Hunch

Spotify on the Android

May 27 by Rasmus, tagged android, demo, google, mobile, preview, software, spotify and video, filed under software

We presented the Spotify mobile app for Android at the Google IO developer conference yesterday. What you see is work in progress and not the final product. We’ll put some finishing touches on the graphics as well as tweaking the code.

A wee bit more info can be found in our blog: Spotify mobile demo at Google Android I/O.

Google hosted synchronization

February 10, 2009 by Rasmus, tagged google, hosted, iphone, productivity and synchronisation

It finally happened. Google did something that was really useful for Google Hosted customers – genuine synchronization of mail, contacts and calendar. With the addition of MS Exchange support for calendars and contacts, you can now have a 21st century experience with your computerish stuff. Yay for simplicity.

m.google.com/sync →

Google Reader UI update

December 8, 2008 by Rasmus, tagged design, google, reader, redesign and ui

google-reader-ui-update-small

Finally Google Reader looks a little less tech and a little more easy to actually use. Read more on the official Google Reader blog: Square is the new round

Google Mail, IMAP and Apple Mail

October 25, 2007 by Rasmus, tagged connectivity, functional, gmail, google, imap, mail, sought-after and work

Gmail IMAPYesterday Google premiered IMAP connectivity for their mail platform Google Mail. It turned out pretty good but far from perfect.

Pros

  • Synchronizing protocol gives me the same state on all my devices. (workstation, cellphone, web interface, laptop, etc)
  • Centralized means backup means reliable and time-saving. (and I feel a bit safer. Once in a while computers crash and burn)
  • Labels are treated as folders, the IMAP way. Hierarchy is achieved through / (slash) separator.
  • Starring or un-starring a message is as simple as setting or unsetting the “important” flag. Very clever.

Cons

  • Very slow connection. This is a real pain in the ass. My private IMAP account and server interfaces in speeds of about 1-50 MB/s while the Gmail IMAP-connections has a burst rate of about 150 KB/s
  • Seems like Google caches folder/label indexes and only refreshes this cache when a new IMAP connection is made. IMAP clients does not disconnect very often which has a side-effect – labels created or modified in Gmail does not update in the client. The trick is to reconnect (restart Apple Mail) to do a refresh.
  • The IMAP interface is under testing and Gmail is still in beta mode, so there is no insurance whatsoever for Google not to pull the plug on IMAP. I may have to go back to POPing into my own IMAP again, which really is bit of a hack.

Further reading

Google Mail Help Center: How do I enable IMAP?
Wired: Google Adds IMAP Support To GMail