End of an Era – RIP Geocities October 26, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Internet, Websites.add a comment
As of today, Yahoo! are pulling the plug on Geocities; it’s kind of sad to see these websites disappear into nothing, as some were – albeit corny – quite interesting to visit. Of course, Archive.org will always exist with backups of your favourite Geocities, and for ones that are still up, you can copy them to your hard drive with tools like HTTrack.
This marks the end of the 1990s internet – scrolling text, flashing banners, webrings, counters and guestbooks. Geocities used to be divided categorically into ‘neighbourhoods’, but a majority of what it hosted was always tacky personal pages, which will be missed by all.
Twitter Proxies? May 11, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Clippings, Internet, Twitter, Websites.add a comment
Many people may find that Twitter is blocked by their corporate network, as I did today, and it got me thinking; most proxy sites are already blocked by my network, and I don’t have the privileges to install software (such as Tor) or change proxy settings in the browser, so how can I tweet?
And then it dawned on me – there are numerous websites which use the Twitter API to send messages, so why not harness one of them?
Twuffer, which is used to send delayed tweets, is a good one, as you can tell it to send the message now, but you can’t read tweets, only send them. I also had a look at TwitterGadget, which can be integrated into any gadget site that isn’t blocked (GMail, iGoogle, NetVibes etc.) so you can tweet from a website you know, and read your own tweets, too.
Has anybody else found good Twitter proxies? Does there need to be one developed just for Twitter?
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]
Facebook for LDAP? April 6, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Theoretical, Websites.3 comments
Once you get past all the pokes and the photos, Facebook could actually have a ‘real world’ use in both home and business computing.
Consider this: your personal (or business) network all use Facebook and are friends with you. They can chose to share their contact information with you and you can with them, so it’s easy to log into the site and check any details. However, people like me, that live inside Thunderbird, would find it useful to be able to lookup friends’ details on the fly when composing emails, so an LDAP system around Facebook would be an interesting project to pursue.
Privacy implications? Each user authenticated to the LDAP server with their own Facebook login, so as long as that’s secure, you won’t have access to people that you shouldn’t, and users can control who sees their details & how much, so in theory it should be a good model.
Two tools to bulk up your vocab February 1, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Websites.add a comment
There seems to be a vacivity in the use of varied language these days. Repetition has become standard, as subterfuge has led is to believe that certain well known words are sophisticated – how wry.
(I’ve been trying to drop in some interesting words from these two websites)
Verbalearn tests your existing knowledge of vocabulary, and builds up a list of ten unknown words for you. You then subscribe to your own personal podcast, which consists of audio flashcards for you to revise & review your your wordlist, and then follow another short test online to make sure you know how to use them. Rinse, repeat with a list of new words makes for a super-efficient system.
As for SaveTheWords.org, you get to ‘adopt’ a word that’s at risk of ‘extinction’. Basically, you chose a word that is extremely underused and pledge to use it as much as possible to make people aware of it’s existence.
[http://www.verbalearn.com/homepage.html]
[http://www.savethewords.org/]
Easy Tilt-Shift Photo Generator January 10, 2009
Posted by CLibra in Images, Photos, Tools, Websites.2 comments
You’ve probably all seen a tilt-shift photo – a real scene that is edited to make it look like a smaller model. This is usually done by trial and error with a tilt-shift camera, or digitally with by blurring & enhancing colours of certain parts certain parts of a picture in PhotoShop, but both ways are cumbersome and take a long time to do.
Lifehacker have recently found a free online tool, tiltshiftmaker, that can automatically tilt-shift photographs for you. All you do is upload from your computer (or provide a URL of a photo on the web) and move the image band until the preview looks right. That’s all! Have a look at one I made of a photo taken on the Paris trip in Novemeber.
Yup, now it looks like I have a Moulin Rouge model. tiltshiftmaker is free and extremely simple to use, whilst producing high quality results. Check it out, see who you can fool with it. Also, have a look at TiltShiftPhotography, which has lots of examples of tilt-shift fake photos, and tutorials of how to make your own.
[http://tiltshiftmaker.com/]
[http://www.tiltshiftphotography.net/]








