10 essential web apps for bloggers
Used to be desktop applications were essential to getting the job done, whatever the job may have been, large or small. Now, with all the nimble web apps to choose from, the idea of firing up a huge application for a small task seems almost, well, unproductive and wasteful.
Yeah, sure, no one is suggesting you do away with Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Illustrator, Photoshop, Quickbooks and other heavy hitters. However, there are excellent tools on the web where less, in many ways, is actually more. Here are 10 of my favorites.
1. ScribeFire - essential Firefox add-on for bloggers. Allows you to to easily drag and drop formatted text from the Web into your blog(s), post entries, take notes, and optimize ad inventory, directly through the Firefox browser.
2. Firefox - great web browser whose charm lies in all those irresistible add ons that make the whole interwebs experience that much sweeter. Once you pimp out your Firefox, it seriously is difficult to function on anything else. Yes, there are the crashes and other peccadillos, but they're easy enough to overlook especially if you are truly in love.
3. Skitch - this is the best, quick image editor and photo sharing web app that is dead simple to use. For quick screenshots and sharing photos, you cannot beat it. For Mac only though. Sorry.
4. Gmail - I've done away with Outlook and Mail and rely on Gmail for several reasons: free, 7090 MB capacity, integration with Google calendar, Gtalk, great search functionality, and the portability is sweet.
5. Google Reader - free, powerful feed reader which allows you to share items with your friends and slog through all your news feeds as fast as your bleary eyes will let you. Bonus - I'm playing with Feedly (Firefox extension) which provides a magazine like start page of your feeds with complete Google Reader integration and Twitter and FriendFeed and more. So far I like, but Google Reader is still number one for now.
6. Twitter - you can't help but love Twitter, even with all its scalability issues and down time. Twitter is terrific for keeping the pulse of what's going down on the interwebs and your friends' lives as well. Hint: following leading tech pundits is a great way to find fresh stories.
7. Remember the Milk - incredibly intuitive task/to do list organizer which helps you stay on your game without having to take a class to master an expensive off-the-shelf organization system.
8. Flickr - every blogger loves them the mega stash of imagery that Flickr provides to enhance their posts, especially the extensive database of work under Creative Commons licenses.
9. Meebo - here's a multi-network IM service, no downloads or install necessary, which connects with AIM, Yahoo!, MSN, Google Talk and Gmail, ICQ and Jabber. Keeping in touch has never been easier.
10. FreshBooks - minimizes the pain and misery of invoicing and time tracking so you can focus on whatever it is you do best. Reasonable pricing plans.
This top 10 is by no means exhaustive, they're just my tried and true. What are some of your favorites?













Comments
8
Subscribe to commentsKamalSep 2nd 2008 8:38PM
Live Writer is cool in that it allows you to write blogs offline and then upload them automatically when you get online.
Dolores ParkerSep 2nd 2008 8:48PM
Yeh, that looks like a nice one for Windows. I love me my Macbook though.
Wickster_ZeroSep 2nd 2008 10:58PM
The Jing Project might be a good alternative for Skitch for PC users. It's not as fancy as skitch but does the basic tasks all the same.
http://www.jingproject.com/
AniruddhSep 3rd 2008 7:31AM
I think Google docs and zoho are also great web app for office application.
Teguh AdityaSep 3rd 2008 6:44AM
Scribefire is a must. I already use it since beta release.
llseeSep 4th 2008 8:14PM
Love the picture, an IBM 360/40. I worked on these guys back in the late 60's. Only the ones I used had the faster 2400 tape drives.
Dolores ParkerSep 4th 2008 8:18PM
Srsly? That's soooo cool.
skooalSep 7th 2008 6:17AM
What about Flock?
http://flock.com/