This is your personalized page, you can now modify everything: move modules, add new RSS/ATOM feeds, change the parameters for each module, etc. Your modifications are saved in real-time and you’ll find your page when you get back on Netvibes.com. If you want to be able to access your page from any computer, you can sign in (at the top right) with your email and a password.

The content is available from the “add content” button at the top left of this page.

Feel free to check the Netvibes blog to stay tuned about new features on the site.

Just Click & Suprised.

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回给国人带来怎样的体验呢?期待中……

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There are some tips about Optimizing Firefox V1.5+:
Firefox is supposed to dynamically realease memory from its RAM cache to other Windows applications as needed. Firefox power users recommend limiting the memory cache using the Configuration Console. This frees up memory for other apps, speeding up everything to a greater or a lesser extent, depending on
your machine and the applications you run. Here’s how the trick works:
Step 1. Type about:config into Firefox’s Address Bar and press Enter.
Step 2. Right-click any row, then click New, Integer. Type or paste the following preference name into the dialog box that appears (this is a hidden preference that doesn’t exist in the Configuration Console until you create it): browser. cache.memory.capacity
Step 3. Click OK, then enter the following integer number into the next dialog box, representing 16 MB of RAM for the cache: 16000
Step 4. Click OK to close the dialog box, then close all instances of
Firefox and restart it.

Move the disk cache to a faster or larger location:
Many Windows users like to locate their disk cachefiles on a separate hard drive from Windows. This can improve the performance of Windows or whatever program is using the cache, or it can free up space on a primary partition. (The disk cache should not be confused with the RAM cache described above.) To move Firefox’s disk cache, use about:config to create a new preference. (This is another hidden preference that doesn’t appear until you create it.)

Type browser.cache.disk.parent_directory into the dialog box that appears, then click OK. In the Value dialog box, enter c:\folder, providing the foldername in which you wish the file to be located.

Speeding up Firefox on Windows XP
You can speed up the loading of Firefox on Windows XP by adding it to the programs that XP “prefetches.”
To do this, right-click the Start Menu item for Firefox, or any icon you use to start Firefox, and open the Properties dialog box. Add a space plus /Prefetch:1 to the command line and click OK. The resulting line might look as follows:
“C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\ firefox.exe” /Prefetch:1

Speeding up the maximizing of Firefox
Step 1. Use about:config to create a new, Boolean value. Type or paste the following string into the dialog box that appears: config.trim_on_minimize
Step 2. Click OK to close the dialog box. Change the value from “true” to “false” and restart Firefox.


Virtual Hard Drive takes a portion of your system memory (RAM) and uses it like a hard disk drive, dramatically increasing read and write times. Applications perform up to 340 time faster, making Virtual Hard Drive the software of choice for anyone looking to reduce the load and response time of calculation-intensive applications.
Creating a RAM disk on you hard disk, Moving Firefox’s cache directory there.
Have fun your Firefox life.

Web2.0 Workgroup
The Web 2.0 Workgroup is a network of premium weblogs that write
content about the new generation of the Web. Combined, these sites
reach a large readership of influential technology and media professionals. If you would like to subscribe to all of these blogs,
download and import the OPML file into your favorite RSS reader. NEW! Check out an OPML mash-up of the Workgroup, by J Wynia using our OPML file plus the Yahoo Search API.

Category: Social Bookmarking
Best Offering: del.icio.us

Descriptiondel.icio.us remains the best, largest, fastest, and most elegant social bookmarking service on the Web.  In fact, del.icio.us is the benchmark that all others use.  And because del.icio.us
appears to take the Web 2.0 ideas pretty seriously, they provide a nice
API for others to build new services on top of.  As a consequence
of this, and because social bookmarking sites makes everyone’s data
public, witness the amazing array of add-on services (or if you have 15 minutes to spare, look here) that mash-up or otherwise reuse del.icio.us functionality and content.  If you want access to your bookmarks anywhere you go along with engaging and satisfying functionality, this is your first stop.  I personally can’t live without my tag cloud of del.icio.us bookmarks.

Runners-Up
Blinklist, Shadows, Blogmarks, Clipmarks, Furl, etc



Category: Web 2.0 Start Pages
Best Offering: Netvibes

Description: There
are a rapidly growing number of Ajax start pages that allow your
favorite content to be displayed, rearranged, and viewed dynamically
whenever you want.  But if the traffic to this blog is any
indication (though possibly it isn’t)
Netvibes is far and away the most popular one.  Available in multiple languages, sporting new integration with Writely,
and offering an extremely slick and well-designed interface that
provides some of the best DHTML powered drag-an-drop organization,
Netvibes has no major vendor backing, yet it has captured mindshare out
of pure excellence.  While many of the major Web companies like
Microsoft and Google are offering competing products, none of them are
yet very good.

