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Will Widgets Invade Your Desktop?

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Computers have an interesting way of stealing your time in small increments.

What do I mean?

Ten minutes of spam sorting per day equates to over 60 hours a year deleting email.

Five minutes per day spent looking for your to-do list comes out at over 30 hours a year of unproductive time.

Thought to represent the saviors of our lives, computers actually eat up our time in tiny, almost imperceptible bytes.

As the computer world grows increasingly complex, anyone or anything that removes clutter from your desktop (or your mind), saves you time, or eliminates effort rates a closer look.

The answer to increased productivity and micro-time management may not lie in “bigger and better,” but in “smaller and specialized.”

Widgets, small specialized programs that typically run in the background while you do other things on your computer, may just hold the key to claiming back those lost seconds and minutes that add up over time.

Instead of trying to represent the “end all and be all” of software programs, “widgets” typically solve one - and only one - problem.

Whether it’s managing a to-do list, monitoring computer performance, tracking activities, or managing your calendar, widgets can solve the little problems that add up quickly.

Side Note: As always, when installing unfamiliar software from the Internet, back up all sensitive files, update your anti-virus, turn on your spyware detector software, and generally heighten your awareness of what’s taking place on your computer.

Log on to widgets.yahoo.com for a growing library of free widgets you can download and use right away.

However, to use the widgets, you must install Yahoo!’s Widget Engine, which makes the whole process a bit cumbersome.

I would much prefer each widget stand on its own as an individual installation.

Also, Yahoo!’s organization of its widget library leaves a lot to be desired as it takes quite some digging to uncover some of the real gems.

To its credit, Yahoo! seems to be actively promoting third-party development of widgets, which it then, in turn, helps distribute.

Log on to desktop.google.com and see Google’s answer to widgets with its “Google Gadgets,” a collection of handy little apps designed to help you out with little tasks.

Probably the best offering for increased productivity is the Google Calendar v2 (though it apparently carries no reminder feature).

Like Yahoo!, you can’t run the gadgets without Google’s software installed.

Though most of the widgets you’ll find at these sites are not business related, they represent a trend toward micro-specialization in software development.

Solving one problem for a small group of people (niche audience) instead of trying to solve every problem for a huge group of people - like major software developers - makes a lot of sense.

I believe this represents a trend that will spill over into the mainstream once a viable profit model develops.

Once people figure out how to make money with these “widgets” or “gadgets,” you’ll see an explosion of mini-software applications performing a myriad of tasks and people will wonder how they previously ever got along without them.

[Jim Edwards]

Article Source: Ezine Articles

[tags]widget, gadget, yahoo, google, jim edwards, turnwordsintotraffic.com, ezine articles[/tags]

2 Comments

I don’t know if Widgets will ultimately save you time. When you have 10-20 of them then it just becomes unmanageable.

I posted about this over here :)

http://www.touchstonelive.com/blog/2006/10/what-do-you-think-of-widgets.html

This trend is hardly new. (No offense) but this is something that has been coming for years and Google and yahoo are just jumping on the band wagon now that it looks like a little of your desktop might slip from there grasps.

Widgets have been in dev for … well, I first started messing with them when I discovered Window Blinds, ….. god like maybe 10 years ago. (has it been that long?)

Further more, it has been my observation that windows is the only OS that doesn’t have some form of widget-ability built into it. My experience with Linux is limited, but it seems to me that it is very widget-able right out of the box.

Lastly, here is a list of people/companys/entities that provide stand alone widgets or tools to create your own stand alone widgets.

1. Opera web browser has some kind of built in way of making stand alone widgets I think
2. Stardock Studios(formerly Window Blinds) allows you to compile stand alone widgets. (Very Cool, Probably the most powerful GUI creation tools you’ll find for this)
3. AutoIt! Allows your to create automation programs. Basically creating EXEs from macros. There is the ability to use GUI eliments in the macros, but this is definitely a Geek tool and less for the masses.
4. And MY FAVORITE DO IT ALL WIDGET, FIREFOX. Lets face it, Firefox Has become the biggest widget there is. Or Widget Host I guess. Damn, FF is practically an OS! An OS that runs on any OS! Thanks Mozilla.

What Do You Think?

 
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