My Top 10 Websites in 2005

Randomness, Websites 3 Comments »

Gmail LogoGmail
The webmail that changed everything. I’ve taken part of its early beta since May 2004 and it’s still in beta until now. With new features coming every now and then, I couldn’t be happier with Gmail even if it’s still in beta stage. It changed the way I use email using threaded messages, labels, filters and a lot of storage. At this moment it’s about 2.78 Gb and still counting! Who needs to delete emails nowadays. Both Yahoo and Hotmail followed the same trend and beefed up their webmails. What sets Gmail apart from other free email provider is the ease of use and extensive use of AJAX. It loads fast and kicks both Yahoo and Hotmail nearly out of the competition (they are catching up though).

Digg LogoDigg
This is my favorite place to get tech news and other interesting stuffs submitted by users. It combines social bookmarking, blogging, RSS, and non-hierarchical editorial control together. Popular stories are promoted to frontpage when more users digg them. Users can also bury the story by reporting it as spam, duplicate link, bad link, lame or old news.

NetVibesNetvibes
This is my favorite AJAX desktop. I tried out Microsoft Live, Google homepage and Protopage but nothing beats Netvibes’ functionality and ease of use. It has loads of great features like Todo list, webnote, online bookmarks and integration to Writely, Gmail and Flickr. I really like the way RSS feeds are displayed on each column and it’s very easy to customize how each RSS feed block appears.

LifeHacker
Lifehacker
Computers make us more productive. Yeah, right. Lifehacker recommends the downloads, web sites and shortcuts that actually save time. Don’t live to geek; geek to live. I skim over all the entries posted in this site everyday just to find something new to make my life easier. I find most of their tips useful.

Del.icio.us logoDel.icio.us
I’ve been hearing a lot of buzz about social bookmarking and I didn’t care about it until late September. When I finally registered in Del.icio.us I really regret not using it earlier. The social bookmark phenomenon is amazing. You can discover many things from different people that scrape the internet for new links. I like discovering new bookmarks. It’s yummy.

Technorati logoTechnorati
As a blogger, Technorati is my friend in boosting my traffic. Technorati is a real-time search engine that keeps track of what is going on in the blogosphere — the world of weblogs. You can claim your blog and watch how many people link or refer to your blog entries. You can search Technorati using boolean strings and tags. What’s more interesting is that all tags have RSS feeds so you can track any tags that interest you and scour anything that you can from them.

Memeorandum logoMemeorandum
Tech.memeorandum is like a frontpage of a newspaper where it gives you the most important news and updates. In fact, it actually looks like an online newspaper. It also automatically updates every 5 minutes and uses a proprietary algorithm to decide what’s important and relevant, ranging from news site to independent weblogs. I always take a look in Memeorandum’s RSS feed to have a wider scope of news online.

Wikipedia logoWikipedia
Knowledge is power; Wiki is even more powerful. I’ve used it for assignments and researches countless times.

Measure MapMeasure Map (beta)
This statistic logger uses AJAX and Flash to display useful information about visitors, links and other helpful information to analyze my blog traffic.

a.scarywater.net
A.scarywater.net is an unlicensed anime fansub BitTorrent tracker. What more can I say?

… plus several invite-only BitTorrent trackers.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,

2005 Year-end Report

Randomness 4 Comments »

I don’t think I’ll have much time tomorrow to write entries because of new year’s eve preparation so I’ll do this now…

Facts and figures of my blog for 2005

Top 5 popular posts (by no. of views):

  1. Thoughts About PLDT MyDSL-W
  2. Smart (?) Wifi
  3. Rizal Stuffs
  4. Konfabulator 3.0
  5. Ending Microsoft’s Cowboy Spaghetti Code

Top 5 commenters:

  1. me!
  2. P4 - 21 comments so far, including trackbacks
  3. Glenn - 11 comments so far
  4. Madz (BlueSapphire & Fumoffu’16) - 10 comments so far
  5. April - 7 comments so far

Top 5 referrers by country:

  1. Philippines - 42%
  2. United States - 20%
  3. Canada - 8%
  4. Japan - 3%
  5. United Kingdom - 3%

Top 5 search strings:

  1. gundam seed wallpaper
  2. smart wifi
  3. cheese
  4. pldt mydsl plan 999
  5. pldt mydsl-w

Top 3 referrers by domain:

  1. google.com
  2. images.google.com
  3. technorati.com

Top 3 browsers:

  1. Internet Explorer - 58%
  2. Firefox - 39%
  3. Safari - 1%

Most number of entries by month: November

Most number of entries by category: Insights

Overall I’ve made 190 entries since January 1, 2005 which is equivalent to an entry every other day.

