July 21st 2007
Life, Technology
The release of a major milestone at the end of June went unnoticed by me, for which I give myself a slap on the wrist. Mozilla’s under-publicised calendar application Sunbird finally churned out their 0.5 release. This new release, as with all previous releases, brings ever more features, bug fixes and urgently needed life into the overshadowed application. Sunbird has been overshadowed by its older siblings Firefox and Thunderbird but is just beginning to break out on its own.
I have used Sunbird, and its Thunderbird extension twin Lightening, before but only at an early state - version 0.1 or thereabouts. Here are my thoughts about this latest stable release and why Outlook should watch out.
Major Improvements
You can find a full list of the improvements and big fixes on the development blog but one major difference in this version compared to 0.1 is that 0.5 hasn’t crashed yet. This enables me to actually use the application! Seriously, there has been major improvements in just about every area. The theme has been updated and other interface elements have been graphically improved.
One warmly welcomed introduction was the support for shared Google Calendars and Outlook meeting requests. This start to integrate with Google Calendar should stand Sunbird well as Google Calendar is one of the few online calendar services that people actually use. If only Google would allow calendars to be externally edited. Oh wait! You can!
Google Calendar Support
The same people that built in Google Calendar support have produced an extension for Sunbird that enables read and write support for Google Calendars. When installed it provides another option when importing or subscribing to calendars which is specifically for Google shared calendars. This tight integration will be vital to the success and adoption of Sunbird in later releases although it’s no the be all and end all for it, let it be known.
Wax Wings?
Sunbird has come a long way since it was announced way back in 2001. With each release it is looking ever more professional and brings ever more needed and improved features with it, the application looks increasingly set to achieve as much success as Firefox and Thunderbird in the not to distant future.
The fact that it is built upon Mozilla’s XUL tool kit stands it in good stead for a plethora of extensions and themes when it becomes more popular and more user friendly.
It’s twin Lightening - an extension clone for Mozilla Thunderbird - is another matter at the moment. There are a few issues with the integration of it and the e-mail client but it has the potential to be a free and popular consumer alternative to Microsoft Outlook. I do think however that if it’s to succeed then Sunbird will also have to integrate with Thunderbird rather than just providing a separate extension which is the current situation.
The Mozilla Calendar Project has come a long way and know they still have a long way to go but they’ve come this far in a relatively short time. If they’ve come that far in that short a time, we can only expect great things in the time to come. Will we see the dissolution of Lightening for a Sunbird that automatically integrated with Thunderbird? Time will tell. Go and grab a download of either Sunbird or Lightening and see what you think. If you haven’t used it in a while, I fell you will be pleasantly surprised. Sunbird definitely does not have wings made of wax and will be flying higher and higher.
July 9th 2007
Life, Technology
Like many self-respecting users of a computer, I like to maintain a clean and tidy desktop. For some reason, I find it hard to find the balance with having a desktop that is both tidy and something that looks good. I don’t like to use the quick launch toolbar because it takes up space for open programs and I like to appreciate the wallpaper I have on my desktop without looking through the jungle of icons and folders scattered about.
I have finally found the answer to my problems although I must admit the answer is Apple-inspired; something not everyone easily admits. RocketDock is a OS X inspired dock for Microsoft Windows that does things other docks try to do and fail. Multi-monitor support, beautiful PNG transparency support and best of all it’s free.
A Dock on Windows?!
Yes, having a dock on Windows is considered blasphemy by many people but if we just put aside any allegiances you’ll see why a dock can save space, time and resources. RocketDock has nice smooth drag and drop functionality - drag a program to it, drop it there and you’re sorted! The program icon will appear along with it’s title in the dock. One problem that faces all applications of this type is that the icons that developers provide with their applications are not of high quality - besides from Apple, I noticed - so I had to go around looking for high quality logos or just create an icon that looked like the program. The hassle is worth it though as the icons look absolutely stunning.

