Saying a lot, saying a little… who cares?
inter-confusion
WLM and Y! are interoperable now… and i’m confused about the client. one‘s sleek, one‘s feature-filled. can’t export/import though. crap. everything else looks good.
guess i’m sticking to GAIM until i see more features.. that i want. nice concept though.
| Print article | This entry was posted by SEV on July 13, 2006 at 21:36, and is filed under staying.aside. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
No comments yet.
No trackbacks yet.
the twitter effect
about 3 months ago - 5 comments
Barely three posts in the last month. Mandatory Twitter-joining post has happened in the meanwhile. 218 tweets in 10 days have happened since. Nothing on this blog. Even now, I’m struggling with what to write right now. Worth thinking about when I’m about to renew my hosting plan. p.s. I’ve “paused” my twitter account.
twit twit tweeet
about 3 months ago - 2 comments
I’ve jumped in headfirst. Tweeting. Left, right and center. Yessirree Bob. Yada yada yada. Srsly. And now to repeat things I’ve heard before (for eons) but which have dawned on me as actually making a lot of sense. So yes, this post might be a bit dated for some of you. At first, I assumed
notes: tech this, tech that
about 4 months ago - 3 comments
For a change, I decided to jot down the thoughts that were coming to me while I waded through month-old Reader items. Warning: It gets pretty long. [Yes, I actually have a set of Reader items that I ensure I catch up with daily, and another set that I’m sure I will always be behind
“my” ada lovelace(s)
about 5 months ago - 2 comments
There were many options that struck me when I heard of Ada Lovelace Day (HT: Raghu). At first, I wanted to take the safe options and just write about Blissenobiarella or Dors Venabili. To celebrate fictional characters, who are not really women scientists or engineers either, didn’t seem to ring true with the spirit of
notes: buzzing around
about 6 months ago - No comments
Google’s latest experiment – Buzz – has been launched to the world recently, with varying degrees of appreciation, hate, irritation and all the reactions that every new social idea is greeted with. Personally, it is a social media outlet/inlet that I can get on board with – seeing as how it integrates nicely into my
my problem with hindi movies today
about 6 months ago - 12 comments
There have been any number of reviews about the latest from the Bollywood stable (My Name is Khan) – ranging from vitriolic to sarcastic/mocking to adulatory. I could write reams, spew abuse galore, and point out in how many different ways the movie gets it wrong… but I won’t. That’s too easy. Plus, people have already done a pretty good
clubbing together a month’s worth of everything into one big gigantic post
about 8 months ago - 1 comment
This is the 4th attempt I’m making at trying for a halfway decent beginning to a post. Have I really been reduced to saying such banalities? I can’t quite believe it. When I look at my front page, most of my recent posts are about movies. Reviews, basically. Most of my recent posts have also
notes: what should be the real plan for the chrome os?
about 9 months ago - 5 comments
The world has been talking about the Google Chrome OS. We have people saying ‘next big huge thing‘, and obviously, ‘next big huge steaming pile of crap‘. Me, personally? I haven’t, and still don’t like the idea of Google having a browser on the market – it reeks too much of a company trying to
windows 7 – quirks, quips and quarks
about 10 months ago - 7 comments
So I finally moved to Windows 7 on one of the machines I use regularly. It wasn’t without its share of weird-ass issues – I don’t think any M$ OS can be without its quirks. Not issues/problems, mind you. Quirks. I will try to update this based on what else I figure out in the
notes: is the zune HD not awesome at all?
about 11 months ago - 5 comments
[opinion due to : Betanews - Zune HD: The best portable media player you may never buy ] Like many other reviews have done before him, the author demonstrates real love for the Zune HD. He also stresses limitations – both artificial and real – which apparently translate to it being the device that nobody