All numbers are aggregated using measuremap.com and Webalizer.

From Azureus to µTorrent

Reviews, Softwares 1 Comment »

µTorrent LogoEver since BitTorrent was introduced to me, I chose Azureus as my BT client not only because it’s feature-packed but also because it gave me the fastest download speed possible in my DSL connection (512 kbps downstream / 256 kbps upstream). Azureus is built from Java and thus uses Java Virtual Machine (JVM). I didn’t mind using Azureus on my desktop PC because it has enough DDR RAM to run Azureus along with bunch of other application all at the same time. One disadvantage is that Java applications tend to use a lot of RAM after prolonged use because of JVM overhead. On my laptop I had trouble using Azureus because JVM sucks most out of my Penitum M 1.5 Ghz processor and 384 Mb DDR RAM (My laptop actually have 512 Mb RAM but 128 Mb is shared with graphics card). I tried other BT clients such as BitComet but I couldn’t get all the features in Azureus. Some features in other BT clients are implemented in a different fashion to get the same result but I prefered Azureus’ way. In the end I gave up using BitTorrent in my laptop.

Lately, I tested the recent release of µTorrent 1.3 and I was surprised that I am getting decent download speed comparable to Azureus, sometimes even faster, without the ridiculous overhead of JVM. It does not need any installation at all. Just downloaded it and you’re ready to seed and leech. With such a small footprint, I wonder how µTorrent achieves this performance. My laptop will love this BT client.

µTorrent at a glance (taken from the official website):

  • Multiple simultaneous downloads
  • Smart bandwidth usage
  • File level priorities
  • Configurable bandwidth scheduling
  • Global and per-torrent speed limiting
  • Quickly resumes interrupted transfers
  • UPnP support (WinXP only)
  • Supports popular protocol extensions
  • Trackerless support (Mainline DHT)
  • Localized to different languages
  • Typical memory use less than 6 MB
  • Incredibly small: 115 KB (slightly varies from each release but is still very small)

Azureus is a very powerful BitTorrent client. I won’t argue because it’s true; however, I’m switching to µTorrent because I need a fast BT client without much memory consumption. I’ll miss some features of Azureus not present in µTorrent but most of the features I like in Azureus are implemented nicely in µTorrent too that’s why in just a matter of days I’m fully convinced that µTorrent is going to be my BT client of choice from now on. µTorrent is still very young compared to other BT clients and it is gaining more users because of its efficiency.

Links:
µTorrent official website: http://www.utorrent.com
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DivX Browser Plug-In

Softwares No Comments »

DivX logoGood news video-codec junkies, DivX has released a new browser plug-in which supports all the major browsers. Currently only Windows is supported but MacOS X and Linux versions will follow soon.

This great plug-in allows you to play high-quality DivX video in full glory. The idea is to make DivX media viewable inside your browser so you won’t open it in an external player. It’s also loaded with great features like saving the files into your disk so that you can replay them later using the free DivX player. You can also switch to fullscreen mode right inside your browser. There are more useful features in this plug-in so if you want to try it just download it from DivX labs.

Supported browsers at the moment:

  • Internet Explorer (5.0 and above)
  • Firefox (1.0 and above)
  • Mozilla (1.7 and above)
  • Netscape (8.0 and above)

DivX Plug-In

Links:
DivX Lab: DivX Browser Plug-In (Beta 1)
Technorati Tags: , ,

New Intel Logo

Insights, Technology No Comments »

New Intel LogoAfter 16 years of marketing campaign, Intel’s tag line “Intel Inside” is now on its way out.

With the approach of 2006 and the impending release of Intel’s new processor Yonah early next year, Intel had re-examined all the logos of its range of processors. And for the first time, the new desktop processor won’t bear the name Pentium. All Yonah processors will be referred according to the number of core in it. A Yonah processor with one core will be called Intel Core Solo while a dual core Yonah will be called Intel Core Duo.

The new Intel Centrino, featuring the new Napa and Intel wifi chipsets, will also adopt the new logo scheme. Mobile processors with Dual cores will be called Intel Centrino Duo while other processors such as Pentium 4, Pentium 4 HT, Pentium 4 HT Extreme, Pentium M, Pentium D, Celeron D, Xeon and Itanium 2 will also adhere to the new logo design.

Some online newspapers had reported that the word “inside” was allegedly dropped; however, when you look at the new logo set, the word “inside” is still there.

Links:
Neowin.net: Say Goodbye to ‘Intel Inside’
x86-Secret.com: Intel Core, Centrino Duo et logos (French)
PhotoBucket: New Intel logo from x86-Secret.com (101.1 KB)
Intel, Intel Inside, processor, logo, Yonah, Centrino

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