Nocs: a Notepad replacement with a twist October 4, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Google, Notes, Software, Sync.add a comment
In my never-ending quest to find the perfect note-taking application, I stumbled across nocs, a lightweight application very similar to Windows Notepad that can be used for taking text notes on the fly; the catch is that your notes are saved into Google Docs, with the option of encrypting them to. After testing, I found that nocs was very fast and easy to use, it took up very little system resources, and it was good that my notes were saved online because if my hard drive broke, I’d lose them, and it means I can sync my notes between PCs.
However, nocs does lack a little in a few places; the notes are saved in an obscure spreadsheet format in Google Docs, making them unreadable through a browser, and as of yet there’s no Mac client. Notes can’t be read offline, and at the moment it’s only focusing on plain text notes, but in the future we might see nocs develop further.
All in all, I’d recommend nocs for a quick replacement to Notepad, but it’s still in its early days yet.
Scan Gmail’s spam for false positives September 23, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Email, Gmail, Google.add a comment
Gmail’s spam folder works excellently for me, but it was only since I read this article that I realised that there were legitimate emails slipping into the spam folder.
Labnol writer Amit points out that with an easy to construct filter, you can scan Gmail’s spam folder for messages specifically addressed to your name, so you can pull out messages that look like they should have been delivered to you. Admittedly, some spam can be returned to the inbox using this method, but if you have too much spam in your junk folder to personally look through, have a go at this filter as it may be able to take the hard work of checking Gmail spam for you.
[http://www.labnol.org/internet/scan-gmail-junk-folder/9904/]
GMail IMAP – a Thunderbird fix August 3, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Email, Google, Mozilla, Software.2 comments
GMail gets used on a day to day basis by not only me, but a good lot of people on the internet. And although that there’s been a decline in the use of desktop email recently, Thunderbird still has its fans, including me.
However, a while back I encountered a rather irritating issue in Thunderbird, and I assume it’s similar for other desktop clients using GMail; my spam messages were treated as new mail, so Thunderbird would alert me when there was no new email, and because I receive a large volume of junk emails each day, it was becoming rather cumbersome. And to frustrate me even more, if I deleted email from the spam folder in Thunderbird, it’d be moved to the trash folder and not removed properly. I could have unsubscribed from the IMAP folder, but that would have meant losing the ability to send messages to the spam folder from within Thunderbird
Fortunately, GMail’s filters helped me craft a server-side solution to this annoying problem. I created a filter to match the criteria of having the words in:spam and marking such emails as unread. That way, Thunderbird never sees them as new messages, I could still send messages to the spam folder through my client, and GMail would clear it out for me on a regular basis; spam became literally ‘out of sight, out of mind’.
HowTo: Read your Google Reader feeds in Thunderbird April 18, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Email, Extensions, Google, HowTo, Mozilla, Websites.7 comments
As an avid user of both Thunderbird and Google Reader on multiple computers, I’ve searched high and low, all over the internet for a solution to synchronise Thunderbird’s RSS feeds with Google Reader; adding my feeds into Thunderbird’s reader would be no good, as I’d have double updates on both of my machines.
Lifehacker had already posted a way to do this in Outlook, but Thunderbird doesn’t have the folder home page functionality that its Microsoft counterpart does, so that route was a dead end.
Fortunately, inspired by Lifehacker, I’ve discovered a way to embed a mobile version of Google Reader into my favourite email client, and it is simple and clean to use, and does not overtake the user interface. Here is how it can be achieved.
- Firstly, download and install the Thunderbrowse extension and CS Lite into Thunderbird; Thunderbrowse is a tool to embed a web browser into Thunderbird, and CS Lite is used to manipulate the cookies from Google Reader.
- Next, open your Thunderbird preferences on the ‘General’ tab. Make sure the box labelled “When Thunderbird launches, show the Start Page in the message area” is checked, and that the location field points to http://www.google.com/reader/i/. If you are unsure, check out this image on how it should look.

This tells Thunderbrowse that the page it should load on startup is the mobile interface for Google Reader, which a streamlined version of its full web counterpart. - After configuring Thunderbird’s start page, it’s time to set up Thunderbrowse to make Google Reader work. Navigate to the Add-ons menu, and open the preferences for Thunderbrowse. On the ‘Content’ tab, make sure that “Enable SmartJavascript?” is checked, and click Ok to save; this allows Thunderbrowse to run JavaScript which is used in Google Reader.
