February 5, 2012

Why you should switch your email to Google Apps

Lots of small businesses who are just getting established tend to go out to places like 1&1 and other “a la carte” style ISPs to get a domain name, email boxes, calendar, file storage, etc. Most of these services don’t have much, if any, integration with one another, limited space and they all have some associated cost.

Enter Google Apps for Domains.

Surprisingly, lots of people, outside of administrators and IT nerds, don’t realize Google Apps for Domains even exists. These are 2 main levels of service with Google Apps, Standard and Premier. Standard provides 50 email boxes, each with ~7.5gb of space EACH and this is slowly, but constantly, increasing. Included are utilities such as Google Docs, Calendar, Groups, Sites, Contacts and more that are all integrated into one interface with a single signin.

For file storage, Google Docs now supports the uploading of more than just documents, spreadsheets, etc. You can now upload any kind of file and have up to 1gb of space in additional to the email space.

There are more settings and features than 90% of people will even use. It is absolutely perfect for small/medium organizations.

Best of all, Google Apps Standard is FREE.

For larger entities that need enterprise level features and organizational integration, Google Apps for Business fills those needs. There are many additional options within the control panel that allow integration into existing auth servers and corporate IT resources. Instead of 7.5gb of email space per box, it is increased over threefold to 25gb. That is a massive amount of space for email. I get a lot of mail, including large attachments, and have been keeping all my mail for the last 5-6 years in my standard account. It’s only 50% full.

Per user, Google Apps Premier only runs around ~$5/month. Most “enterprise” level email systems such as AppRiver and other Exchange providers cost anywhere from $9 to $15/month or more if you need a blackberry or other smartphone connected.

There are too many features to list here, visit the Google Apps for Business page to find specifics.

Clayton Design has setup many standard and premier accounts over the past year and the endusers seem to love it. Their own email can now be used across all of Google’s services instead of having to have a separate gmail address.

Contact us with any questions or if you would like us to help you set it up. Even if you already have email boxes somewhere else, we can perform an virtually seamless, full migration over to the new service.

We’re sure you’ll like it, we did and have never looked back.

How to Always Browse “Incognito” with Google Chrome

Here is a little tip I came up with after getting annoyed going into incognito every time after opening Chrome.

Setting the following setting will allow you to launch Chrome in incognito mode.

incognito

Be sure to put 2 dashes "--" in front of "incognito". Sort of looks like one in the screenshot.

Google’s new Chrome Browser Released!

Google released their new Chrome web browser shortly before the end of a video announcement about it at 11am PST.  I had the download page ready at the beginning of the video (http://www.google.com/chrome) and was only getting a “404 – not found” error.  At around 11:45a I hit refresh on it and there it was.  

The install was amazingly fast and simple.  Didn’t even require a file that needed downloaded to my HDD and run from there.  The install launched directly out of my Firefox and was done in less than 1 minute. 

It is very heavily based on Apple’s Safari Webkit engine.  Here is the HTTP_USER_AGENT from a test PHP page I made:

“Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US) AppleWebKit/525.13 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/0.2.149.27 Safari/525.13″

Overall, I’ve always sort of liked Safari, but always had issues with minor glitches and random lagginess.  I’ve not encountered any issues at all with Chrome so far.  Google has probably done massive internal testing to insure that there are no obvious glitches and/or bugs.  The GUI is very simple and seems fully functional and the memory usage is EXCELLENT compared to Firefox.  

I’ve had Firefox take up to 400-500mb RAM without much even going on.  Even just after starting Firefox is the Google homepage, it takes up 62mb RAM.  On my system, Chrome only consumed around 25mb.  

The only thing I’ve run into when it comes to rendering is my company’s Intranet.  It is only optimized for IE and Firefox and looks pretty bad with Chrome/Safari but is still usable.

All other sites I frequent are just fine, loading faster than ever.

UPDATE 5pm EST:

After running some memory tests, I opened up 4 tabs in Firefox, IE8, Chrome, Safari and Opera, which included logging into 2 of the sites and just displaying two others.

Tab 1: My company’s ticketing system
Tab 2: My personal GMail (Google Apps for Domains)
Tab 3: This blog’s admin section login page only
Tab 4: MSN Money Stock quotes with 6 stocks on it

Firefox 3.0.1: 124.5mb RAM (1 thread)
Firefox loaded everything pretty well, was a bit sluggish on GMail tab.

IE8 (version 8.0.6001.17184): 95.5mb RAM (2 threads)
IE8 loaded everything that it loaded pretty quick too, but completely failed to load GMail, getting stuck on the loading <Email adress> progress meter…  Rendering on the front page of my company’s site was screwed up, but was fine in all other browsers tested.

Chrome: 112.5mb RAM (6 threads)
Perfect loading of all tabs, very fast, no issues.

Safari 3.1.2 (Windows): 98mb RAM (1 thread)
Loaded all sites, a bit sluggish, but not as bad as Firefox. 

Opera 9.52: 75.5mb RAM (1 thread)
Loaded all sites, little slow on GMail, but it came up. All other sites where just as fast as Chrome.

In conclusion, I like the feel of Chrome the best.  Very simple and easy to use, I really like the multiple thread/tab paradigm.  Safari has that nice “Appley” interface I like.  Opera is Ok, but does have more rendering problems, on sites not tested above, than the others.  IE8… Bleh… no comment…  

And as for Firefox, and I thought I’d never say it, it falling behind on both memory usage and speed.  I’ve also encountered quite a few Firefox crashes when shutting down the browser.  This is happening occasionally on all my machines on all operating systems I use, Mac, Linux and Windows.

New Google Chrome Browser

Google Chrome Browser

Later today Google is expected to release a new web browser based on Webkit (what Safari uses) and Firefox.   I feel that it will be a welcome addition to the browser wars.

I used Firefox, but have notice a lot more browser crashes with 3.x than previous versions and it feels quite laggy sometimes even on a Quad processor machine with 3gb RAM.  It gets to the point sometimes where I just load up Safari or Opera to surf sometimes.

IE just sucks.  I ONLY use IE for site testing during web development and for the “best” experience accessing my day job’s Outlook Web Access (OWA) for email.  Other than that, IE is not a part of my day to day browser use.

If this Google takes the best of Webkit and Firefox and makes it “better, faster, stronger”, then I will use it.  Of course I will be frank on my review of it and will do my best not to be biased since I use Google almost exclusive for my search needs, Email (Google Apps for Domains), Analytics for stats, etc.

I will post up a review once I get my hands on it and can put it through it’s paces.

I think Google will have more downloads of this browser in the first 24 hours than Firefox did on it’s 3.0 launch day if it posts up something on the front page of Google.  This could be huge.