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Great idea: bookmarlet for importing contact information

So I’ve raved about CRM systems and managing personal contact information, but now I have a solution, which I hope someone has already built.

Someone needs to build a bookmarklet that lets you highlight contact information, and then with the click of a button send it to the right contact management tool (outlook, highrise, salesforce, etc).

I hate copying and pasting over the address, then the phone number, then their name….. the whole time worrying about errors in my data input.

You could highlight text in an email signature in gmail, you could highlight text on people’s websites, and then the bookmarklet would recognize the address, phone number, email, fax, and put them in the right places for that particular contact manager.

Obviously we would love an automated version that just recognized signatures in your inbox (Mac mail may have something like this), but a rapid contact importing tool like this would be the first step.

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“File” Syncing?

Lots of new companies are coming out with file syncing products. This irks me, so here’s my rant.

Personally I’ve used Foldershare since day one (which has been out for a while, even pre-microsoft), and its been rock solid. I sync “working files” between a couple of bizdev guys and a desktop thats on all the time. This keeps the team on the same page with power points presentations, word docs, etc.

For those of you raving about DropBox, Foldershare does/did that. What makes the whole concept even less interesting is that after doing this Foldershare syncing successfully for several years I realized I don’t really have that many files to sync anymore.

Where have all the files gone (apparently into laptop bags, because in a recent search for a new business/laptop bag I found a ton that have file sorting sections, like paper files?, who uses that, lawyers?)?
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Review: Webstractor

An acquaintance asked me to take a look at an application called Webstractor by SoftChaos. He told me that it was a way to capture webpages for research, and then to export the results into word.

Here is the Webstractor product tour.

Pros

- The Radar feature seem like a useful one that other similar services don’t offer. Though, services that notify you of changes in a specific website already exist, and some of them are free ( see changenotes).

- Webstractor browser preview along the right hand side is very nice, and allows you to move through your captured web pages rather quickly

- The editing features are usually not included in apps that capture website

- It is nice that Webstractor captures long pages, but that can be done with other apps too

- The product shows up pretty high in google searches, there are not many easily found alternatives

Cons

- The html interpretation in the editor mode is not precise

- It does not export to microsoft word, just to .pdf, which doesn’t offer the differentiation that word would have.

- Is capturing every page you visit useful for research? it seems like it would be more useful from a search perspective. the model is to just bookmark them from yo

- Technical people will use a web-based solution, and if this is going to be a solution for less technical people it needs to be much much easier to use

- Print and share doesn’t count as collaboration these days. Exporting to pdf is something these others don’t do, but its pretty easy to do by just printing to pdf in your browser.

Suggestions

- the actual applications of the software are unclear, what market? what people, what would they actually do with the software?

- needs browser plugins for Firefox

- needs to be completely web-based

- needs collaboration features so multiple people can work on a project

- needs sharing features so people can share their work after they are done (aka publish to a private website)

Alternatives

Another big problem with webstractor is that there are many convenient alternatives.

Zotero
http://www.zotero.org

Yojimbo
http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/

Slogger
http://www.kenschutte.com/slogger/

Scrapbook
http://amb.vis.ne.jp/mozilla/scrapbook/

Google Notes
http://www.google.com/notebook/

DEVONthink
http://www.devon-technologies.com/

Social bookmarking is also a very viable and popular research tool, and potentially has more powerful side effects. Here is a great resource on social bookmarking, and here are several popular tools:

- http://del.icio.us/

- http://www.furl.net/

- http://www.spurl.net/

Other Reviews of Webstractor

http://www.lifehacker.com/software/top/geek-to-live–save-and-annotate-the-web-with-scrapbook-168744.php

Overall I think webstractor definitely tries to solve a valid problem, but does so in a clumsy way. The jury is out on desktop apps, and the main survivor here is your web browser. The application has to be web based, and currently there are some good alternatives. Hopefully I will follow up with some review of these alternatives shortly.

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