Runners-Up
Protopage, Start, etc


Category: Online To Do Lists
Best Offering: Voo2do

Description: Ever
more of the software we use on a daily basis is moving online, from
e-mail to feed readers.  To-do list managers are no
exception.  I’ve used a variety of them and so far the one that’s
resonated with me most is Voo2do
A one person operation run by Shimon Rura, Voo2do uses Ajax sparingly
but very effectively to let you create and manage multiple to do
lists.  With an API available for you to access or export your
data with your own programs, support for Joel Spolsky’s Painless Software Scheduling method, Voo2do is the embodiment of simple, satisfying software.

Runners-Up:  Ta-da Lists,  Remember the Milk


Category: Peer Production News
Best Offering: digg

Description
:
While not packed with Ajax, digg frankly doesn’t lack for it.  And of course, Ajax is only one of many optional ingredients on the Web 2.0 checklist.  The important Web 2.0 capability digg provides is that it successfully harnesses collective intelligence
All news items listed in digg are supplied by its users which then
exert editorial control by clicking on the digg button for each story
they like.  The home page lists the most popular current stories,
all selected by its registered users.  And digg’s RSS feed has to be one of the most popular on the Web.  Digg has been so successful that Wired magazine has even speculated it could bury Slashdot, which also allows users to submit stories, but doesn’t let them see what stories were submitted or vote on them.

Runners-Up: Diggdot.us, Gabbr.com, Reddit


Category: Image Storage and Sharing
Best Offering: Flickr

Description
:
Also acquired by Yahoo! earlier this year, Flickr is
the canonical photo/image sharing site par excellence.  Sprinkled
with a smattering of just enough Ajax to reduce page loads and make
tasks easy, Flickr provides an open API, prepackaged licensing models
for your photos, tagging, a variety of community involvement
mechanisms, and a vast collection
of add-ons and mashups.  There are other sites but none of them
compare yet.  Flickr is one of the Web 2.0 poster children and for
a good reason.

Runners-Up: Zoto, Glide, Shutterbook 


Category:  3rd Party Online File Storage
Best Offering: Openomy

Description
:
As
more and more software moves to the Web, having a secure place for your
Web-based software to store files such as documents, media, and other
data will become essential.  There is a burgeoning group of online file storage services and Openomy is one that I’ve been watching for a while.  With 1Gb of free file storage and an open API
for programmatic access to your tag-based Openomy file system, and you
have the raw ingredients for secure online storage of your documents
wherever you go.  There is even a Ruby-binding for the API. 
Expect lots of growth in this space going forward, especially as other
Web 2.0 applications allow you to plug into your online storage service
of choice and the desire also grows to offload personal data backup to
professionals.

Runners-Up: Xdrive, Omnidrive,  Allmydata.com


Category:  Blog Filters
Best Offering: Memeorandum.com

Description: Gabe Rivera’s Memeorandum service
is a relevance engine that unblinkingly monitors the activity in the
blogosphere and appears to point out the most important posts of the
day with a deftness that is remarkable.  The growing attention scarcity
caused by the rivers of information we’re being subjected to in the
modern world needs tools that effectively help us cope with it. 
Blog filters are just one key example of what the future holds for
us.  Memeorandum covers both the political and technology
blogospheres, and hopefully others in the future.  There are other
blog and news filters out there, but none compare in terms of
simplicity, elegance, and satisfying results.



Category:  Grassroots Use of Web 2.0
Best Offering: Katrina List Network

Description: I covered Katrinalist.net in a detailed blog post
a while back but it remains one of the best examples of grassroots Web
2.0.  Katrinalist was an emergent phenomenon that triggered the
peer production of vital information in the aftermath of this year’s
hurricane disaster in New Orleans. In just a handful of days
participants created XML data formats, engineered data aggregation from
RSS feeds, and harnessed volunteer efforts on-the-fly to compile
survivor data from all over the Web.  This led to tens of thousands
of survivor reports being aggregated into a single database so that
people could easily identify and locate survivors from the Katrinalist
Web site.  All this despite the fact that the information was
distributed in unstructured formats from all over the Web with no prior
intent of reuse.  A hearty thanks again to David Geilhufe for help making Katrinalist happen.



Category:  Web-Based Word Processing
Best Offering: Writely

Description: Easy to set-up, fast, free (in beta), and familiar to those with even a passing familiarity to MS word, Writely.com is
an effective and easy to use online word processor. With its WSIWYG
editor, users can change font and font size, spell check and insert
images (up to 2MB).  It also uses tagging and version control,
both excellent features for any word processor. A very useful word
processing tool, especially for those who can’t afford to buy MS
Office. In addition to being a word processor, Writely.com
also serves as a collaboration tool. Users invite others to collaborate
on a certain documents via email. It is can also serve as a tool to
help a user blog and publish. Built with an AJAX user interface, it
maximizes many of the new features available with Web 2.o.  It
ends, once and for all, any uncertainty that productivity tools can and
should stay online.
  Writely is the best out there but just by a nose. The others are very close runners-up.

