Switch on, log on, wait, and wait, and wait. If that pretty much
describes
your online experience, it may be time for metabrowsers to come and bail
you
out. While these browsers don’t improve the speed of your connection -
wouldn’t that be a pleasant surprise - they can customise the way you
surf,
giving you the best of your favourite web sites, all on one page.
This power surfing is of the kind your current browsers simply can’t
provide. For instance, instead of opening a number of browser windows
like
you usually do - one for your email, another for sports, the weather,
stock
quotes or headlines, a meta browser actually lets you ‘pick and choose’
bits
from these sites, to make one page that stacks your favourites one on
top of
the other. Needless to say, using these browsers to the best of their
capabilities comes only with a bit of practice, though, once you spend a
little time with them, you can conveniently forget all about the
sluggish
browser currently taking up your drive space.
Octopus (http://www.octopus.com/) is a good place to kick things off.
Still
in its experimental stage, the browser has already attracted a lot of
attention. All you need to do is download a small Java applet. That
done,
you can personalise your browser to control pages you view, and save
these
customised views.
While the content you can choose from is limited at present --
restricted to
news, sports, and stocks - things should undoubtedly get better in
future.
Sadly, Octopus currently requires its users to have Internet Explorer 5
installed, which means that Netscape and Mac users may have to wait a
while
longer to use it.
Easy to use, easier to like, and the brainchild of a freelance
journalist,
Quickbrowse (http://www.quickbrowse.com/) is your next bet, as popular
for
its quick registration process as it is for its features. ‘Custom
Masterpages’ are what it lets you create, which are continuous pages
that
put your favourite sites together. Take a bit of news from Rediff.com,
add
breaking business reports from the DowJones home page, put in some IT
info
from ZdNET, enter the URLs, and click Quickbrowse to find them all
neatly
stacked on top of each other. Best of all, users can actually have their
Masterpages e-mailed to them daily, for fast access, or share their
Quickbrowse bookmark with friends.
Similar, as far as the technology is concerned, is Call The Shots
(http://www.calltheshots.com/), recently selected as one of Red
Herring's
Top 20 most promising technology companies. It lets you create ‘Combo’
pages
comprising what it calls ‘blocks’ of a user’s favourite sites. Users can
create various blocks of text or images and save them on one page, add
blocks from other sites, and form a kind of jigsaw giving them exactly
what
they want from the Internet, and nothing more.
While it takes a while getting used to, this means that unwanted content
like banner ads are thankfully left out in the cold. After building a
ComboPage, users can also invite others to view it. An important issue
raised here is: how does the browser avoid copyright violation? There’s
a
notice that warns against the ‘unauthorised copying or distribution of
copyrighted works,’ but nothing specific has been laid out yet. Wait and
watch, or take a peek while you’re at it.
Yodlee (http://www.yodlee.com/) is more for those tired of multiple
online
accounts. The browser simply centralises them, giving you a control
panel to
manage and access them all - whether email or shopping or auctions --
without making you sign in anywhere manually. It also tells you when you
have new e-mail at a particular account, giving you the sender's name
and
subject line even without logging in! If that’s not enough, Yodlee also
does
what other metabrowsers do, viz. designate content channels you want at
one
location. It’s not terribly fast, currently, which is a downside; but a
couple of improvements will have surfers across the planet lapping it up
soon enough.
Taking up 2.4 MB, Katiesoft (http://www.katiesoft.com/) may find a few
sceptics; but that should change the minute they take time out to
actually
launch the browser. Katiesoft lets users open up to four separate
browser
windows (called panes) that are navigable simultaneously. Sure, any
metabrowser can do that, but can it also let you browse multiple panes,
each
with their own navigation?
You can save ‘Snapshots’ of your custom panes, with not just the content
but
also pane size and position of the scrollbar! An auto refresh feature
sets
your panes to refresh the sites at a predetermined interval. You can
also
maximise or minimise a particular pane, returning to the multi-paned
view
whenever you feel like it. For those who have the money, paying $29.95
may
be a good idea as it gets you an upgrade (the ‘App Capture’ online
version
is free) that integrates desktop applications too. This means you can
check
your mail and run another software programme like Microsoft Excel too,
on
the same page!
More options are readily available, like Clickmarks
(http://www.clickmarks.com/), which helps users create customised,
personal
portals accessible on any device, wired or wireless. OnePage
(http://www.onepage.com/) can identify particular content on a page and
bring it back to a user’s personal page. Websplit (
http://www.websplit.com/)
splits your browser in up to nine windows displaying thumbnail
screenshots
of selected sites. And Netcaptor (http://www.netcaptor.com/) opens up as
many browser windows as you want, but charges you $19.95 for its effort.
After metabrowsers, the ‘anti-browser’ that claims to give you a
‘different
Internet.’ Netomat (http://www.netomat.net/) retrieves information from
the
Web as soon as you pose a question using natural language. It scours
cyberspace to throw up flowing text, images and audio on to your screen.
Best of all, this data -- ranging from RealAudio and jpegs, to wav,
gifs,
html and plain text -- is not constrained by a web page or site, but is
free
floating and independent. Better still, it’s free.
So the next time your browser decides to make you wait a while, you know
what to do.