Archive for the ‘Microsoft’Category

Gtriage – Your Inbox Can be Tamed

The Problem: E-mail Overload

The Solution: That depends …

Finding too many new messages in our in-boxes is a stubborn, universal problem for lawyers: an occupational hazard if you will. I’ve examined various solutions to this problem, including as Outlook plug-ins ClearContext and Xobni, but was never satisfied with their performance.

Take ClearContext for example. It produces excellent coordination between contacts, attachments, tasks, and appointments, but requires way too much work. Basically for CC to work well, the user must do all the classification and draw the connections. By the time I’m done advising the program of what’s important, I’m already exhausted.

Xobni on the other hand, magically organizes e-mail and attachments by contact without the need for any input at all. It really is impressive at showing you who is who, and the history of your communication with them; but it cannot help me make sense of the 100+ new messages I get every day. And without visual clues as to what is worth reading I can’t even find the important messages, much less put them in context.

Finally, these applications and others like them are designed exclusively for use with Outlook; a notorious memory hog that can single-handedly slow down and crash my system. No thank you.

Then I read about Gtriage in a FriendFeed post a few months ago. Gtriage works with Gmail or Google Apps to identify important messages and give you visual cues with which to find them. Just sign up and within minutes Gtriage learns your e-mail habits, applies its machine-learning algorithms, then identifies and labels messages so you know which ones to attack first. Amount of work required on the user’s end: none. That’s more like it.

Gtriage takes less than 3 minutes to set up. Since it learns automatically there is nothing to do or worry about once you have signed up; but if you are the creative type you might want to see how it can be combined with Gmail plug-ins like Multiple Inboxes for spectacular results (see this example).

Special Offer for Practicehackers: At the moment Gtriage remains in invitation-only beta, but Unblab was good enough to provide the invite code for 10 new accounts. Simply go to http://gtriage.com and be one fo the first 10 readers to sign up using practicehacker as your invite code.

Let me know what you think of Gtriage by posting your feedback, compliments, or hacks right here on Practicehacker.com, send your thoughts by e-mail to mhedayat@mha-law.com, join our Friendfeed Group, or sound off on Twitter.

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Socialwok (allegedly) adds collaboration to Outlook

Image representing Socialwok as depicted in Cr...
Image via CrunchBase

Socialwok is a free add-on for Google Apps that you can pick up at the Google Apps Marketplace.

I installed it a month ago but have never really been able to connect people in my office using this app. I know it’s working, but it still does not really seem to be adding much interaction. I’ll keep trying and let you know if it truly does the job. In the meantime, here’s a video about using Socialwok with Outlook. Enjoy.

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Gmail’s Newest Tricks

 
If you use the Firefox or Chrome browsers you can now to the following things in Gmail that you could previously only do with a desktop e-mail client like Outlook
 
+ add files to an e-mail by dragging and dropping them
+ share calendar schedules via your meeting invitations
 
Check out this screencast I made to illustrate the process.

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Office 2010 officially ships …

… but will it be any better than the beta version  I’ve been using? Maybe. Will I pay to find out? Not sure. So what do I know? I know that  Mashabl!’s lame coverage tells me nothing. Thanks for the Microsoft press release guys. I didn’t know you were a public-relations outlet for Bill Gates. Nice.

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Gears of War 3 …

… is coming May 5.

Welcome to the end of the beginning.

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ABA Tech Show 2010 in Pictures

Syncing Google Apps with Outlook

 

Guide to Online Data Syncing Services

(Google Apps Edition)

In July 2009 Computerworld published a great piece on data synchronization methods involving Google, Yahoo, Windows Live, and other services. But I’m going to show my colors here and only cover tools that help you sync Outlook with Google products (especially Google Apps). Sorry if that doesn’t help your situation. For the rest of you, read on to learn about some nifty free apps to keep you in sync. As you know by now, in addition to staples such as GmailGoogle TalkGoogle Docs and its Calendar, Google has developed a suite of professional or “enterprise” grade applications called, what else, Google Apps. Google Apps is my answer to the anywhere, anytime, practice; and is designed to play nice with office staple Microsoft Outlook. Google Calendar for instance syncs with Outlook via the free Google Calendar Sync tool as well as third-party tools such as Spanning Sync and BusySync. Mac users have it even better – the Address Book in machines running OS-X 10.5.3 and higher offers native sync support for Gmail contacts – no apps required. For businesses who want to sync it all, Google Apps Sync for Microsoft Outlook  is available for $50/user/year; maybe too much of a commitment unless you run a mid-sized firm. A similar tool called Google Apps Migration for Lotus Notes helps businesses shift from Notes to Google Apps. For personal users on a PC, third-party tools include

Goosync, a server-based solution that supports syncing of calendars, contacts and tasks

KiGoo a downloadable application that offers syncing of calendars and contacts

SynContact, free software that syncs only contacts

And since Google supports Microsoft ActiveSync  you can also sync an iPhone, iPod Touch or Windows Mobile. And since ActiveSync is natively supported there is no additional software to install. If you use a BlackBerry you can download a sync tool from Google to accomplish similar tasks. Okay, that’s it. Short and sweet. Hope you liked. If you have anything to add please add your comments below.

 

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23

02 2010

Halo Reach Team (I’m the Skull Guy)



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