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Posted Friday, 10 August 2007
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I’ve been testing a new Mac application called Mailplane this week. I first read about this app on Silver Mac.
I have several Gmail accounts, including some from my Google Apps domains . Checking each account requires repeated cycles of signing in because Gmail can only display a single account in a browser at any one time.
I used to keep Safari and Firefox open so I could see my two main Gmail accounts.
But I really don’t like Safari much.
Mailplane is only in beta, but it really works well. Even if you only have a single Gmail account, Mailplane is worthwhile. It’s a customized web browser that handles your Gmail. Using Mailplane is better than checking Gmail with Outlook or another POP mail reader, as Mailplane is accessing Gmail as a web service.
I’ve got five invitations to try Mailplane. The first five people who post a comment and request an invite, and who link back to this blog, will get the invites.
I do use reCAPTCHA to help keep the spammers away from the comments. Sometimes the images are a bit fuzzy. Just click the arrow icon in the reCAPTCHA box to get a different set of images.
Remember, it’s a Mac app, so Windows users will get no love from Mailplane.
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Posted Friday, 10 August 2007
In a Business Week article earlier this week, Aaron Ricadela examined Facebook’s growing popularity with adults.
Social networking is a business tool
Facebook was started at Harvard, and remains popular with university students. I’ve had a Facebook account for almost 2 years, and I’ve recently seen more of my colleagues join that site.
As I’ve pointed out here on June 30 and on my old blog on September 11, some employers have used Facebook, MySpace and other social networking services to investigate applicants. MySpace is an annoying clutter of images, spam and media files, and I rarely check my MySpace account these days. Facebook is quieter, and it seems safer, although that site has become a popular target for malware distribution, according to yesterday’s brief article in Campus Technology.
Entrepreneurs and executives have found that Facebook is a great way to do their own social networking. I think that Facebook is more fun to use than LinkedIn, a popular social networking site that is geared towards working professionals. My colleagues seem to prefer LinkedIn to Facebook.
LinkedIn is hanging on to its audience – for now. Facebook’s mobile site is much easier to use than LinkedIn’s current offering, and that may be one reason that Facebook is gaining older users. My July 2nd article discussed how executives are being targeted through search engines and social networking sites such as LinkedIn.
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Posted Friday, 10 August 2007
As I gear up for the fall semester, this morning’s news bucket brought me two stories about databases.
Local legislator Wll Espero wants to create a registry for violent criminals. It’s similar to registries that track pedophiles and rapists. In dribs and drabs, other Hawaii lawmakers have announced their support. Norman Sakamoto made a statement yesterday, and Clayton Hee spoke up a few days ago.
Databases are not force fields!
The ACLU has pointed out that these registries cannot keep a convicted criminal out of a neighborhood. Privacy concerns take a back seat when momentum builds for “feel-good measures that do not increase public safety”, according to Hawaii ACLU legal director Lois Perrin.
Local supporters of these registries believe these databases will only help them. But what happens when a local government compiles a database that invades the privacy of “upstanding citizens”?
Every couple of months, some local group or politician suggests building toll roads in Honolulu, in place of a train. These efforts are laughable. There’s little space to put new expressways in Honolulu, unless the new lanes are stacked on top of existing highways. That’s a poor idea on a volcanic island. Tunnels won’t work well on an island, either.
New highways only add more cars to our roads
Mass transit makes much more sense. It’s difficult to get across town or find a parking space in Honolulu. Oahu’s economy already suffers from the thousands of cars that flit back and forth to work, home and school with only one or two passengers in each vehicle.
Many mainland toll roads offer electronic tags or E-ZPasses that let drivers travel through an express lane at tool booths. These systems let drivers prepay their tolls and avoid long lines that seem to stretch forever as other drivers fumble for paper money and change. Monthly and online statements let E-ZPass users review their journeys. That’s an excellent aid when filing for corporate reimbursements or income tax deductions. It’s also a great way to monitor fleet drivers.
Chris Newmarker of the Associated Press reported today on a growing trend in divorce cases – subpoena a spouse’s E-ZPass records to see where and when they were driving. When a spouse says they were in Pennsylvania on business but their E-ZPass account shows a tool transaction in New Jersey, credibility flies out the window.
Cheating spouses think no one will notice if they are somewhere else
Some states will not release E-ZPass transaction data to a civil investigation. These logs make excellent evidence in some criminal cases. Melanie McGuire was recently convicted of murdering her husband, cutting up his body, loading the pieces into three suitcases and dumping his remains in the Chesapeake Bay. Prosecutors used her E-ZPass records in court to describe her travels. She could have left her E-ZPass at home and paid cash, of course.
UPDATED 13 August 2007 11:05 HT: Dave Shapiro seems to agree with me.
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