Innovative Web Solutions
Blue Star have a proven reputation for building
high performance web designs and web applications
backed up by strategic online marketing campaigns.

Archive for the ‘Google Apps’ Category

Google to drop support for IE6 and other dinsosaur browsers

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

A letter from Google informing the public that older browsers won’t cut it with Google’s new line of product enhancements, I welcome it, perhaps now we can be free of IE6 and other dinosaur browsers allowing the rest of us developers to leverage the exciting new technologies that have emerged in the last few years.


In order to continue to improve our products and deliver more sophisticated features and performance, we are harnessing some of the latest improvements in web browser technology.  This includes faster JavaScript processing and new standards like HTML5.  As a result, over the course of 2010, we will be phasing out support for Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 as well as other older browsers that are not supported by their own manufacturers.

We plan to begin phasing out support of these older browsers on the Google Docs suite and the Google Sites editor on March 1, 2010.  After that point, certain functionality within these applications may have higher latency and may not work correctly in these older browsers. Later in 2010, we will start to phase out support for these browsers for Google Mail and Google Calendar.

Google Apps will continue to support Internet Explorer 7.0 and above, Firefox 3.0 and above, Google Chrome 4.0 and above, and Safari 3.0 and above.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Gmail annoyances and downtime

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

I am beginning to loose faith in Google’s services, perhaps they are getting too big for their own boots and letting quality and engineering standards slide.  There was a time one could always rely on Gmail but increasingly over the last year there have been numerous Gmail outages.

At the moment I cannot send/delete/view emails on either my Google Apps or personal Gmail account.  As email is vital to my business this is most unacceptable, these problems have been going on for 5 days now, I tried the usual troubleshooting such as disabling Gears and Labs, alas to no avail.

In the end I fell back on my in-house SMTP server running in tandem with Gmail so I can at least get mails out to clients and other contacts.  Of course not everyone has the luxury of their own mail server and I really feel for those who are currently totally without email.

Any clients who are using Google Apps who are affected by this outage can contact us to setup a temporary webmail account on our data-centre so they can send out emails for the duration of this  outage.  You will still receive mail on your Gmail account, but can send from http://webmail.bluestar.ie.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Adding additional services to Google Apps

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Google Apps is always being updated with new features on a regular basis.  The killer new feature is the ability to add extra services in addition to the standard offering of Gmail, Docs, Calendar et al.  There are several neat tools available from Google Labs and more are sure enough to pop up as time goes on.  Currently there is a neat website bookmarking service, an forum/support centre (Moderator).  There is also a most useful tool for version control and bug tracking.

There is also the ability to add services built using Google App Engine.  But here’s the real sweet part; developers can roll their own services integrated with apps, the possibilities here are endless.  All that is needed is the App’s public key to add a new service.

There are also some interesting services available from Google partners, some are free and others are subscription based.  The most notably free app I have yet come across has to be Xoopit, which manages attachments and simplifies finding attachments, among many other cool features.

On a related matter Google Docs API has been updated with the ability to edit content directly and manage document location.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Advances in Gmail Labs

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Gmail Labs and Gmail in general is becoming more feature rich everyday.  Two new welcome additions are the widgets that allow you to get a snapshot of your Google Calendar and Google Docs, showing recent items in Docs and your upcoming schedule in Calendar.  Up until now I had been using Remember the Milk as a task list in Google.  I was aversed to using the greasemonkey scripts that were available to perform similar scorcery but it seemed too much like a hack for my liking.

With the new additions to Labs, the left nav panel does get a bit cluttered, still there are also labs features to re-arrange the layout of some of the other page elements such as chat and links, and I think labels can also be moved to right of screen.  There is also drag-and-drop available on these elements which helps provide a somewhat less cluttered workspace.  In Google Apps all these improvements make a super productive email environment, everything at your fingertips.

http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2008/10/new-in-labs-calendar-and-docs-gadgets.html

On a sidenote Gmail for mobile has also been updated to version 2, now with support for Google Apps users.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Google’s insight on trusting your IT to the Cloud

Friday, October 31st, 2008

The reliability of cloud computing has been a hot topic recently, partly because glitches in the cloud don’t happen behind closed doors as with traditional on-premises solutions for businesses. Instead, when a small number of cloud computing users have problems, it makes headlines. As with most things at Google, we are fanatical about measuring the availability of Gmail, and we thought it best to simply share our reliability metrics, which we measure as average uptime per user based on server-side error rates. We think this reliability metric lets you do a true side-by-side comparison with other solutions.

We measure every server request for every user, every moment of every day. Any millisecond delay is logged. Over the last year, Gmail has been available more than 99.9 percent of the time — for everyone, both consumers and business users. The vast majority of people using Gmail have seen few issues, experienced no downtime, and have continued to have a great Gmail experience, with exception of an outage in August 2008. If you average all these data together, including the August outage, across the entire Gmail service, there has been an aggregate 10-15 minutes of downtime per month over the last year of providing the service. That 10-15 minutes per month average represents small delays of a couple of seconds here and there. A very small number of people have unfortunately been subject to some disruption of service that affected them for a few minutes or a few hours. For those users, we are very sorry. And for Google Apps Premier Edition customers, we have extended service level agreement credits to them.

So how does greater than 99.9 percent reliability compare to more conventional approaches for business email? We asked some experts. Naturally, the normal caveats apply for on-premises solutions, since each individual business environment will vary, depending on server reliability, staff response time, and actual maintenance schedules for each application.

