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Mind you, I do tend to type a lot of URLs into the run box (-:
Best start page in the world? A blank page.
The next best start page? The default Google page. Clean, simple, to the point.
My portal of choice is still MyYahoo. The problem with this page is that it doesn't do a good job of letting you know when new features are available on the rest of the Yahoo property. So I occasionally need to go to www.yahoo.com to see what Yahoo has been doing.
There is one Web page I always have open, GMail. Google is leveraging this fact. They are slowly enhancing the GMail page to be a portal: Chat is integrated, Web Clips run above the list of email subjects, links to Google, Calendar, and More appear in the upper left corner, and of course contextual ads are displayed on each email message.
I am particularly fond of being able to share pages that I build publicly as well as privately.
My links toolbar is pretty full as I have a range of sites I use all the time.
http://www.protopage.com
regards
Al
Rather annoying, especially at dinnertime. "Illinois is outside our delivery area. Please stop calling. *click*"
I like the idea of pageflakes type sites, I just can't stand the load time. Instead I use www.trawlr.com for my online RSS feeds and fix of tech news in a river-of-news style view (with various tags to filter the feeds).
basically the browser shouldn't use any real estate if there are no html elements on it.
I do think Vista will educate people more and more on the widget concept and you will see people getting more comfortable in using widgets on the web, desktop, and eventually in the wireless space.
One thing I do disagree with Dan on is his comment that widgets on the desktop are more vibrant or dynamic than on the web. That has generally been the case however with yourminis you get the same dynamic widget experience in a start page, as an embed, and on the desktop (coming soon leveraging apollo).
I actually have it set to Google, because there's almost no overhead to loading; and one of the most frequent things I want to do in a new browser window is search.
Well... for me, it's that the whole concept of a "home page" is a bit 1994. In 2007, I don't find it at all useful - the web browser is such a vital tool that I open up hundreds of browser windows in a working day. And, when I open a new browser window, I'm not interested in content from a "home page" popping up each time. Rather, I open a new browser window in order to perform a task.
As #7 said, I use "Open all in tabs", when I want to go see a bunch of related content that I'm interested in visiting frequently.
Pfft {waves hand dismissively}
My browser doesn't need to clutter up every new window with RSS. It lets ME decide if I want to read and when. I get weather reports via the Mk1 iBall and a Window.
many of the sites I hit during the day are behind firewalls, so putting them as a home page would be rather useless.
Isn't that what tabbed browsing is for? I prefer looking at a specific page for a specific task. I just find these start pages that try to be all things to all people ultimately end up skimping on everything. It's like walking around Costco and getting the free food samples.
The information I want to know when I get on my machine at work in the morning lives on internal Nagios and Cacti servers unreachable from the internet. This is true of quite a few IT people.
I do not expect this to change and doubt I would ever use a commercial site as a start page.
Most of the time I leave Gmail and Google Reader open in tabs and across sessions. I find "customized start pages" with lots of widgets and cruft just as initally attractive and as ultimately useless as Apple's Dashboard.
The whole concept of a dedicated "start page" seems a bit archaic to me. This whole concept hasn't really advanced much at all since I last tried My Yahoo, except for fancy Ajax interfaces and RSS feeds. Somehow I'm not very excited, although judging from the interview they seem to understand that this kind of service is not for everyone. If they can make a business out of it, more power to 'em.
It's close to about:blank and google.
But it has this feature which allows me to jump to a url by typing 4 keys!
you can find it here
http://go.nzal.es
Unlike many of the other personalised start pages available, there's no need to create an account and it's all already set up for you, with the most popular gadgets organised by category and sub-category. So there's virtually no setting-up work required by the user, making it ideal for the mainstream audience and those (like me) who can't be bothered to do all the work of setting up their own page. More adventurous (and less lazy) users can choose to add their own Google gadgets and RSS feeds, but most people just use the gadgets and tools provided.
Unlike Netvibes, PageFlakes and all the other AJAX powered home pages, Funky Homepage does not use a drag and drop interface. Instead it allows you to select from a drop-down list of the most "popular" gadgets and feeds - "popular" according to the Google gadgets most popular list, that is. As such, it's not really intended to compete with the flexibility of Netvibes and PageFlakes, but instead is intended to address a gap in the market for those who want something a bit more funky than Google or Yahoo, but without all the setting up required of Netvibes and Pageflakes. So only the most popular gadgets are offered. Although it still maintains a large degree of flexibility for the more adventurous users, allowing them to enter their own feeds and gadgets, should they wish. Whether you like it or hate it, at least it offers an alternative from the plethora of AJAX-powered homepages that are now available.
It's free to use and you can check it out at http://www.funkyhomepage.com
The next best start page? The default Google page. Clean, simple, to the point.