Sunday, August 19, 2007

About Living in the future


New Zeelander Helen Baxter, has created an interesting mindmap about "Living in the future" with lots of keywords in different 2.0-areas. Check it out HERE

The future 1994...

In 1994 I was the first person in my company (by that time Nordbanken) that had access to the Internet. This video show Internet look and feel 1994, it was really cool by that time.....

Wikis explained

Ever struggled to explain what a wiki is to someone -- let's say, your boss, co-worker, or family member? Struggle no more! Here it is in plain english


- social bookmarking in plain english
-RSS in plain english
-Social networking in plain english

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Web 2.0 adaption in enterprises

"Many folks don't know about or understand what feedreaders (etc.) can do. Experienced systems implementers know that the pioneers and early adopters are easy converts, but the magic happens when you can connect with the early majority.

You can lead the corporate horse to the Web 2.0 water, but you can't make them collaborate. It's a different set of skills - some folks will get it, and some folks will fight it - but I think most folks will stand by, bemused, and watch it all go by, until it becomes a job requirement. That's not cynical, it's reality; 500,000 people stood in long lines to get their first-edition iPhones, but most of us stood back and wondered where the cost/benefit really is on stuff like that."

Some words from a wonderful posting by James P. MacLennan on his blog.

Mobile 6 upgrade for TyTn

HTC have released the upgrade to Windows Mobile 6 for the TyTn device on the HTC E Club.

To download it you need to register the Serial Number of your device on the HTC site and you can then download it!

You can get more details HERE

Speed test your mobile connection

Here you can test your speed and se what throughput you get from your mobile device.
Check it out Here

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Mediaplayer concept

Erik Lindström, a true "gadgeteer" and a collegue of mine, bought a new mediaplayer(streamer) this summer and I am very impressed by its functionality. It´s called "Twixbox".

Read a full story here

Inwearhouse e-shop

Monday, August 13, 2007

Swedbank´s blog about savings



If you havent already discovered it - Swedbank is the pioneer-blogger among swedish banks.
Just before the summer they introduced the Savingsblog.
Link to Swedbanks savingsblog

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Online-in the middle of nowhere



So finally this summer I experienced the sweet taste of beeing online from my summer house in the middle of nowhere. Where the sea meets the sun and where I am surrounded by forest and mountains. It has taken a couple of years. I remember 3 yrs ago, by that time it was amazing to be connected in 56 kb/s via GPRS. Today its 1,8 mb/s via HSDPA. Via Edge you can connect in 200-300 kb/s and for that you don´t need more than standard GSM-coverage. (But don´t forget your hardware such as PCMCIA-card for example - if the chip is´nt already in your laptop)

So now we are able to be online everywhere, how do we adapt to that? Interesting question. What services will providers market to us next? This year was the year of the mobile-always- connected- thing, we could see that from banners in the papers etc.. How will we change our behaviours when we can be online all time?

Something that caught my attention this summer is a new service called Soonr, it certainly comes from the thin client-world. I think this is very much what we can expect from the future.
(Also check out iZoho which is a service from which you can reach your zoho-files, spreadsheets etc via your iPhone) This is shortly what Soonr say on their website:


How Does It Work?
Your mobile phone acts as a remote control for your computer. There is nothing to install on your phone because SoonR uses the features that are already built into your phone. You simply login into the SoonR website at www.soonr.com. SoonR can send you an SMS with the link to make it even easier.

In order to access your computer from your phone, you need to download a program (SoonR Desktop Agent) that runs on your computer, and define which folders you want to access from your phone. This program allows you to leverage applications installed on your computer such as Outlook, Mac Mail, Skype, or Desktop Search. That’s not all it does! It will optimize all the data that is sent to your phone, leveraging the superior power of your computer’s CPU.

The SoonR service is there to connect your computer to your phone and provide optimized versions of information stored on remote computers. When you make changes on your remote computer, the SoonR Desktop Agent program will update the information on the SoonR service so that it will immediately available on your mobile phone the next time you ask for it. The service also provides a place for information to be shared that works even when remote computers are turned off.