Flocking Fantastic
Flock is, and I’ve said it before, a fantastic browser. Not everyone agrees, saying it’s just Firefox with a bunch of extensions added on top.
This isn’t the impression I’ve gotten–I’d like to see an extension do some of the stuff I really like from Flock.
Let’s start by looking at the feedreader. Everyone one using Firefox knows about the “Live Bookmarks”, as they’re called in Firefox–most people, anyway, and sure: it works quite well, assuming you only want the headlines to display in your browser.
Flock, on the other hand, has a really nifty built-in feed reader, which automatically loads any RSS feed opened and asks you if you wish to subscribe to it.
Furthermore, it allows you to read all your news, choose between displaying headlines, excerpts and full articles and save any post you might find interesting for later use.
Sure, this particular feature probably could be achieved with a simple extension–I wouldn’t know as I’ve never attempted to code any kind of extension or theme for Flock or Firefox.
Another really cool feature is browsing Photobucket or flickr galleries–in a seperate pane! It even notifies you of any new photos uploaded by your contacts. If that’s not kickass, I don’t know what is.
When you mouse over an image on flickr or Photobucket servers, a small banner flashes over the image, that lets you click it and load the person’s photostream in the pane.
Those, along with the new theme, are the most notable two new features.
I want to grab hold of one more though, the del.icio.us integration. There was a Firefox extension for it, but let’s face it–hardcoded features are much, much nicer than extensions, right?
You double-click the star (which denotes a favourite) left of your addressbar and type in regular favourite-options and it simply posts it to your del.icio.us–which it asks you for on startup (which is the case with flickr, Shadows, Photobucket and such services aswell).
Of course, there are tons of more features like these–like dragging snippets into your browser window and drop them in a pane at the bottom and various other things–it’s not like they’re not worth mentioning, because they are–though I don’t want to bore you anymore. Instead, point your browsers to the Flock website and click the fancy download-link.
Lasse Havelund on August 18th 2006 in Miscellaneous