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SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

Mar05
by Sindy Cator on March 5, 2014 at 4:59 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider, Product Reviews

header image2 730x352 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

Gmail users have a myriad of options for accessing their emails on the move. Specifically for iPhone, there’s the beautiful Mailbox for starters, or less fussy folks may be perfectly happy with Google’s very own incarnation.

Now, SquareOne is throwing its hat into the ring, as it attempts what many, many others before have it attempted: to filter through the email rubble and bring order to the chaos. We managed to grab a quick hands-on with SquareOne ahead of the launch today and we were impressed.

SquareOne: The Lowdown

Currently an iPhone-only affair, SquareOne’s core raison d’être is in showing what’s important to you at a glance, by moving your messages into groups (created by you) of senders. Here’s how it looks.

To remind you about just how much email you get, when you first launch the app SquareOne serves up some pretty sobering statistics on your email usage. As you can see from this, my inbox is more overloaded than 78.8% of heavy users, and in the course of one month I receive nearly three thousand emails, taking an average of 15 hours to reply to each one. Instinctively, that all sounds very correct.

a1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming    b1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

To start with, SquareOne sets up a handful of default zones/groups to get you going, but you can create as many as you like. You can also move them around and reposition them as you see fit.

c1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming    d1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

When creating a new zone, you can give it any name you like and also allocate it an icon, of which you have many to choose from.

To sort a contact into a ‘zone’ just swipe left on any given email, and then select the relevant group. All emails from that sender will now automatically go to that group. Also, if messages in a given group can wait your attention (e.g. if you want to delay actions on dealing with all your emails marked as ‘Work’), just swipe right to silence these notifications only. This is a really nice touch, as it happens.

e1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming    f1 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

To compose an email, you can just hit the little downwards pointing arrow at the top-right of your screen, where you’ll see the option to ‘Compose’, ‘Edit’, ‘Mark All as Read’, and ‘Move All to Archive’.

g 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming    h 220x330 SquareOne: A slick iPhone app that wants to make your emails less overwhelming

The verdict

As a Gmail user, for both work and play, I have to say Google’s gotten pretty good at separating the wheat from the chaff. Its auto-filter feature is generally pretty effective, siphoning off all in-bound communications into Primary, Social, Promotions and Updates. One thing it’s worth noting about SquareOne is that much of it still feels very manual, though that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Sure, it will automatically send emails to pre-designated folders, but it would be good to see a little more automation from elsewhere. From my 3,000+ emails a month, many of these are one-offs, new contacts, or very infrequent senders that I may not wish to allocate a zone to. It would be good to see these automated to a degree, though I confess I’m not entirely sure how that could work.

While there are elements of SquareOne that remind me of Mailbox, I think that’s more in terms of the slickness and general usability, rather than specific features. Indeed, what SquareOne does here is move away from the vertical-scrolling inbox you’ve no doubt become accustomed to, and replace it with a dashboard of folders, for want of a better analogy.

Of course, this won’t be to everyone’s liking. There is a lot to be said for being able to scroll through all your emails chronologically and see them in a single view. For that, you’d perhaps be better of sticking with the standard Gmail client. However, it’s that exact scenario the folks behind SquareOne are trying to kick out of play.

There’s an impressive team behind this startup, who proclaim to use principles from psychology and cognitive science to feed the design principles here. It’s all about minimizing unnecessary mental overhead, the company says.

CEO and co-founder Branko Cerny has a B.A. in Psychology, and had a stint working in marketing at Google before launching SquareOne. Then there’s Weidong Shao, who spent five years on the Gmail team at Google, while Arthur Conner was previously an iOS engineer at Insightly and WunderRadio.

“We are not primarily aiming to make a more powerful email client, but a less overwhelming email experience,” Cerny tells us.

