicely on their frontpage:

What would happen if we no longer used things like looks, age, sex and nationality to decide if we would try and become freinds [sic] with a person?

This sounds like a nice concept, and I’m pretty sure it will work greatly for the one second until you’re prompted to upload your picture when signing up. Because after you’re signed up, some stranger’s picture is displayed to you, and you can decide to contact them or not. So in reality, instead of abolishing these boundaries cited above, they’re reinforcing people’s preconceptions by giving them a picture and nothing else.

Michael Arrington of course wrote about them first and even provided them with a quote for their frontpage (”fo.rtuito.us is serendipity on steroids”), but didn’t notice the irony behind the concept.

So I guess Fo.rtuito.us is not much more than a “hot-or-not” service, thinly veiled as a social networking service.

From Bloglines to Rojo - and back

Ever since I started using RSS to keep up with the blogs and news sites I read every day, I’ve been using Bloglines. The reasons are simple: it’s easy to use, it’s fairly quick (although there have been some issues in the past) and it’s web-based, so I can access it from any computer I like. In between I’ve tried out desktop based readers, but since I’m doing most of my work in Linux, there’s not much of a choice here. aKregator is the default reader for KDE, and although it’s an excellent desktop feedreader, the fact that I’m switching computers once in a while has always turned me off desktop apps. Unless there’s synchronisation with web-based service involved, I won’t be using on of the local apps anytime soon.

Well, lately I’ve been getting a bit fed up with Bloglines. While I’m still satisfied with the things they offer (for free!), I’ve been hearing and reading a lot about Rojo. Rojo is another web-based feedreader, and it offers all sorts of features I think I’d like to use. During the last few months, I’ve tried using Rojo a few times. I uploaded my OPML, tagged my feeds (a feature non-existent in Bloglines, unfortunately) and started using. But my tries never lasted longer than a day or two. Why? Well, take a look at what I see when I open up the sites in my browser:

Bloglines

This is Bloglines. It may look overly spartan, ugly even, but the interface is rather clean, and with one quick glance, I’ve got a nice overview of the situation.

Rojo

And this is Rojo. The left column, which ideally should allow me to quickly see what is going on, is extremely cluttered. In contrast to Bloglines, Rojo always displays certain items from my feeds on the front-page, something I don’t really need nor like, mainly because I want to decide myself what to read first.

But Rojo does have many features Bloglines doesn’t, and that’s why I keep coming back, seeing if maybe my cluttered-frontpage threshold of pain has changed since my last try. Rojo offers a lot for the socially inclined. You can “mojo up” a story, thereby feeding an algorithm that allows certain items to be displayed more prominently than others. They are also into tags a lot, something Bloglines isn’t.

Rojo is by far the feedreader with the most features. And this, quite frankly, is also its problem. It’s being dragged down by the weight of its features, providing not only an overkill in features, but also a cluttered, slow interface. Bloglines on the other hand doesn’t give a damn about new features, risking frustration by long-time users, but also giving them a reason to not stray for longer than a few days (like me).

I will stay with Bloglines until Rojo stops adding features and starts concentrating on speed and readability.




Tech.Stormgrass is powered by WordPress 2.5 and K2