Webmaster Key - Discussion Forums


Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
February 07, 2012, 11:12:30 AM

Login with username, password and session length
Welceome to Forums!

Important information for guests and new members:

In order to understand the full benefits of becoming an active member of this forum, please review the following information on guest and new member restrictions. These forum changes have been prompted by an overwhelming and unreasonable amount of bot postings and incoherent guest spam messages. We wish to prevent these events from happening in the future and make our community a more comfortable place for all of our members.

For guests:

Guests are not allowed to open new topics, polls, or posts attachments.
If you wish to open up new discussions on this forum, we encourage you to register.

For new members:

New members with less than five posts are not allowed to modify additional profile information such as avatars, contact information, biographies, and signatures. However, new members are encouraged to post their own topics or reply to topics initiated by other members. Become active on the forums and 5 posts should be an easy task!

We are a diverse community with members from all over the world. We encourage new ideas and interesting conversation. Do not be afraid to post webmaster/computer-related questions or problems, as our active members are always willing to help when they are able. Interested? Join us.

+ Webmaster Key Forums
|-+ General Discussion
| |-+ Cut Loose Saloon
| | |-+ News and Articles
| | | |-+ A Review of Tool bars
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: [1] Go Down Stumble Upon! Digg It! del.icio.us! Add to Technorati! ReddIt!  Send this topic Print
Author Topic: A Review of Tool bars  (Read 1818 times)
susieq
Key Keeper
Veteran
*****
Posts: 1 584


This critically endangered species is dying out


WWW
« on: April 20, 2004, 11:59:29 AM »

Found this review and thought it may be of interest.


REVIEW: Toolbars Offer More Than Searches
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: April 19, 2004


Filed at 11:28 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (AP) -- Search engine toolbars for the Internet Explorer browser have become nearly essential tools online: They can block pop-up ads, alert you to new e-mail, even protect you from scams.

You'd need a half-dozen to combine all the best features, the Internet equivalent of leaving home in the morning with six different wallets.

 Advertisement
 
 
 
So to narrow the choice I tested 11 -- two of which, from America Online and EarthLink, debuted Monday.

Toolbars from the search leaders -- Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft and AOL -- all have decent pop-up blockers that kill windows I don't want (ads) and permit ones I request (shipping details, for instance). And they're all a snap to download and install.

The Google Toolbar includes an extremely useful feature for frequent online shoppers. It automatically fills out online forms, such as name and address. A password protects stored credit card information. And if you keep a Web journal using Blogger software, which Google bought last year, you can add entries from the toolbar.

A small bell appears on the Yahoo! Companion Toolbar when users of Yahoo e-mail accounts have new messages. You can also access bookmarks of favorite Web sites that you've stored on Yahoo. What I like best about the Yahoo toolbar is its portability. Settings are stored online, so you can customize it or add bookmarks wherever you are.

As for Microsoft, you can launch Hotmail and Messenger from its MSN Toolbar, but there's nothing special once you're there.

The AOL Toolbar displays the number of mail messages you have -- if you're logged on already through AOL's regular software.

Yahoo outperforms MSN and AOL by allowing sign-ins from the toolbar, but Google outshines all of them. I found its search engine and extra features most useful. It even has a green bar that shows the relative popularity of the site you're visiting.

Among the rest, toolbars from Dogpile and Ask Jeeves have decent pop-up blockers. AltaVista and EarthLink make mistakes recognizing legitimate pop-ups, and Alexa keeps popping up annoying prompts asking whether I want that pop-up or not.

Dogpile, Ask Jeeves and Alexa have buttons for mailing Web links to a friend. Alexa's was the best.

Beyond that, each has its own handy features:

--Dogpile supports an emerging technology called Really Simple Syndication, or RSS. With it, headlines from your favorite Web journals, news or other RSS-enabled sites scroll across the toolbar.

--Ask Jeeves lets you shrink and expand entire Web pages -- not just their text in the more limited manner of the Internet Explorer browser.

--Alexa, owned by Amazon.com, suggests related sites, as in ``People who visit this page also visit ...'' It's similar to Amazon's shopping recommendations. And should a Web site disappear, a copy at the Internet Archive may be reachable with the click of a button.

--AltaVista has a button for translating text to and from other languages. With it, you might get at the gist of what's going on.

--EarthLink blocks fake EarthLink, eBay and PayPal sites that try to steal your passwords or credit card numbers. It also searches your computer for malicious programs known as ``spyware,'' though to remove them, you need an EarthLink account.

Among these features, EarthLink's ScamBlocker is the most promising, especially once sites identified by the anti-spam company Brightmail are added next month.

I also tried GuruNet, which helps you cull useful information from the junk by narrowing results to reference materials like encyclopedias and maps. It reduces clutter. But unlike the others I tested, GuruNet requires a cash outlay -- $29.99 a year.

I like Dogpile's RSS scroller and Alexa's recommendations. In both cases, there's a trade-off. They collect information on surfing habits, so read their privacy policies carefully.

Most people will probably be fine with either the Google or Yahoos toolbar, unless there's a specific feature they'd use a lot -- perhaps because you frequent foreign sites (then download AltaVista's as well) or have poor eyesight (use Ask Jeeves).

Sadly, however, all these toolbars work only on Windows computers running Internet Explorer. For other browsers, try GGSearch, a standalone application that looks like a toolbar. You get basic Google searches but not extras like pop-up blockers.

Or use Opera's browser, as I do. It has the Google search box and pop-up blocker built-in, though its form filler isn't as good.

^------

Google: http://toolbar.google.com

Yahoo!: http://companion.yahoo.com

MSN: http://toolbar.msn.com

AOL: http://ftp.newaol.com/aoltoolbar/download.html

GGSearch: http://www.frysianfools.com/ggsearch

Courtesy of:

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/technology/AP-Tech-Test-Search-Toolbars.html
Report to moderator   Logged

Seasons Greetings...http://sue.weblamp.net
SensoVision
Administrator
Veteran
*****
Posts: 5 857


I'm proud user of Debian GNU/Linux OS


WWW
« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2004, 12:55:59 PM »

generally I would agree with article writer. I'm using Google Bar sometimes although IE isn't my default browser for long time ago, and it's very sadly that Google won't make it's toolbar comaptible with Mozilla. I would be interested in PR feature and Google Directory icon.
BTW we already had thread about tooblars here.
Report to moderator   Logged

Denis
Pages: [1] Go Up Stumble Upon! Digg It! del.icio.us! Add to Technorati! ReddIt!  Send this topic Print 
+ Webmaster Key Forums
|-+ General Discussion
| |-+ Cut Loose Saloon
| | |-+ News and Articles
| | | |-+ A Review of Tool bars

Jump to:  
« previous next »


Our Partners
RelmaxTOP Ranking System Web Hosting RelmaxTOP Ranking System
Staff Sites
12Noon[12Noon Gallery] Andy[Urgentclick]
Tamuril[Tamuril's Digital Art Exhibit] Sensovision
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP We are hosted by Relmax Inc. |Our Privacy Policy | Sitemap
Powered by SMF 1.1.9 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC
Forum design by Tamuril © 2005.
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!