Whether SquareOne can ultimately differentiate itself enough from the competitors out there, remains to be seen. But it has launched an incredibly slick, impressive product out of beta after more than six months of iteration. For now, it only supports Gmail, which is a shame, but we’re told that universal IMAP support is on the horizon, and – drum roll – a version for Android too.

SquareOne should be going live in the App Store any time now.

➤ SquareOne | App Store

└ Tags: syndicated
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Yahoo is moving towards terminating Facebook and Google sign-ins for all of its services

Mar05
by Sindy Cator on March 5, 2014 at 4:27 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Google, Insider, Product Updates

yahoomail android 3 520x245 Yahoo is moving towards terminating Facebook and Google sign ins for all of its services

Yahoo started allowing users to log in to its services with their Facebook and Google IDs in 2011, but now it is putting an end to that, starting with the sign-in process for Yahoo Sports Tourney Pick’Em.

A Yahoo spokeswoman tells TNW: “This new process, which now asks users to sign in with a Yahoo username, will allow us to offer the best personalized experience to everyone.”

The termination of sign-ins via Facebook and Google will take place gradually, which means that users will sooner or later need a Yahoo username to access all of its services, as Reuters first reported. The Yahoo spokeswoman confirms to us that “eventually, the sign in buttons for Facebook and Google will be removed from all Yahoo properties.”

For now, users can still access Yahoo services using their Facebook or Google log-ins. A timeline wasn’t provided for when exactly they will cease to exist.

The move to integrate Facebook and Google log-ins three years ago came as Yahoo sought to tap on their huge numbers of users — but it seems like CEO Marissa Mayer is keen to take a different route in a bid to reclaim native users and revive its ecosystem.

For those who haven’t used their Yahoo account in ages, Yahoo IDs are not only for your email: they also tie your customizations and preferences to other Yahoo properties, including looking up content such as sports information, weather, and news. Last year, the company started freeing up Yahoo IDs that had been inactive for at least 12 months.

└ Tags: facebook, news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Yahoo is moving towards terminating Facebook and Google sign-ins for all of its services

Mar05
by Sindy Cator on March 5, 2014 at 4:27 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Google, Insider, Product Updates

yahoomail android 3 520x245 Yahoo is moving towards terminating Facebook and Google sign ins for all of its services

Yahoo started allowing users to log in to its services with their Facebook and Google IDs in 2011, but now it is putting an end to that, starting with the sign-in process for Yahoo Sports Tourney Pick’Em.

A Yahoo spokeswoman tells TNW: “This new process, which now asks users to sign in with a Yahoo username, will allow us to offer the best personalized experience to everyone.”

The termination of sign-ins via Facebook and Google will take place gradually, which means that users will sooner or later need a Yahoo username to access all of its services, as Reuters first reported. The Yahoo spokeswoman confirms to us that “eventually, the sign in buttons for Facebook and Google will be removed from all Yahoo properties.”

For now, users can still access Yahoo services using their Facebook or Google log-ins. A timeline wasn’t provided for when exactly they will cease to exist.

The move to integrate Facebook and Google log-ins three years ago came as Yahoo sought to tap on their huge numbers of users — but it seems like CEO Marissa Mayer is keen to take a different route in a bid to reclaim native users and revive its ecosystem.

For those who haven’t used their Yahoo account in ages, Yahoo IDs are not only for your email: they also tie your customizations and preferences to other Yahoo properties, including looking up content such as sports information, weather, and news. Last year, the company started freeing up Yahoo IDs that had been inactive for at least 12 months.

└ Tags: facebook, news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Facebook Messenger arrives on Windows Phone

Mar05
by Sindy Cator on March 5, 2014 at 2:40 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, facebook messenger, Product Launches

Facebook may have killed Windows support for its Messenger app, but it has released a Windows Phone version today which is available for download now.

The Facebook Messenger app for Windows Phone features the usual bells and whistles available on iOS and Android platforms, including stickers. You can also send photos privately, as well as have group conversations and share your location so people know where exactly you are.

