Outlook 2007 sucks

Bor­ing post sub­ject, I know. But check this out:

Outlook is preparing the requested view

Took around a full minute for the folder to load, on an Athlon 64 3200+ clocked at 2.4GHz with 2GB of fairly quick memory.

Since when do apps alert in the tray about load­ing a view? If Out­look didn’t expend resources on a generally-useless tray icon (really, it doesn’t even change when you have new mail wait­ing), maybe it wouldn’t take so bloody long to do anything.

I’ve got a dual core 4200+ on the way, but really doubt it’ll make any dif­fer­ence when the fault is largely soft­ware that sucks. Not say­ing that it’s just Out­look at fault… I’m inclined to place a fair degree of blame on the well-known-to-be-sucky Win­dows Desk­top Search. But it just inte­grates best… why does Microsoft have to pro­duce prod­ucts that suck?!

Speak­ing of which, my iPaq is work­ing again with a brand new extended bat­tery. Apart from the slow proces­sor, it’s doing great… but I’m going to test-drive a Palm Z72 for a few days and see if it does any bet­ter. Basi­cally, I don’t really need the GSM/GPRS func­tion­al­ity on the iPaq because it’s faster for me to con­nect via my Sony Eric­s­son via Blue­tooth (as there’s no HSDPA on the iPaq). I’ll imme­di­ately miss the wire­less, but have sur­vived sev­eral months with­out it, and SDiO wifi cards are a pos­si­bil­ity for the palm… I doubt they’re par­tic­u­larly com­mon, though. Have been con­sid­er­ing a Black­berry, but they’re pretty restricted in a whole heap of ways that PDAs aren’t. For exam­ple, ever tried get­ting an SSH client on a Black­berry? I haven’t. But have my doubts it could be done!

Any­way. Don’t use Out­look 2007 unless you have to.  It has nice multi-calendar/iCal sup­port, but that’s about all it has going for it. Still no inbuilt SMS/MMS sup­port, the ren­derer is a regres­sion in the truest sense of the term (doesn’t even sup­port back­ground images — IE7 comes out, which is an awe­some browser, and they decide it would be a good idea to force Word 2007 to be the ren­derer. Bril­liant.), thor­oughly mediocre RSS/feed-reading capa­bil­i­ties, and, to top it all off, it’s crap-slow (com­pared to ear­lier versions).

If it offers group­ware advan­tages I don’t know of them (but doubt it could, it’s always been fairly com­pre­hen­sive on that front), and chances are they won’t be par­tic­u­larly enabled until Server 2008 is released. Am guess­ing here, but not with­out some reasoning.

Avoid.

p.s. Yes, I’m prob­a­bly over­due for a Win­dows rein­stall.  Unfor­tu­nately a fairly major project cropped up just as I’d sched­uled one, and I still haven’t got around to it. Will prob­a­bly hunt down the right prod­uct key when the new CPU gets here early next week: that’s a large part of the prob­lem, Microsoft appar­ently expect that home users either buy pre­built sys­tems with stu­pid crapware-filled restore disks, or are hard­core tech using pirates/MSDN users (same thing… the users rarely paid for the MSDN subs, mostly its their work­place). I have 5 XP Pro licenses of dif­fer­ent vari­eties (not to men­tion pre­vi­ous ver­sions of Win­dows), and of those a bunch are the same prod­uct type (upgrade)… which makes license man­age­ment and com­pli­ance a bit of a challenge!

What I’d love MS to do is cre­ate a site-licensing prod­uct for SOHO users with flex­i­ble and trans­fer­able licens­ing at retail OEM pric­ing (that sounds dumb, but I mean still charg­ing what us mor­tals pay for OEM licenses, not the vol­ume prices that Dell, Lenovo, et al. get) — it’d be sim­ple, web admin­is­tered (not requir­ing a local server), and increas­ingly rel­e­vant in homes which are fea­tur­ing more and more computers.

CSS closure

It’s been so long since I’ve actu­ally “fin­ished” a stylesheet on a real site (not some tiny two-page thing or an appli­ca­tion) that I don’t remem­ber how to let go. I keep look­ing around for the lit­tle things I’ve missed (they’ll always be there), but there’s increas­ing amounts of noth­ing. I’ve got to say that it’s fun to do hav­ing taken a break (not inten­tion­ally, just played out that way because other stuff was going on) for a cou­ple of months… though I’m a lit­tle more jaded about hav­ing to use abs pos and floats every­where, etc., this time around.

I think it’s coz I haven’t done my own designs for quite a while (and am hence con­tend­ing with table-thought). I need to get my hand in again.

This time it’ll prob­a­bly be back to a darker base. Cyclic, I tell you! I was actu­ally think­ing of some­thing like Ellen’s blog has (only with blue and some colour and less ran­dom stuff and with­out annoy­ing IE-proprietary coloured black-on-black scroll bars!) but was research­ing some JavaScript stuff today and came across some dark blogs and wow did my eyes like that. Prob­a­bly because between a white design and a white-base code win­dow on two mon­i­tors I effec­tively spent at least 8 hours today star­ing at pan­els of light… but I’m actu­ally now start­ing to see the ben­e­fits of dark-based high-contrast designs.

I’m prob­a­bly just going blind, but sta­tis­ti­cally that places my pref­er­ences closer to those of most of the web, so design­ers that like tiny type can suck my text-zooming browser. Whilst I make your pretty pixel-perfect designs look hor­ri­ble as they scale.

I don’t want elas­tic designs, I want designs that don’t give a crap what you do to them. That, if you explode them into lots of lit­tle pieces, aren’t over­lap­ping them­selves and flow just fine. I kinda feel like I’m still try­ing to jus­tify this present design (which, if I haven’t said this before, actu­ally had its ori­gins as a print stylesheet… it’s called “SC ClearPrint” for that rea­son), but if I am I hope to equally be jus­ti­fy­ing the next. Hop­ing for some­thing equally func­tional but slightly prettier.

Whilst talk­ing about styles, hand­held styles are actu­ally over­rated if you’ve got a single-column lay­out. Even if you don’t, good handheld/mobile browsers mostly over­come the worst of the web. Seman­tic markup is actu­ally quite impor­tant, hav­ing said that, because it reduces code-bloat by so much. When you’ve got min­i­mal amounts of mem­ory and a rel­a­tively slow proces­sor, that kinda stuff mat­ters irre­spec­tive of bandwidth.

(Aside: it amuses me to note that, with the excep­tion of disk space, my PDA is more pow­er­ful than the first com­puter we owned — pur­chased in 1996(/5?), with a P-133/32MB/4GB/1MB gfx)

Yeah. Suf­fi­ciently off-topic to end this here methinks.

# by Josh on May 26th, 2006 Tags: , , ,
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