On such a note: if you would like the high resolution icons I’ve collected, just leave a comment and I’ll sort you out. The dock can be positioned either at the top or bottom or the left or the right of your screen. The configuration utility provided also lets you adjust centering and the offset of the dock so it’s really customisable as far as position goes.
Just Dock It!
RocketDock stores my most used programs and places on my computer and has enabled me to speed up the things I do. Things are now one click away instead of two or three and my boot time as decreased - not much - by a few seconds because there’s nothing on my desktop except this any more.

From the official site, this is a list of features but no list of features can describe the dock in its true beauty. Below is also a list of alternative dock applications. Give them a try out if you’re interested and leave a comment. I’m going to try a few out over the next couple days and see how they compare but I think it’s safe to say that RocketDock is for me… atleast until I neglect my desktop once again.
- Minimize windows to the dock
- Real-time window previews in Vista
- Running application indicators
- Simple drag-n-drop interface
- Multi-monitor support
- Supports alpha-blended PNG and ICO icons
- Icons zoom and transition smoothly
- Auto-hide and Popup on mouse over
- Positioning and layering options
- Fully customizable
- Completely Portable
- ObjectDock Docklet support
- Compatible with MobyDock, ObjectDock, RK Launcher, and Y’z Dock skins
- Runs great on slower computers
- Unicode compliant
- Supports many languages and can easily be translated
Leave a comment once you’ve downloaded it and had a go! Get docking people…
June 11th 2007
Blogging, Internet, Life, News, Technology
Today Steve Jobs announced the availability of Safari 3 via a public beta. Although this was interesting news, what was more interesting was the announcement that Safari 3 is now also available for Windows! To some, this may be the news they’d been wanting to hear for a long time but to others it may just be another sign of impending world destruction. My personal opinion is that this move is at least one step in the right direction for Apple. It will certainly make my life as a developer much more easier as I won’t have to rely on services such as Dan Vine’s iCapture or annoyingly have to ask friends to screen shot my sites on their Macs.
First Impressions
My first impressions are that this is indeed true beta software. My experience is that it is rather slow and feels rather heavy as an application. As with all Apple software, the user interface is indeed nice. It’s not clogged with buttons and only the bare essentials are shown but it still allows for nearly as much customisation as Firefox, although it’s not quite on par at this stage. The traditional brushed metal theme has only been on my screen for a few minutes and it’s already growing on me. Although it’s default font choice as Times New Roman isn’t to my taste, it doesn’t take anything away from the browser.One thing I will say is the option to resize most text areas is a nice feature.
Get it Now
Go and get the beta from the Apple site, try it out and return here. Mac or PC users can download the beta and I advise that you do. Give it a go and come here and leave a comment! Below are a few screen shots to tickle your fancy.

June 9th 2007
Blogging, Life, Politics
When I was listening to the news the other day, I could not believe what I was hearing. I thought the news was replaying a clip from cold war era. Russian President Vladimir Putin was threatening to aim potentially nuclear weapons at sites around Europe because some countries had agreed to play host to American anti-missile and radar sites. If it’s his aim to piss off most of the world, he’s succeeded. I’m going to allow myself some less than appropriate language here and say to mister former secret agent; where the hell do you get off threatening Europe with missile attack? Have you been in a coma for the past sixty years? Mr. Putin, why are you so against a defence system for Europe and America? Is it because it’s America’s system? I don’t understand you, Mr. Putin, why don’t you want me to be safe from the evil in the world? Well, enough of those common words. Let us enjoy a read and discuss the implications of America’s new ‘defence’ system.
Big-Arse America
If you haven’t been keeping up with America’s expanding international presence lately then you may not have heard about their growing plans to set up an anti-missile defence system around Europe and their own territory to combat what they think is a real and growing threat from ‘evil’ countries like Iran and North Korea. Their system involves a number of radar and missile sites throughout Europe - one radar site is located here in the UK. Mr. Putin’s outrageous comments came after it was announced America wanted to place sites in Poland and the Czech Republic - former Soviet states and signatories of the Warsaw Pact.
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