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Showing posts with label Beta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beta. Show all posts

Saturday, November 21, 2009

IT News: Wikipedia Beta Introduces New Add to Watchlist Shortcut

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It may not sound much, but the Wikipedia Beta now includes a new shortcut in the interface of the popular online reference.

The shortcut allows users to quickly add a page to or remove one from their “watchlist”, a process which used to be well hidden and most easily found during editing.

Wikipedia Watchlist Button Screenshot 

This addition to the already radically overhauled interface reinforces the website’s aim of becoming more accessible.

The watchlist function notifies users when a page has been edited.

Remove

To try the beta for yourself, you need a Wikipedia account (free from the website). Once logged in, select “Try Beta” from the links at the top right of the screen and you’re in.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Windows 7 RC In Pictures

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Install1This is the first and last post on testing the Windows 7 Release Candidate. In  short, excellent. I have had some issues with programs locking up at the save dialogue but besides that this is the best OS I have ever used. It is faster than my Vista install and even my install of Ubuntu Studio 9.04!

So, to round up my time in this milestone of the OS, here is a small gallery of screenshots. It doesn’t cover everything by far, but it’s a little taste of the RC which is basically the same as the release version.
GO TO GALLERY

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Microsoft Cries “bing(o)” on Google’s Number

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Fully online yesterday* but still in beta, Microsoft’s new search engine ‘bing’ may have hit on something. But is it enough to take the top number from Google?
First impressions of the site are that it is fast and surprisingly useable for a Google competitor. The front page opens quickly and when you mouse over a search result a pop-out menu appears. This menu contains a preview of the text of the page and a list of links on the page itself. Search sources can be refined to a specific website’s domain in the ‘advanced search’ menu or by simply typing the domain on the end of the term.
The image search tool CoolIris seems almost clunky compared to the bing’s image search, which loads images quickly and in an array that makes browsing them easy. Like the search tool, bing gives you picture information when you mouse over the image. Clicking on the image will give you a page similar to the one that Google gives, with the addition of a column on the left of the screen containing the other image results for the term.
Video search plays a searched video from within the search window when you mouse over the image preview of the video. This means no more jumping around pages and reloading to see what you have found.
bing also introduces multimap, which seems just like Google Maps but with more information options for the places you search.

Google’s search algorithm is hard to beat and the results seem less relevant in bing than Google at the moment. The site preview with links in bing is helpful, but is no substitute to a good result. However Google’s image search is dated and clunky compared to the slick, fast, easy to use bing. It seems that Microsoft is trying to claw back market share, and for image and video search it has got me. (Even if I am peeved that it doesn’t find this blog!)
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In my wanderings I found that going to bing in some other languages meant that there were no sponsored links, and some of these are in English.

*From Wikipedia’s page on bing

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