26 September 2008

Of course it's shiney... it's Chrome!

Well for just under the past month I have only opened up Internet Explorer on my computer about 1/2 a dozen times... and no.. it's not cause I have banned myself from using the Internet... I have made the migration to Google Chrome.


Google Chrome is Googles new offering to the web browser market, and was released not so long ago as a beta release that you can download from their website.

I must say that for an initial beta release, Chrome is already an incredibly stable, and feature rich piece of software, and when it becomes more mature I think will give the Firefox browser a run for its money... and cause everyone already knows and loves Google... may tempt some of the long time devoted Internet Explorer users over.

So it's a web browser... How much could Google actually do to improve a web browser?
Well lets see... here are some of Chromes features I like:
One of my superiors is well known for here motto "less is more" and Google has taken that approach with Chrome. Both IE and Firefox offer you a barrage of buttons to click up in your top toolbar... by default, Chrome offers only 5:
  • Back
  • Forward
  • Reload
  • Page Settings
  • Settings
And that is it... no file, edit, tools, menu's ect.
Chrome devotes as much space to the actually website you are visiting as it can, so less up the top, and no status bar down the bottom.
One of the best features, and the thing that makes me really love Chrome, is where the newer versions of IE and firefox have the address bar, then a search box where you can search the Internet directly, Chrome merges these into one bar.
In a single text bar, you can type a url to vist a site directly, or enter a search term to search your favourite search engine with (it does not have to be Google), search your Internet searching history, bookmarks ect.
Tabs... yes they are cool, Firefox has used tabs for yonks, and IE finally came on board with tabs in IE7, so we all know how good it can be to have multiple websites open in a single window. The biggest advantage Chrome has is that each browser tab is independent, so if you visit a website that crashes the tab, only that one tab dies, and your whole browser does not crash as it would with Firefox or IE. The flip-side of this however, is because each tab is running independently, if you have many tabs open, Chrome can become quite resource hungry and eat up a fair bit of RAM.
What happens when you open a new tab? Each time you open a new tab, Chrome has a little page it displays in the tab that gives you little screenshots of all your most visited pages, and a list of all your latest bookmarks... making it very easy to return to some of your favourite sites.
Another cool feature with tabs.... you can rearrange the order they appear in, by simply clicking and dragging the tab to the order you want it in... simple, but makes life easy if you have 10+ tabs open and are constantly jumping between a few of them.

So overall... Do I like it? Yep... Love it, and won't be going back to IE or Firefox at the minute.
As it is still a beta release, there a few little bugs, I have found some CSS renders a little odd sometimes, but overall is pretty good. At the minutes, if you open an RSS feed directly in the browser it just displays as a heap of unformatted text, but hey, you can do all the important stuff.

17 September 2008

Reflections from above

Well, today marked the end of my month and a bit as acting branch manager, Sydenham Library. Looking back on over the past month, it has given me a new appreciation of what my boss actually does.

I guess from the point of a worker, it is very easy to sit back whenever something goes wrong, or something just does not seem fair, and wonder to yourself "What exactly does my boss do, it doesn't seem like she does anything". Why, yes, to an extent they do none of the labors that make the place function, they are like the mortar in a house. When we think of a wall, we think of the bricks, and they make up the wall... but there is one thing we really don't think about that is holding all those bricks together... the mortar.
When I was first asked to be acting manager, I thought to myself, this is going to be a breeze, the place will pretty much run itself, and I will have so much extra time to get little tasks I have been putting off for ages finished. I can now say, out of all those little tasks, I probably only got around to doing one. I can always tell when I am challenged at work and enjoying it, cause the days and hours just fly by. This experience was like that, it feels like only a couple of days ago I was waving off Inna thinking of what pranks I can set up in her office for when she returns.
This experience has also given me the opportunity to see how things flow from the other side attending co-ordinators meetings and the like. I can see why sometimes despite our constant nagging at the branch, it can be difficult for Inna to commit to trying different things, or improving some workflows.
It appears to me that libraries have so much potential to deliver valuable services to the community and help people better themselves and become technologically more advanced, and lets use the catch cry, become life long learners. I think there is really only one thing currently holding libraries back from achieving this with fantastic results... Librarians. The sooner all these old dinosaurs retire and die, the better. I know it sounds a bit Nazi like, but fire the librarians and burn the books. Whilst trying to give the world the impression that they are now hip, know what a blog is, and can be cool. They are a bunch of scared little old ladies who are too obsessed with trying to keep the piece with everyone, and try to create a model of services and workflows the suite everyone... when basically different areas have different needs, and different needs are often addressed in varying services and procedure to match those needs.
If you are a librarian reading this, yes congratulations you are actually using a fang-dangled computer and reading one of those modern bloggy-who-ze-what's-it's... but maybe you should retire now - Why we are at it, lets change the name library to 'community learning centre', 'technology and information hub'.
To close... the biggest thing I have learnt from my manager stint... write everything down in a diary. It's bloody hard trying to keep track of everything that's happening, and where all your staff are. I shall now go back to being mortal.