Member Sign In
Not a member?

A Wired.com user account lets you create, edit and comment on Webmonkey articles. You will also be able to contribute to the Wired How-To Wiki and comment on news stories at Wired.com.


It's fast and free.

Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...
Join Webmonkey

Please send me occasional e-mail updates about new features and special offers from Wired/Webmonkey.
Yes No

Please send occasional e-mail offers from Wired/Webmonkey affiliated web sites and publications, and carefully selected companies.
Yes No

I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to Webmonkey's User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Retrieve Sign In

Please enter your e-mail address or username below. Your username and password will be sent to the e-mail address you provided us.

or
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Welcome to Webmonkey

A private profile page has been created for you.
As a member of Webmonkey, you can now:
  • edit articles
  • add to the code library
  • design and write a tutorial
  • comment on any Webmonkey article
Close
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Sign In Information Sent

An e-mail has been sent to the e-mail address registered in this account.
If you cannot find it in your in-box, please check your bulk or junk folders.
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Digsby for Windows in Public Beta

Digsby_196x196Technology seems to experience waves of proliferation and ensuing consolidation. In the gadget world it’s called convergence: putting a camera in every cell phone. On the Internet, now that everyone has a million accounts on various social communities, life isn’t as easy as checking your e-mail: you have to check your MySpace, your Facebook, your MyStarbucksIdea, etc. Now comes a wave of consolidation, tricks and tools for roping together your widely dispersed online life.

Digsby is a new application that looks at first like an IM client. And indeed it is a client for the major IM networks, but it can also hook into POP and IMAP accounts, as well as Facebook and MySpace.


For now, it’s only in beta, and only for Windows, but OS X and Linux versions are promised soon. The installation process was a little slow and ugly, with Visual C++ 2005 windows popping up and .dll-related messages scrolling by. But the resulting application is pretty clean-looking and easy to use. Skinnable too, which I hear the kids like.

It’s also considerably more responsive than Pidgin, my multi-IM client of choice, which suffers for using the GTK+ GUI API rather than Windows’ native one.

Like an heir to biff, Digsby pops up a little notification panel when you get a new IM or e-mail or MySpace event. You can respond by typing in the pop-up. Depending on how you look at it, that either minimizes or maximizes the interruption potential.

You can send e-mail too, as well as perform little functions like “Mark as Read”. Any e-mail client, of course, is drastically prone to feature bloat; it’ll be interesting to watch that happen in future versions.

I am a freak from a bygone era, so I was unable to test out Digsby’s social-networking features — please, somebody with the necessary accounts, try out that feature and report back. For now, Facebook and MySpace are the only supported networks, but more are promised soon.

Digsby is free to download, but it’s released under a proprietary license.

See Also:

Post Comment Comments Permalink Print
Reddit Digg

 
Subscribe now

Special Offer For Webmonkey Users

WIRED magazine:
The first word on how technology is changing our world.

Subscribe for just $10 a year