What the Flock?

I’ve been a strong supporter of Mozilla’s Firefox browser for quite a while now. Once I switched over to it, it has been hard to even consider using a different browser. Sure, I’ve tried them all to see what features they are going to give me, but I always end up going back to Firefox because of the amount of plug-ins I have become accustomed to using daily. As much as I love Google and I really do love the Google browser, without support for the plug-ins I use, I’m sorry but you just can’t be my default browser.

With that said, today I decided I was going to give Flock another shot. I had installed it shortly after it came out, ran through my normal routine of testing it out for 2 days and then rushing back to Firefox. But with the expansive growth of Social Media, I figured it was time to grab an update and see what’s new. What followed where 3 gigantic no-nos that left a sour taste in my mouth before I even started to check out any new features.

I loaded up Flock and went to the help menu and chose “Check for Updates.” No surprise there was one available and I told it to download the 16MB file and install it for me. When it was done I started Flock and was redirected to a page that said, “But wait, version 2.0.2 is available. Download now.” Wait a second! I just uploaded one minute ago. Why did the “Check for Updates” feature update me to a version that was already out of date?

Undeterred I upgraded to the latest version and started kicking the tires. A minute later I received an email in my 3rd party email application that contained a link. When I clicked the link, Flock opens up a new tab and starts loading the page. Wait just a second again! Without asking me (2 installs in 5 minutes and I don’t recall being asked) if I wanted Flock to be my default browser, they took it upon themselves to make Flock the default. This is monumentally NOT COOL. Don’t hide it in the terms and say “but you agreed to the terms.” Do not change settings on my computer without asking me first. Period!

When Firefox didn’t open up as my default, I went to my quick launch bar to start it up. The Firefox logo was no longer in it’s customary spot and it took me a second to realize what happened. During the install process for Flock my Firefox icon was replaced by a Flock icon. Clicking the link started Flock, not Firefox. This is inexcusable. I’m curious if they do the same thing to the Internet Explorer icon if that is your default browser. I’m betting not since Microsoft would likely reign down legal armageddon on them in 2.367 seconds.

Now, I know what you are going to say, “But Flock is now powered by Mozilla so it’s fine.” No, no it’s not. Until such a time that Flock and Firefox merge in to 1 product, they should treat my computer accordingly and not mess with settings that should be mutually exclusive.

And now that I’ve got this off my chest, I’m going to go back and test out Flock’s ability to run Firefox plugins as it says it can.

</rant>

Google At Ten

Yesterday was Google.com’s 10th birthday. I still remember the first time I ever went to google.com’s home page. The first thing I said was, “Where’s all the stuff?” By the time they came around, search engine sites like yahoo.com were already on their way to becoming portal sites with more content than you could shake a stick at. Google’s clean and simple page was such a welcome change, it didn’t take very long at all before it became my default search tool. (Heck, it wasn’t all that long before Google became a verb.) Now, 10 years later, even though I don’t necessarily use the search engine every day, I use at least 1 (if not several) Google products each and every day.

Google Properties I frequent:

Gmail - I’ve had a gmail account since it was tough to get an invite to sign up for one. While yahoo was making their interface 1000 times worse, Google kept things simple. I don’t need drag and drop features in my email. I’d much rather have the speed gmail maintains compared to the bloatedness of yahoo mail any day.

Maps - Back in the day I loved MapQuest. Then Google came out with Maps and it was a whole new ball game. When the street view feature came out I thought it was kinda silly. Then, one day while trying to provide somebody with a landmark to help them find a store, the brilliance of it all came crashing in. They gave me the tool I needed long before I realized I needed it. And now with the iPhone/GPS integration… game, set match.

YouTube - Online video = YouTube. Done and done. OK, fine, they didn’t make this one. They just bought it. But just watch what they do with it over the next 18 months. It’s going to be one of their biggest profit centers. Just a matter of time.

Reader - I had been using NetVibes as my RSS reader for quite a while. That is until I realized that I could use Google reader on my iPhone and read all my RSS feeds wherever I was at. This caused me to take a long look at it and I’ve now switched to using google reader as my default RSS desktop tool, too.

Chrome - It has supplanted FireFox yet as my default browser, but once the list off add-ons that I use in FF are available for Chrome, I’m heading over. The speed difference is noticeable. Plus, I love that the address bar and the google search box are one and the same. In 6 months time I expect it to be my default. We’ll see.

Search - The integrated google search in the FireFox browser is so handy. I love not having to go to google.com and THEN perform my search. The only thing that would be better would be the ability to just hit CTRL+G to have a dialog box pop up automatically so I wouldn’t even have to take my hand off the keyboard to do a search.

I was starting to feel a bit like a fanboy. Then I remembered, there are some sites that I use that are not owned/operated by Google even though there is a competing product made by the big G. For instance, Flickr.com. I tried out Picasa a while back, but it’s not always about the site itself. A lot of times it’s about the 3rd party apps that go along with it. Flickr’s set of apps is amazing. I have them on my iphone, my desktop, my blog, etc. For now I’ll stick with flickr.

Happy Birthday Google. Congratulations on 10 great years and a slew of great products. I’m expecting more big things from you over the next 10 years.