- Similarly, open the preferences for the CS Lite extension, and on the ‘Global’ tab, select “Allow cookies globally” from the drop-down box. If you don’t do this, Google Reader will complain that it can’t set cookies and it won’t work, so don’t skip this step!
- Restart Thunderbird. You may need to log in to Google Reader in the window that’s presented to you, but after doing so, you’ll have a section like this, displaying your new feeds in the message pane.

Hooray! Obviously, the mobile version lacks some of the functions as the full version, but it’s too cluttered to embed it into Thunderbird, and the menus overlay each other, making it almost impossible to use. Essentially, any webapp could be added to Thunderbird, so lovers of Google Calendar or Remember The Milk can take full advantage of their mobile versions in Thunderbird.
[http://lifehacker.com/5187172/use-google-reader-from-within-outlook]
[https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/5373]
[https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/5207]
The solution to Notes? September 23, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Articles, Creations, Email, Gmail, Google, Notes, Sync, Theoretical.4 comments
Maybe this’ll be the solution to my notes dilemma?
Things I used:
Is it really that simple? Here’s what I did.
- Created a ‘Notes’ folder in my GMail account. Set it as the default templates folder in Thunderbird.
- Created a plus sign GMail address, and a GMail filter to put all email to here in the Notes folder.
- Write my note in a new email. A sample one might look like this:
To: Me+notes@someone.gmail.com
Subject: @Music @Money @ToDo
Message: Ask Dan about that £10 I lent him – maybe use it to buy tickets for that Gig?
Now, to save the note, either hit the send button, or save it as a ‘template’ in Thunderbird.
Checklist: Offline access? Yup, through iMap I can access the notes offline. Online web access? Yeah, just log in through GMail. Portability? Of course! Email can go anywhere, so I can have my notes on any platform, sync’d whenever I need them. Features? Uh huh, the subject line acts as tags, and I can search the notes through GMail’s powerful search front-end. I also have permanent notes (when I send the email) and ongoing editing notes (by saving them as templates). I can embed HTML into them, too.
Ok, it ain’t perfect…yet. It’s the best solution I have so far, and I intend to stick to it for a while – Google are managing my email, my calendar, my search, my photos, and now my notes!
Browser wars: Turning Firefox into IE8 and Chrome September 7, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Firefox, Google, Microsoft, Mozilla, Software, Tools.3 comments
I have to be honest – I was impressed by some of the new features showed by Google Chrome and IE8. There I said it! Yup, I was wowed by a Micro$oft product, don’t laugh. However, I swear by Firefox, and was in two minds about switching – why leave the browser I love just for some features, wait, do I choose Chrome or IE8?
After some digging, I found I didn’t have to. Here’s a roundup of the best extensions to have features from IE8 & Chrome in Firefox:
- Accelerators in IE8, those little shortcuts to web services, can be exactly replicated by IE8 Activities for Firefox – remember to install accelerators here afterwards! For the more technical minded, have a look at Operator, which focuses on Microformats to provide a similar – but more advanced – experience; as with the activities, check here to find Operator user scripts. I much prefer Operator and would recommend it, but for simple accelerators, IE8 Activities for Firefox will do fine.
- Webslices manifests as Webchunks in Firefox. How d’ya use it? Just install it, and when you land on a Webslice enabled page, Webchunks will alert you and let you subscribe to it in a special toolbar. That’s all you gotta do! You can easily keep an eye on your ’slices with a click, and the toolbar will change to visually alert you when there’s an update. Have a look at eBay’s Webslice search portal, and StumbleUpon’s Buzz Webslice.
UPDATE: Webchunks has been updated, with a function now better than the original. You can now subscribe to any part of a webpage, regardless if it’s a coded Webslice or not. Get the latest version here. - You may think that Chrome’s new tab interface is cool, but the original idea was actually stolen from Opera! To put it into FireFox, check out Speed Dial and Auto Dial, two extensions that work in different ways to fill blank tabs with something useful.
