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RockMelt hands-on review

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

A few hours ago, I received a RockMelt invite.

I installed it already and here’s my hand-on review on RockMelt.

RockMelt installation

Upon clicking the setup program I found myself connecting to FaceBook. This make me ask, is this a browser for sharing or a FaceBook browser?

RockMelt FaceBook connect request

After installation, RockMelt asked me to connect to my FaceBook account. I did. But. How about those who do not want this browser just for FaceBook? There’s Twitter and other social networking sites. I connected by browser to my Twitter account, too.

What is RockMelt? Really. Is it a social web browser as it claims to be?

RockMelt FaceBook request permission

Upon connecting, I was asked what permissions would I like to give to RockMelt to have access to.

RockMelt friends

What immediately shows up is a welcome message at the center of the browser. There are four menus there: friends, share, search, and news. At the center of it all is a globe.

I hovered on the friends menu and arrows showed up pointing to the left part of the browser, showing my friends who are currently logged-in in FaceBook.

RockMelt share

When I hovered on the share menu, two arrows showed, pointing to the upper left part and to the upper part of the browser. These are share buttons.

RockMelt search

I hovered on the search menu and an arrow showed up pointing to the search field at the upper right portion of the browser.

RockMelt news

And when I hovered on the news menu, an arrow showed and it points to the right side of the browser showing all apps and feeds you’re connected with. FaceBook and Twitter feeds icons are displayed by default?

RockMelt menu

I was accustomed to using FireFox and Internet Explorer as web browsers. I was never a Chrome or a Safari fan. Well, to be honest, I use Safari on my mobile phone. I see it as the better browser for mobile phones.

FireFox and Internet Explorer has almost all buttons placed on identical location.

In using RockMelt, I found myself facing a web browser with no home, stop, and reload button. Almost all buttons are designed for social activities.

RockMelt show all friends

On the bottom left part of the browser is the “show all friends and pick favorites” button. If you click on it, it will show a tabbed version of your online friends, your favorites, and all of your FaceBook friends.

RockMelt show feeds

At the bottom of the menus at the right part of the browser is the “add feeds” button. If you click on it, it will show you all apps and feeds RockMelt is connected and let’s you add feeds there.

RockMelt quick guide

Can’t seem to find your way on this new social browser? Don’t worry. RockMelt has this quick guide “tutorial” for you.

RockMelt Experience. This is a good browser for those who often check their social networking accounts. It’s fast and easily navigable. I find it awkward that there’s no home, stop, and reload buttons. There are shortcut keys but for the not-so-savvy people, they might have a hard time.

Overall, it’s a OK web browser with a promising future. But. I’ll stick with FireFox for now.

Have you been using RockMelt already? Tell us what you think!

I just got a RockMelt early access invitation

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

At 5:48 AM today, RockMelt, the browser for sharing, sent me a message via e-mail.

RockMelt early access invitation

RockMelt early access invitation

It’s and early access invitation for the newest browser. The social browser.

RockMelt download site

RockMelt download site

I immediately clicked the link to proceed to my RockMelt download page.

My RockMelt download completed

My RockMelt download completed

After few seconds, my RockMelt installer download is completed.

RockMelt download message

RockMelt download message

Here’s what RockMelt told me after the download. Yes. I hope I’ll love it, too.

I’ll give it a try today and make a hands-on review by the end of the day. Cheers!

Microsoft makes it legal to rent Windows, Office worldwide

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

Microsoft introduced a rental program, Microsoft Rental Rights Licensing, in which a customer would pay a flat fee to use Windows or Office 2007 (Standard or Professional versions) for a year.

Microsoft

Microsoft

The new rental rights specifics are explained further on Microsoft’s Partner site:

“Windows desktop operating system and Microsoft Office system licenses do not permit renting, leasing, or outsourcing the software to a third party. As a result, many organizations that rent, lease, or outsource desktop PCs to third parties (such as Internet cafés, hotel and airport kiosks, business service centers, and office equipment leasing companies) are not compliant with Microsoft license requirements.

“Rental Rights are a simple way for organizations to get a waiver of these licensing restrictions through a one-time license transaction valid for the term of the underlying software license or life of the PC.”

According to the partner site, the new rental rights SKUs are now on the Microsoft Product List for volume licensees. The additive licenses are available to those with Microsoft Open licenses, Microsoft Select/Select Plus and government licenses.