Filed under: Internet, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Freeware, Social Software, Beta
TweetDeck is a desktop client for Twitter build on Adobe AIR. Nothing new there. That sentence could have described Twhirl, Snitter, or Alert Thingy. But TweetDeck has a few features up its sleeve that other Twitter clients lack.
The most noticeable difference is that TweetDeck has a multi-column view. You can glance at all of the latest tweets from your contacts in one column, see replies in another, and direct messages in a third. Or you can create groups of contacts (for example, a group of all your favorite Download Squad bloggers on Twitter), and see just updates from those contacts in a column.
You can customize the display by adding up to 10 columns, or removing columns you don’t need. The display is also resizable. There are no themes and no way to adjust the font yet. But the application is still in beta.
[via ReadWriteWeb]
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Filed under: Internet, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Freeware, Social Software, Beta
TweetDeck is a desktop client for Twitter build on Adobe AIR. Nothing new there. That sentence could have described Twhirl, Snitter, or Alert Thingy. But TweetDeck has a few features up its sleeve that other Twitter clients lack.
The most noticeable difference is that TweetDeck has a multi-column view. You can glance at all of the latest tweets from your contacts in one column, see replies in another, and direct messages in a third. Or you can create groups of contacts (for example, a group of all your favorite Download Squad bloggers on Twitter), and see just updates from those contacts in a column.
You can customize the display by adding up to 10 columns, or removing columns you don’t need. The display is also resizable. There are no themes and no way to adjust the font yet. But the application is still in beta.
[via ReadWriteWeb]
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Filed under: World wide web, Kids, Security, Features, Windows, Macintosh, Google, Mozilla, Browser Tips, Social Software, Search, Browsers
There’s a battle for the hearts and wallets souls of our young surfing kids on the interwebs. Parents are obviously concerned about the appropriateness of the internet being a kid’s playground, so are looking for suitable controls to help them feel their children are protected on the internet.
We looked at 2 kids browsers, Glubble and Kidzui, and gave them a test spin as well as subjected them to an unscientific kid focus group. Check out our results after the jump.
Continue reading Glubble and Kidzui - good kid browsers, silly names
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Filed under: Windows, Blogging, Social Software
There are already more desktop apps for Twitter than we could ever possibly cover without losing our minds. But what about that OTHER microblogging service, Plurk? A couple of people have hacked the mobile version into Adobe Air to create two similar apps: PlurkAir and PlurkIt. This is ok for now, but it’s nowhere near the level that Twitter clients have achieved.
That’s where Plurker comes in. It’s scheduled to be the first dedicated Windows desktop version of Plurk, and the feature list looks pretty impressive. Sort Plurks using custom searches, set alerts for private Plurks you receive, enjoy autocompleting @message functionality, and way too much more for us to list here. If Plurker is as good as promised, it could give Plurk a large user boost by taking away one major excuse not to use the service.
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