- The smart location bar is better known as the Awesome Bar to us Firefoxians. To add domain highlighting, install Locationbar², and site-specific browsing from Chrome can be put in a more workable form in Firefox courtesy of YubNub LocationBar (read more about how to use YubNub here), or manually add Quick Searches for your favourite sites.
- Incognito/InPrivate mode isn’t exactly reproduced for Firefox (yet), but for now we have Stealthier, an extension that disables certain browser features that leave tracks; it ain’t pretty but it works, for even more protection combine it with Tor and TorButton.
- Whilst individual tab isolation isn’t available yet, we can remove permissions from certain tabs. Tab Permissions will let you selectively remove access to Images, JavaScript, MetaRedirects, Plug-ins and Subframes, so you can take away things that will crash a tab until we get the power to separate tabs.
- Application Shortcuts, a cool feature from Chrome, sounds a lot like Prism, a project from Mozilla Labs which lets users run Webapps right from the desktop. For that streamlined creation in-browser, install Prism on your system, then add the Prism extension (Windows only) or the Spectrum Bookmarklet (cross platform). These webapps don’t get automatic offline functionality like Chrome’s unfortunately, but with Gears you can get offline access to some apps in the browser.
- Like the SmartScreen feature of IE8, which is called Safe Browsing in Chrome? This one’s baked into Firefox! Just pop open the Security Tab in Firefox’s options and make sure the options to tell you if a site is an attack site and forgery are checked. Easy as.
- Finally, Firefox’s download window can be moved into the status bar with the Download Statusbar extension. It’s not as aesthetically pleasing as Chrome’s implementation, but it does the job.
It’s surprising how fast the Firefox developer community has responded to the features from the latest browsers, although some of these features were around before Chrome and Internet Explorer hard coded them in.
Is it possible that Firefox will be able to pull of these features better? How will it affect the browser shares? Stick around to find out.
WordPress gets Turbo, with Gears July 7, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Blogroll, Code, Google, Software.add a comment
I blog on WordPress. I worship Google Gears.
So what happened when the two fused?
Unfortunately, there’s no offline blog access.
However, WordPress makes an intriguing use of Gears that hasn’t been done before.
It downloads dashboard components to the Gears storage, speeding up access to them, so general admin & posting on the blog is faster. It’s better than native caching because it won’t get cleared on browser exit.
Hopefully, this will see the creation of a plethora of unique uses for Gears.
Browser Sync is dead. Long live Weave! June 15, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Google, Internet, Software, Sync, Tools, Websites.add a comment
Google has announced that Browser Sync will be dropped with the release of Firefox 3, so many people are stuck for an alternative.
It’s a shame that this is happening – Browser Sync was useful, but evidently deemed not important.
Luckily, Mozilla are developing a new tool to fill the gap – and more.
It’s called Weave, and as you’d expect by the name, it ‘weaves’ multiple browsers together.
It’s possible to synchronize Bookmarks, History, Cookies, Passwords, Form data, and soon, Tabs, Extensions, Themes, Microformats, and Search Plugins.
Similar to Browser Sync, you can encrypt your data with a PIN as well as your password, but there is also support for using a different server to store your data, which makes Weave more open. The source code is readily available online.
[http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2008/06/google-browser-sync-to-be-discontinued.html]
[https://services.mozilla.com/]
Offline Notes with GearPad May 21, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Code, Google, Sync, Tools.add a comment
As the name suggests, GearPad is infused with the power of Google Gears.
The no-nonsense site allows you to store plain text notes and access them from anywhere – as a bonus, you can sync ‘em offline.
If only Google build this into Google Notebook, that would be really useful.
It’s opensource – if you want to run and serve your own you can.
[http://aaronboodman.com/gearpad/]
[http://code.google.com/apis/gears/sample.html] Source
Reader meets Notepad May 6, 2008
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Google, Software, Tools, Web 2.0.add a comment
Logged onto Google Reader this morning to check my feeds.
I get a dialogue asking me to refresh for a new feature.
Ok.
I now have a Notes section in Google Reader.
I guess I could use it for writing follow ups to news items, my thoughts, what I was going to etc.
Cool stuff Google.
[http://googlereader.blogspot.com/2008/05/share-anything-anytime-anywhere.html]






