As time goes by, my titles become more and more descriptive. By reading only the headline, you actually already know the gist of it, so you might as well move on.
Unless of course you don’t have a clue what box.net is, what GMail does and what the hell a 3rd party app constitutes. In which case I’ll gladly clear that up for you.
Box.net is an online storage service (meaning you upload stuff to their servers, so you can access it from wherever you are). They’ve been around for ages (meaning around two years, which in web2.0 terms is more than just ages, it’s eons). They provide a stable service, and over time have added new features like the ability to share your files with others, hence creating a social-network based on the sharing of your files. And a short while back they opened up their platform, allowing other applications to be used with the files uploaded to box.net. One such example is the integration of picnik.com, a webbased image editor (also the official editing tool for Flickr).
And today they announced support for not only Outlook (which hopefully will perish sometime in the next five years) but also GMail (which hopefully will take over the world within the next five years).
What does that mean for you, the user? It means you’ll now be able to upload files to box.net and then send them to other people via GMail (or Outlook). Which is not exactly how it works, as box.net doesn’t exactly make GMail send the file, it just automates the process of publishing the file and then sending the link to the file to someone else. Fair enough.
So while that doesn’t sound like a revolutionary new service, it makes life a bit easier, which, in the end, is the only thing we expect from the web.
And I’ve upgraded to Wordpress 2.5. It was actually a lot less painful than my latest upgrade, mainly because I had the foresight to actually read up on possible conflicts (something I of course couldn’t have done the other times I upgraded and totally borked my system).
Anyway, K2 behaves nicely with WP2.5, even though I can’t use the K2 sidebar manager. Which really isn’t that much of a problem, considering that I can’t see any difference between built-in sidebar widgets and the K2 sidebar widgets.
All in all, good stuff. The WP2.5 backend really is a touch nicer to look at, even though there’s no revolutionary change discernible. I guess that’ll have to wait for 3.0 release.
Hulu, the much hated then much hyped, now much, well, online, video website has officially launched.
But, and this holds true for everyone residing outside the US, they won’t actually show me any clips. Which renders it totally useless and an utter failure in my book. Over at Mashable, Stan Schroeder comes to the same conclusion, writing:
And you know what? As a user, I don’t care what the reasons for this are. I don’t care about copyright. For me, the site doesn’t work, and that means it has absolutely zero value. The Internet knows no boundaries; if you try to set up artificial ones you’re going to fail, period.
I totally agree. Even though the website explicitly states that they only cater to US-residents, there’s still no need to laud that. It’s an infliction brought to us by the abomination that’s international copyright law that websites that actually offer content suitable for international audiences, like video, can’t do so.
Hulu’s main goal was to counter the unauthorized use of copyrighted content on sites like YouTube or DailyMotion. Well, they won’t have much luck in that regard, the way they are doing business now.
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