
netvibes,
originally uploaded by Tommy Vallier.
So it was suggested recently that I talk about my Netvibes page and how I use it.
The screenshot posted along with this is a sample of my front page. I’ve tweaked settings a little so as to not look too far behind, and have hidden my Remember The Milk calendar.
Getting Started
The page you’re looking at in the screenshot is my “Start” page. Along the left I have my twitter feed. Because I do try to stay in the loop. Down the middle you can see my Gmail inbox. ALL of my email is managed through gmail (Not even the for-your-domain version) and I see it from this panel. Below that is my Google and Wikipedia search box and the latest dig posts. On the right: Local date and time, weather and my calendar.
From this page I can quickly and easily see all of the things that are most important to me. Specifically the time, my email, calendar and the twitter feed. You can also see a large amount of tabs at the top. I’ll get to those. Note that I’ve set all of the modules on the page to be the same red-ish colour. It’s tab also has a unique icon. This is to visually identify the home page from others. I make a point of not using this red-like colour only on pages of personal interest – Home and bookmarks.
Branching Out
Along the top I have a wide variety of tabs. Each one is home to a large number of feeds and modules pulling in content from around the web. I do a few things to keep this organized too.
First, I identify tabs by the icons associated with them. All “real world” news feeds, such as newspaper feeds and feeds from TV stations, both local and not, share an icon. Same with blog feeds, podcasts and TalkShoe-related tabs. If I’m looking for a tab, I can then visually hunt out the icon then the tab name. You’ll notice they’re also grouped by icon. And personal tabs (Start, bookmarks and Meebo for communication) come before feeds. That’s because I use them more.
Module are all colour coded on a per-page basis too. If I’m looking at a page full of orange modules, I’m reading blogs (Regardless of topic). If it’s green – it’s a podcast. This works exceptionally well when you look at the TalkCasts tab. These are all shows created on TalkShoe (They earned a tab based on number of shows I track) and they share the TalkShoe icon, but within that page, all modules are green to match podcasts. The icon identifies the subject, the colour then identifies the medium.
The separate tabs/colour combination is part of the reason that, despite trying others, I don’t think I’ll be leaving Netvibes any time soon.
Mark All as Read
As tempting as this can sometimes be, I have never hit this button in Netvibes. Well, safe for adding a new feed I’m currently caught up on. One thing I do, admittedly, do though is NOT completely check out the content. I sometimes just don’t have time. I like knowing that there’s new posts, or a new episode, and will sometimes mark them as read if I look at a subject or topic and am not interested. I know that’s expected (How many of you read every post on every blog… or every article in the paper)… But I still feel guilty.
What About You?
I’m, clearly, a Netvibes Junkie. What about you? What reader do you use and why? Maybe you use Netvibes and can recommend a new module for me to check out? Maybe you’ve got a question? Looking forward to the feedback.