Runners-Up: WriterBoard, Rallypoint, Zoho Writer


Category:  Online Calendars
Best Offering:  CalendarHub

Description
:
Online
calendaring is a rapidly growing product category in the Web 2.0
software arena.  The fact is that a lack of good, shareable
electronic calendars is still a real problem these days. I’m fond of
saying that the software world has vast collections of synchronization
utilities and integration capabilities, yet it’s incredible that we
still can’t routinely do simple things like keeping our personal, family, and work calendars synchronized.  CalendarHub is the best online calendar I’ve seen so far, with Kiko a close second.

Runners-Up: Kiko


Category:  Project Management & Team Collaboration
Best Offering: BaseCamp

Description: Web
2.0 has terrific social collaboration models for two-way information
exchange like blogs and wikis, open enrichment mechanisms like tagging,
ranking, popularity, and organizing techniques like folksonomies. 
All of these provide a great backdrop for team collaboration and
project management.  Surprisingly, there aren’t many terrific Web
2.0 project management tools.  Part of this is because project
management tends to be very specific between different types of
projects.  Fortunately for Web 2.0 companies, this means there
isn’t a lot of competition from traditional software companies like
Microsoft and Primavera, which churn out somewhat mediocre products in
the shrinkwrapped software space.  This is why 37Signal’s Basecamp
is such a pleasant surprise.  It’s an excellent team-based project
management tool that continues to delight me the more I use it. Also you can check it out at: Full & Latest about them.

Web 2.0 is an exciting, vibrant community.  Let’s show the world what Web 2.0 is made of…

social software
is enablement of groups of people to collaborate using computer
mediation.  It’s a surprisingly sophisticated field that’s been
around for almost 40 years now.

The Web is now packed with numerous
examples of useful, potent, and widely used social software including
well-known examples like Wikipedia, del.icio.us, digg, and WordPress.  There is also a growing body of next-generation social software exemplars such as AllPeers, RubHub, Squidoo, and Wink.  For a fairly new and more objective top 10 social software list, see here by Ross Mayfield.

Full Article here.  Other one:

Social Software And The Single Sink Applications

social software is enablement of groups of people to collaborate using computer mediation. It’s a surprisingly sophisticated field that’s been around for almost 40 years now.

The Web is now packed with numerous examples of useful, potent, and widely used social software including well-known examples like Wikipedia, del.icio.us, digg, and WordPress. There is also a growing body of next-generation social software exemplars such as AllPeers, RubHub, Squidoo, and Wink. For a fairly new and more objective top 10 social software list, see here by Ross Mayfield.
Full Article here. Other one:

Social Software And The Single Sink Applications

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社会关系是当今人们进行任何活动必不可少的基础,当今的社会中,每个人的社会关系网络决定了一个人的成就和生存能力。然而今天社会的多样性急剧增加,让人们本来的社会关系变得非常脆弱。各种社会活动,尤其是商业活动也增加了更多不确定性。巩固和拓展个人的社会关系网络成为一个令人头痛的问题。虽然信息网络技术帮助人们更容易创造信息和相互沟通,但是冗余的信息和虚假有害的信息也在网络上到处蔓延,形成了新的公害。

Wealink.com致力于提供中国最大的在线社会性网络服务,帮助人们建立真实、诚信、可靠的联络和评价体系。这个体系将具备个人数据中心服务(PDH)、个人社会关系管理服务(SNS)、可信的商业信息共享服务等。在这个体系中,人们可以安全地对信任的人群分享自己的联络方式、信息和知识,利用信任关系拓展自己的社会性网络,达成更加有价值的沟通和协作。这个体系还会逐步形成有效的社会评价体系,让人们的社会性资本(SocialCapital)可以累积,这样的体系未来可以服务于各种社会活动,并带来巨大的商业和社会价值。

Performancing, Helping Bloggers Succeed

Performancing for Firefox is a full featured blog editor that sits right within Firefox. Just hit F8
or click the little pencil icon at the bottom right to bring up the
blog editor and easily post to your WordPress, MovableType or Blogger
blogs.

Performancing for Firefox is for Firefox 1.5 and above only. We’ve made use of a number of cool new features within Firefox 1.5, so you’ll need that version of Firefox to try it. More…


30Gigs.com started off with the idea of creating a
“All in one” site for the webmaster and avid computer users. Combining
personal file storage, GD2 signatures and anonymous email all in one
service, which would be free. Our main goal is to increase our space
even further, to 50 gigs, or maybe 100 as time goes on. 30Gigs.com is
still in a very heavy beta, and if you are a member, please help us to
make it the best mail server there is. We will be offering a section
for personal file storage (up to 30 gigs) and a GD2 signature maker to
keep your email safe from spam robots. We also offer a unique feature,
which allows you to send a email from any address you want. More…

Customize Google
CustomizeGoogle is a Firefox extension that enhance Google search
results by adding extra information (like links to Yahoo, Ask Jeeves,
MSN etc) and removing unwanted information (like ads and spam). More…

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