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Outlook 2010 Bug Creates Monster Email Files 126

Julie188 writes with this snippet from Network World "Office 2010 is still in beta and a patch is already out. Microsoft is trying to fix a bug in the email program Outlook 2010 Beta that creates unusually large e-mail files that take up too much space. The Outlook product team has offered a bug fix for both 32-bit and 64-bit systems that fixes the problem going forward, although previous emails will remain super-sized. This could be a problem for email programs that limit message sizes, such as Gmail or BlackBerry."

Comment Productivity is Key (Score 1) 197

This battle will come down to productivity. In the world of email, search and portable documents, Google has held the throne for more than a few years. In the world of making connections, Facebook has been the primary provider of highly productive online social networking. Facebook's ease of use, coupled with the stability of having your searchable username be the same as your real name, have turned it into the premier site for your general personal social networking needs. Google's success in search, Gmail, Docs and news has been a result of the productivity and efficiency of these services. It only took 2 seconds for any user to realize that Google Docs was a good way for them to collaboratively work on text and spreadsheets, because it was highly usable, and conveniently available for anyone who held a free Gmail account. It would be easy for Facebook to develop an email platform based on their username. The question is whether that would prove useful for people. Personally, I think it would be unpopular and ineffective. It's easy enough to "Send a message" to your friends through the Facebook interface. As for Google, there is real potential for a social networking revolution based on search. Imagine if your online profile through Google automatically brought up top search results on what was going on with your former classmates? Or if your work history automatically linked your profile to your former coworkers? The result would be a much-more-accessible online social network, especially if Facebook networks became searchable. As many commenters have mentioned, one touchy area would be privacy. I'm particularly interested in the visibility of a user's profile. If Google search results become more attuned to individuals (by their real name) "à la Facebook", then any "private" personal data will be available to everyone. This will spark at real shift in mentality among the users of social networks. Erasing or "desocializing" one's Web 2.0 identity, either through making requests to Google or/and going site-by-site to eliminate private info, will become as common as running spam blockers. Searchable Google identities will wake people up to the reality of "online privacy". But "Google IDs" would certainly be a hit, because it would make us more productive in our day-to-day life. Need a job? Google's webcrawlers can help you find one. Want to find your buddy from that summer camp way-back-when? Someone probably updated a group photo and tagged everybody (and though your old buddy doesn't have Gmail, he leaves a cybertrail that's easy to follow). Want to know how many of your high school classmates hit the big-time? You would probably be able to search it in one query (although your dashboard will probably have already given you a clue).

Comment Re:Note-taking is a life-long skill (Score 1) 569

Taking pictures of the whiteboard is a great idea! With regards to the primary question, I always take notes with pen and paper. It's when I'm starting to actually produce something -- like an essay, article, chart or presentation -- that I start using the computer. I use Evernote to brainstorm various ideas, and also to write my drafts, and then I go to Word/Excel/Powerpoint (unless I can avoid them) or my WordPress to make the actual documents.

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