According to the research firm Radicati Group, companies with on-premises email solutions averaged from 30 to 60 minutes of unscheduled downtime and an additional 36 to 90 minutes of planned downtime per month.1

Looking just at the unplanned outages that catch IT staffs by surprise, these results suggest Gmail is twice as reliable as a Novell GroupWise solution, and four times more reliable than a Microsoft Exchange-based solution that companies must maintain themselves. And higher reliability translates to higher employee productivity. Gmail’s reliability jumps to more than four times as reliable as a GroupWise solution and 10 times more reliable than an Exchange-based solution if you factor in the planned outages inherent in on-premises messaging platforms. But this isn’t the only way Google Apps helps businesses do more with their resources. Compared to the costs of Microsoft Exchange, IBM Lotus or Novell GroupWise — including software licensing, server expenses and the labor associated with deploying, maintaining and upgrading them on a regular basis — Google Apps leaves companies with much more time and money to focus on their real business.

We are now extending what we’ve learned from Gmail to the other applications in Google Apps.

Today, we’re announcing that we will extend the 99.9 percent service level agreement we offer Premier Edition customers on Gmail to Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Sites, and Google Talk. We have been delivering high levels of reliability across all these products, so it makes sense to extend our guarantees to them.

More than 1 million businesses have selected Google Apps to run their business, and tens of millions of people use Gmail every day. With this type of adoption, a disruption of any size — even a minor one affecting fewer than 0.003% of Google Apps Premier Edition users, like the one a few weeks ago — attracts a disproportional amount of attention. We’ve made a series of commitments to improve our communications with customers during any outages, and we have an unwavering commitment to make all issues visible and transparent through our open user groups.

Google is one of the 1 million businesses that run on Google Apps, and any service interruption affects our users and our business; our engineers are also some of our most demanding customers. We understand the importance of delivering on the cloud’s promise of greater security, reliability and capability at lower cost. We are hugely thankful to our customers who drive us to become better every day.

1. The Radicati Group, 2008. “Corporate IT Survey – Messaging & Collaboration, 2008-2009″

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Google Chrome and 4 new Gmail labs features

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Gmail Labs Edition has received three useful new features. For me, the nicest one of this bunch is the ability to re-arrange the side navigation. Also present are a selection of new label colours to use. And last but not least the addition of a Label search with auto-suggest.

In other Google happenings, a new web browser has been unleashed upon a relatively unsuspecting world, this really was a natural progression for Google at some point, it was only a matter of time, the age-old saga of a platform lockdown, Google control the apps, now the environment they run in also. Personally I think this is great as many of the applications I use on a daily basis are Google services anyway. Google Chrome is said to be optimized for Javascript heavy apps such as Gmail and Google Docs. There are many other common sense features available too, we all know how common browser freezes and memory leaks occur in current browsers. Chrome is different, it runs each tab as an individual process, and even provides a task manager with detailed stats on each tab and ability to kill a crashed page without affecting other open sessions.
It will be interesting to see how this affects the long-time browser wars.

3 New Gmail Labs features

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

New easier posting of Docs on Google Sites

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Google sites now simplifies the embedding and addition of Google Docs for display and sharing, or indeed for the world to see if one so wishes. Google Sites allow for easy collaboration online by editing pages in a wiki style and a common file sharing area for project files. Other refinements have also been made to Sites, including a much needed facility to adjust layout and have more control of structure of page.

http://googlesitesblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/more-layout-control-and-better.html

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Templates for Google Apps

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Google Docs now gives the option of creating a new document from a template. There is an extensive collection templates already available and there will surely be more added over time.

This feature may have been an obvious path to follow, indeed it has been a path followed quite well and it has blossomed into quite a nice addition to the Google Docs suite. There are templates for regular documents and also for presentations and spreadsheets.

http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2008/07/templates-bring-docs-to-life.html

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Google Apps for SME’s in Ireland

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Google Apps provides a whole new way of working with your time and data. You can have all your apps hosted under your domain name. The suite of applications includes:

  • Gmail for email needs
  • Google Calender to manage all your tasks
  • Google Talk for instant messenging within and beyond your company
  • Google Docs for dcouments, spreadsheets and presentations
  • Google Sites for collaboration and project sharing

Google Apps allows you to easily retrieve all information you may need from anywhere, email, calender and documents. You can even access most services through a mobile device.

Blue Star are happy to setup Google Apps for any organisation that may need it. Please get in touch for a quote.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Offline access comes to Google Docs

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Since Google Gears was initially released the most prime candidate for offline access must have been Google Docs. To have the freedom to edit documents offline, and the flexibility to access documents from anyhwere online or through a mobile device is wonderful. My Google Docs recently got the Gears upgrade enabled. Synchronising documents is quite fast, although I have not yet given the offline access a good trial, the only major lacking feature is the inability to create new documents whilst offline, though this can be easily overcome by creating a few empty documents before going offline and hottong the road. It would be nice to see my Gmail on Google Apps upgraded to the new version, surely in time. Google’s rollout of new features to Apps seems to be sporadic and somewhst chaotic at times.

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to MySpace

Blue Star Web Design Ireland
e: sales@bluestar.ie
t: +353 86 3318412
Tipperary Town

Copyright ©2010 Blue Star