Facebook WindowsPhone 730x304 Facebook Messenger arrives on Windows Phone

We noted before that it seems Microsoft can only keep Facebook in one of its platforms at a time. The company is attempting to merge the Windows and Windows Phone stores, but that’s still a long way off. Facebook Messenger for Windows was released in March 2012, following a limited beta test in November 2011.

➤ Facebook Messenger for Windows Phone

Thumbnail image via Brandon Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: facebook, microsoft, news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Microsoft rolls out Xbox One March update with improvements to party chat, multiplayer, friends, and more

Mar05
by Sindy Cator on March 5, 2014 at 2:09 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Screen Shot 2013 11 19 at 21.21.39 769x305 520x245 Microsoft rolls out Xbox One March update with improvements to party chat, multiplayer, friends, and more

Following the February update, Microsoft today began rolling out the Xbox One March update, which features “many new features and improvements, most significantly to our party and multiplayer systems.” The new version is meant as preparation for the launch of the high-anticipated title Titanfall, which goes on sale on March 11 in the US and on March 13 in Europe.

Here’s a long list of what’s new:

  • Get to your friends list faster: The friends list is now front and center on the homepage of the Friends app. Click the Social tile on Home, or say “Xbox, go to Friends” to see who’s online and what they’re up to. From there you can quickly send messages and get into a party.
  • Party chat: When you party up, chat audio will be turned on by default.
  • Chat with friends playing different games: Party chat is now separate from people playing your game, so you can chat with your friends who are online or you can chat with everyone playing the game.
  • “Invite friends to game” option has been added to multiplayer titles. Similar to Xbox 360 titles, this will appear inside a games’ menu and offer a simple and quicker way to set up your multiplayer battles. Selecting “Invite friends” will let you invite friends to your game and party.
  • “Recent Players” has been added to show you Xbox Live members you’ve recently played with, making it easier to stay in touch with people, add new friends after your multiplayer sessions, or report a player for bad behavior.
  • Dolby Digital sound: Optical out now supports 5.1 Dolby Digital, enabling devices such as sound bars and headsets with only optical in. Support for Dolby Digital surround sound over HDMI has also been added.
  • Support for 50Hz output to Xbox One: You can set the live TV app to display at 50Hz for full or fill modes, fixing the frame rate issues some users in Europe have been experiencing while watching live TV on Xbox One.
  • Volume up/down adjustments: You can now tailor the number of volume increments when using “Xbox volume up” or “Xbox volume down” voice commands.
  • SmartGlass: Receive notifications for Xbox Live messages, check out what your friends are doing, and see their latest highlight clips. You can even unsnap apps with the tap of a finger – all from your mobile device.
  • Support for new Xbox One accessories: Xbox One now supports the recently announced Xbox One stereo headset and adapter, Xbox One media remote with a dedicated OneGuide button, as well as third- party headsets.
  • Browser improvements: When you’re searching for content, there’s now a direct link to IE to see related results on the Web. New gesture and controller features let you directly zoom and pan Bing and Google Maps. You can now just highlight a phrase on a page and press the menu button to search Bing.
  • IR blasting of power and volume to TVs/AVRs is now available in all regions.
  • Easy sound bar setup: You no longer need to type in the model number for most sound bars or AVRs when setting up TV on Xbox One.
  • General improvements: Last, but not least, a few miscellaneous update the ability to view Game Clips while in Snap mode and a new passkey feature to protect user settings.

One thing that you will notice missing from this list is Twitch TV live streaming support; that’s coming on March 11 with the new Twitch app: just say “Xbox broadcast” to start sharing. As for other features, Microsoft mentioned it is working on external hard drive storage support and friends notification improvements, but no telling when those will arrive.

See also – Xbox One review: A multimedia extravaganza that also plays games and Overview: Here’s how Skype will work on the Xbox One

└ Tags: microsoft, syndicated
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