Archive for February, 2010

Moving Tales II – Finding tools that work

Posted on February 12th, 2010 by Mel in Moving | No Comments »

I’ve been meaning to write a post about my progress of looking for a suitable flat for quite some time but couldn’t get around to it. Now, a few weeks later, it’s definitely time for an update about where we are.

We’ve visited seven flats until now, had, in addition to that, three visits cancelled on us because the flats were taken prior to our meeting and there is another visit scheduled for this coming Sunday. Of course, using immobilienscout24.de, we’ve done a thorough pre-selection according to our criteria explained in a previous post. In the end, all flats we visited are located in the area close to the main station but not too close either. Four of the eight flats are ones we’ll apply to – applications will go out this weekend – and there’s a clear favourite. Question is now only whether our application can convince the owner that we’re great people, totally calm, totally willing (and able) to pay the rent every single month and that we won’t be a bother for them. We’ll see, I guess.

Now, to the tools I used to get us where we are now: just before beginning to seriously search for a flat, I discovered Evernote 3.5 and immediately put it to use to store all information relating to the possible flats in addition to opening an account with immobilienscout24.de to save the flats. Using Evernote, despite the web clipper, was a bit of work, but it allowed me to use tags to sort through the images and text files and made it easy to find information quickly. It also has an iPhone app and since my spouse has a new iPhone, we tried that out as well. It worked reasonably well, but sifting through a couple hundred files – I had stored other information in Evernote by then as well – was painful, since the tags are useless in the iPhone app. One can’t search using them, one has to go merely by image or title of a file to find what one is looking for. At least, it allows to group files according to notebooks, but that is, alas, not sufficient to really use it for consultating files.

Eventually, it became too bothersome and just wasn’t practical while on the move – as weird as this may sound. So I returned to a little more oldfashioned tool: Excel. To draw comparisons, a spreadsheet really is the best option. Plus, you can easily print out the tables. :) Carrying around a piece of paper also doesn’t put you in danger of running out of power, making it impossible to jot down notes. So it’s an Excel table that I use during the flat visits as well, taking down important information about the flat.

A few days ago, I also noticed a functionality within immobilienscout24.de which is not obvious on the first point of view. When you click on “My notes” on your list of remembered flats, there’s a pop-up where you can check boxes whether you have already contacted the realtor, set up a date to visit the flat or have visited it. There is also a field to enter a comment. I’ve found this to be extremely useful and have noted general impressions about the flats after visiting them. Of course, for setting up the appointments, I used Google Calendar.

In the end, a basic Excel sheet, a calendar and some well hidden functionalities of the realty website are quite enough to organise the flat hunt. Of course, once we actually do get one of the flats, the fun part will start: arranging furniture. :)

Google Buzz

Posted on February 9th, 2010 by Mel in Multimedia, News | No Comments »

Today, Google announced their newest product: Google Buzz. Here’s their intro video, as always with Google, quite nicely done. As you will be able to see, Google Buzz will be conveniently located in your Google Mail account (if you have one only, of course), and will allow you to connect to different social web applications from this unique location.

YouTube Preview Image

It makes me think a bit about Google Wave in terms of collaboration, but also quite obviously ressembles Twitter and Facebook as well as photo sharing websites. But that’s to be expected of a service that will bring them all and in the darkness bind them.

Ok, wrong movie. ;) Still, it will very likely make Google even more powerful and, of course, allow them to gather even more data about its users. And we all know that gathering data about consumers is like printing your own money. But it’s Google and they’re cool, right?

Sarcasm aside, there are other services which offer to combine your different social networking sites on one website to make accessing them easier for you. I can’t say whether they’ll have access to your data or are merely doing it out of pure selflessness, but it’s clear that Google don’t do it because they want to help you manage your online life better. They do it because they can. And because… well, the idea is good. Keeping up with what’s happening on your different social sites is quite a bit of work. Personally, I’ve at least five accounts with services like Twitter, Xing, Facebook etc. and probably a few others that aren’t all that important. Being able to eventually access them from one single account would be great. Sure, Google would know even more about me. On the other hand, Google already knows that I’ve got a Xing profile. They know my YouTube and Twitter accounts. They quite likely also know what I buy at Amazon. They know basically my entire browsing history. They probably know the content of my Google Docs files. Or could, if they were so inclined.

So what? We’re more and more moving towards what consumer protectors call “transparent human being” anyway and I don’t think there’s anything or anyone that can stop this process. Admittedly, I wouldn’t want anyone to know my medical history aside from my doctor, but having, for example, one single profile for every person in a country to which are linked data from your driver’s license, taxes, ID card, marital and family information etc, would make life a lot easier. No more telling twenty different services that you moved, for example. One letter (or, eventually maybe, one DE-mail) and you’re done. The services would then proceed with creating updated ID cards etc. for you which you could fetch in one go.

But I disgress. I’ll definitely check out Google Buzz as soon as it’s available in my Gmail account, probably in the next one or two days and see whether it will really improve my online social life or whether it’s, a bit like Google Wave, a hyped product rather than all that useful.