
Choose a new Start Page
Remember back in the day when Lycos, Netscape, Excite, AOL, Compuserve and a few others dominated the homepage of most browsers? Times were good, news, weather, and the daily horoscope greeted us with a nice and simple format. Well, for the most part, those days are over. Web 2.0 has nudged us right along to a new group of home/start pages and the decision of where to begin each web experience could not be harder.
I began this quest by coming to the conclusion that my current start page was just not cutting it any more. The page I wanted would need to have the ability to display rss feeds, e-mail, news, gadgets, and of course have search capabilities. After hours of playing experimenting with the different options, I have put together a list of what I like and don’t like about the most common places to use today.
iGoogle
Google stumbled into the homepage game and in the beginning I was not impressed. Sure, it displayed my gmail, calendar, rss feeds, gadgets, and Google search but it was very web 1.0 looking. Everyone always says “looks aren’t everything” but we all know the truth and thankfully Google realized this too.
Google began offering the ability to cloak your page with a theme and it has made a significant difference. Some of the themes are not too shabby and even change depending on the time of day.
Bottom line: If you are an avid user of Google products this makes for a respectable start page.
Score: 7/10
NetVibes
If NetVibes was a 17-year old school girl she would be the prom queen. Graphics galore, easy customization, with feeds and modules covering everything I can imagine. Getting started is easy as well. Within 20 seconds you can have a customized page including a theme, location based data, modules of interest, and suggested widgets.
After you get started you can customize more with thousands of widgets and the ability to add your favorite rss feeds, you can even title the name of your new creation.
Bottom line: NetVibes tugged at my heart strings the very first time I paid a visit.
Score: 9/10
Pageflakes
Proof that you can’t judge a book by its cover. Pageflakes and NetVibes are very similar in looks but after you spend some time with both you will begin to notice a difference.
Pageflakes is easy to setup, the whole process can be completed in less than a minute, and is just as easy as NetVibes. Widgets can be moved, themes can be applied but what begins to bug me is some of the small things that could be easily changed. How to changes settings is not very apparent and some of the modules do not allow me to do everything I would like, for example – I could not pull in all my email accounts from different providers onto the page.
Bottom line: Pageflakes is good but NetVibes does it better.
Score: 7/10
Windows Live
Microsoft has really dropped the ball when it comes to convincing users to use the products they put out on the web. The Live experience is not straightforward or easy to find for a lot of users. When I sat down to write this review I could not get to my customized start page that I had setup a few months ago it had been replaced by a boring page showing hotmail, spaces, and services being offered.
The page is a simple, streamlined page that may appeal to some users but it offers nothing that I want.
Bottom line: Wait until MS decides what they are doing
Score: 3/10
My Yahoo
Yahoo was the king of the web for many years and is still a prince when it comes to the number of users they have, however, they have not joined the revolution whole heartedly.
I admit that for years Yahoo is where I went for stock quotes, tv listings, odd-news and a few other items but, even though these items still exist they no longer hold the appeal that they once did. The page can be customized to a point, three columns allow for a drag-and-drop interface and a multitude of themes can be selected but that is about it.
Bottom line: As with Google, if you are an avid user of Yahoo products this is not a bad place to be but, Yahoo has really fallen behind.
Score: 4/10
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