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# Sunday, 11 November 2007

Awhile back I got a little too aggressive with the mouse and accidently dragged my show desktop shortcut from the Quick Launch Bar onto the desktop. I tried to correct it by dragging it back onto the Quick Launch Bar, but of course this didn't work. What it did was create a shortcut on the Quick Launch Bar to the shortcut that was now on my desktop that then actually handled showing the desktop. Here's how to get things back to normal:

  1. If you happen to have completely lost the Show Desktop shortcut create a text file called "Show Desktop.scf" and add the following text to it:

     

    [Shell]
    Command=2
    IconFile=explorer.exe,3
    [Taskbar]
    Command=ToggleDesktop

     

  2. Finally open up the following folder "C:\Documents and Settings\{Your User Name}\Application Data\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch" and drag the file into the folder.
Sunday, 11 November 2007 17:27:38 (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback - Save to del.icio.us - Digg This! - Follow me on Twitter

# Saturday, 03 November 2007

    Now that Google has added IMAP to Google Apps and Gmail, see my previous post for more details, I have begun to switch over from my Hotmail account that I have been using for about ten years now, to using an email address at my domain hosted on Google Apps. Basically all I have been waiting for was the ability to access my Google Apps email using Outlook 2007. Google Apps has had a POP interface, but it is extremely horrible and downloads everything to your inbox, even the messages that you have sent. This requires you to setup mail filters in Outlook to get your messages where they should be which I have no urge of creating and maintaining just to get my emails into the folders where they should be at in the first place. About a month ago I had considered developing a service that pulled messages from Gmail and translated the file structure to a decent IMAP layout, but now Google has beat me there. The tagged style of messages in the Gmail/Google Apps Email web interface translates into folders on the client side. As shown in the screenshot below, the All Mail, Drafts, Sent Mail, Spam, Starred, and Trash folders are standard Gmail folders. The 1and1 and Admin folders are labels that I have created that show up as folder on the client side. Then I have my Inbox. One issue that I have noticed is that when I add a new label to the web interface I have to right click on my account in Outlook 2007 and select Update Folder List in order for the new folder to show up, but I assume the new folder would eventually show up on its own if I was patient.

 

    Of course, Google App Email/Gmail's web interface is fairly feature rich and handles things a bit differently then Outlook so there are some feature lost when using a client application and some features are represented differently in the client application. For instance, It Outlook 2007 you can flag an email, but in the web interface these emails will show up as starred.

Outlook 2007 view

Google Apps Email View

 

    Also in Google Apps Email/Gmail you have the ability to mark and email with multiple labels. For example in the below screenshot this test email is label, Inbox, 1and1, and Admin:

 

Google Apps Label View

    On the Outlook 2007 side this email also shows up in the Inbox folder, the 1and1 folder, and the Admin folder. If I create a new label in the web interface called Test, which creates a corresponding folder on my client side and copy the instance of the email in the 1and1 folder to the Test folder on the clients side this is reflected on the web interface as removing the 1and1 label from the email and adding the Test label to it. If I delete this email on the web interface side it will be removed from all folders on the client side and placed in the Trash folder. Moving an email to the trash folder on the client side will also move it to the trash folder on the web interface side.

    Hopefully this gives you a basic understanding of the interaction between Outlook and Google Apps Email. I will be happy when I finally get completely switched off of my Hotmail account, but at least for awhile it looks like I am going to have a bit of a split personality.

    

Saturday, 03 November 2007 10:43:42 (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback - Save to del.icio.us - Digg This! - Follow me on Twitter
Gmail | Google | Outlook 2007
# Wednesday, 31 October 2007

Google is full of information about individuals, but when do I have the moral right to look for it and when don't I? I know that within ten minutes, if you live in Iowa and I only have your first and last name I can pull up all of your court records and see what brushes with the law you have had. If you live in Polk County in Iowa I can find out if you own a home, how many bathrooms it has, if you have a swimming pool, what tax credits you are getting on it, and how much it is worth. I can then pull up the sex offender's registry and see if you are on it, or check out whom in your neighborhood is on it. If I have your email address I can search for it in Google groups and find out what topics you like to talk about. Finally I can plug your name into Google and see what else I can find. I did this a few weeks ago on someone and found out their birthday, what church they went to, and that they had recently competed in a triathlon.

Sure I know that I have the legal right to pull this up whenever I want, but when do I have the moral right to? Does a parent have the moral right to Google someone who is watching their kid? Does a coworker have the right to know how many speeding ticket the person in the cube next to them has, or if they have an OWI? Is it alright to Google your blind date before you ever meet them? What about a potential employer finding a MySpace or Twitter page? It has come to the point when you need to be aware of what information is out there about you. I know if you Google me you're going to find sites like Osborn2Rock for the band of a guy in California that has the same name as me, and unfortunately information about a guy who wrote a book about hunting squirrels with dogs. Anybody searching for only my first and last name could potential thinking that any of these hits were me and misjudge me completely. When the information is freely available do we have to make ourselves responsible for using it properly? What do you think?

 

"With great power comes great responsibility."

Wednesday, 31 October 2007 18:33:11 (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [1] - Trackback - Save to del.icio.us - Digg This! - Follow me on Twitter
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