There's a lot to be said about Google's full-frontal attack on the software industry. It is buying and relaunching all kinds of basic software offerings for free, including word processing, spreadsheets and online collaboration.
Less understood, and perhaps equally fascinating, is the world of third-party plug-ins, known as "gadgets" that roam the Web for you, looking up airfares, tracking news or otherwise keeping you up-to-date. Some are serious time-killers, but many are suprisingly useful.
First and foremost, get Google Desktop
This little-understood Google browser plug-in creates a searchable index of your own PC hard drive, as well as any drive you can reach on a local network, even behind passworded folders (assuming you tell Desktop the password).
I recommend: After a few hours of examing your drive, you can suddenly
lightning-quick search for obscure files, forgotten e-mails (even in Outlook), any office file, calendar item, stray spreadsheet -- whatever. No more opening nests of files for the one document you need now.
Downloading the main program gives you access to a brace of essential gadgets written by Google itself, such as
e-mail, weather and maps modules, plus the only to-do list I've found simple enough to keep using.
Go beyond simply searching phrases
The most annoying part of looking for a specific file is knowing it exists -- somewhere -- but not being able to nail it down.
I recommend: Google allows a series of
search strategies, like searching for phrases and file types. If you know some client's specific data is in an Excel spreadsheet, for instance, knock any other type of file out of the search in one click.
Power search the Web from your desktop
If you've become addicted to quick fact-checking, you know by now that opening Web pages over and over can slow you down, particuarly on deadline.
I recommend: Several gagets will run searchs on typed-in terms straight from the desktop, including
Wikipedia,
FareCompare for airline ticket prices, for instance, and Google itself, as a part of the
Desktop control panel. More get written every week.
Speedsurf the news that matters
It is getting much easier to digest news and data from the many Web sites that matter to professionals. Gadgets can help you follow the strands of info that matter with no Web browsing required.
I recommend: NPR Now Playing tracks the popular public-radio news programs. There are several ways to track
stocks and financial indices as well as
Google News and your own chosen
RSS feeds. For geeks, there's a module that scrolls the top 10 stories on user-driven news organization
Digg.com.
Keep track of the real world outside
Zoning out in the radiation bath of your computer's screen can put you out of the loop, reality-wise.
I recommend: Stay on top of times to call clients or associates with an
international clock, watch for
traffic problems as you head out for appointments, keep a big deadline in perspective with a
countdown clock, and plan your week with the lovely
Weather Globe.
Do simple things more simply, or better
Programmers love to one-up operating system designers, so a number of Google gadgets are written specifically to improve the performance of the computer itself.
I recommend: For instance, using gadgets you could sniff out a
wireless network near you, track
laptop battery strength,
work out your travel expenses or just
shutdown your computer very quickly. The scariest and but most fun is a
shredder which can overwrite a file up to 35 times, rendering it totally and unequivocally gone.