Archive for the 'Browsers' Category

Google Browser Sync

Once in a while, Google issues things that are really quite surprising. A couple of weeks back, that little surprise was the Google Browser Sync, an extension for popular open source browser Mozilla Firefox.

Google Browser Sync

While there are extensions like Foxclouds’ Foxmarks that let you synchronise your locally stored bookmarks to various other installations of a browser, Google attempts to go all the way and lets you sync not only your bookmarks, but also your cookies, saved passwords, open tabs and history.

Now, this is a rather complete approach. And it’s a bit problematic as well. Why? Well, it took years and years to lecture people about the necessity of securing a computer when accessing the web. And suddenly there’s a company like Google issuing a tool that not only sends your settings all through the web whenever you open up your browser, it also stores all that information online.

While I’m sure that Google does their damnest to secure user accounts, I’m also well aware of the fact that people will always be people. In an age when phishing has become a common threat to people’s security, giving out a Google account password to a malicious stranger is something that can and will happen to loads of people. Once that password is out, in a worst case scenario, the victim is now confronted with a compromised account including an e-mail account, search histories, bookmarks, saved passwords, cookies, adsense details, etc.

That threat of a compromised online identity has of course existed before the advent of Google’s syncing extension, but to pick up one of the Freaconomics themes, the incentive for the bad guys has just become a lot stronger.

I wouldn’t be me, had I not a thing about interoperability to add.
Firefox is a cross-OS browser, meaning I can use it on Linux and Windows. This is great, and Google’s synchronisation extension is a nice tool to keep all my stuff together. It is a bad tool if it doesn’t properly work with Linux. And well, that’s the case here.

Using Firefox 1.5 in a KDE environment, Google sync is unable to sync and dies after trying to upload my stuff. I tried syncing just my bookmarks, or cookies, or history, none worked. Considering Google’s vast infrastructure, being unable to cope with my preferences seems a tad baffling.

Flock - new milestone out

Flock, the social browser that’s built on the foundation of everyone’s darling browser Mozilla Firefox, has just released a new version. This milestone release 16 is already packing a heap of the improvements that will also be in the Beta release that’s soon to come (according to their website).

I’m not really sure how many of the things I noticed in this release already were in earlier versions (in one format or another), but I’m just going to point out what I noticed after some time playing with this version.

The first thing I noticed was their tight RSS integration. Just click the feed icon that appears automatically as soon as a page has a feed, and the feed can then be added to Flock’s built-in newsreader. While I’m not really a big fan of local newsreaders (which this is, unless there’s some way of syncing that to some server), but I’m sure this is by far the easiest solution out there for RSS first-timers:

flock feedreader

Another feature that’s pretty unique to Flock (albeit not to this release), is their tray…drag and drop text and pictures into it for later usage. It can be activated simply by clicking a little icon in the status-bar:

the tray

This can come in very handy when researching for a blog post or other areas where research is necessary (damn, that reminds me of that paper I should be researching right now).

Finally, there’s the photobar:

flock photos

Now, I could get all excited about this feature, and while it’s really nicely implemented, letting you upload to and view your Flickr stream from inside Flock, I can’t see any immediate use for it. I mean, uploading to Flickr is nice, but there are various solutions, not least upload tools for any kind of OS, that are a lot more versatile. And well, I don’t necessarily need to look at my Flickr photos from within the browser I’m using, if in fact I can just use that browser to go to my Flickr account (and be able to leave comments, search, and do whatever the real Flickr page lets you do). Still, a nice toy.

Finally, there’s an issue that still isn’t resolved in this version. Apparently, Linux and Mac versions of Flock can’t deal with Greasmonkey scripts anymore. Greasemonkey, that extensions that allows for an extremely versatile surfing experience, boasts an impressive number of scripts and which for some people has become almost indispensable. So, when trying to install a script in Flock (on Linux or Mac, I’m on Linux), that’s what you get:

flock error

The Flock team actually addressed this issue on the Greasemonkey extension page, but there’s still no word about when they are planning to make Greasemonkey work for Flock again.




Tech.Stormgrass is powered by WordPress 2.5.1 and K2