Growl for Windows
Growl v2.0 beta 18 was recently released for Windows – should you care? If you are like most people, it is getting harder and harder to keep up with everything happening around you on the web. Twitter, facebook, email, calendar, IM – the draws on your attention are almost overwhelming. Wouldn’t it be great is there were some tools out there to help with all the noise? The ability to be automatically notified when things happen would be really useful – enter Growl for Windows.
What is Growl? In their own words:
Put simply, Growl lets you know when things happen. Files finished downloading, friends came online, new email has arrived – Growl can let you know when any event occurs with a subtle notification. The rest of the time, Growl stays out of your way.
Along with letting you know when things happen, Growl also gives you full control over how you are notified and what action (if any) you want to take in response to the notification. You can choose to be alerted with a visual indicator or an audible alert, both, or neither. You can choose the type of display that is shown, whether the display remains on the screen, the importance of the notification, and even if the notification should be forwarded to another computer. You can have notifications that trigger an email, run a script, launch a program, or are read out loud.
Growl has been available as a MAC application for some time now, so their foray into Windows land is a welcome addition to help you manage your machine. All of you have Windows Update on, right? Well now you have a tool that you can configure to notify you and/or take action on lots of other things on your machine.
How does it work? The setup is somewhat manual, but this is a good thing, since the whole point is that Growl is unobtrusive. Once you install the application, the software sits in your system tray waiting to be told what to do. You download pluggins from the Growl site for the applications you want. There are tons of apps there – Firefox, iTunes, Outlook, Gmail, even a system monitor. You run the setup for the app you want and let Growl do the rest. What you get is a configurable pop up window for whatever application you choose.
You get configurable reminders for things as they happen – new emails, calendar appointments, what the tune you are playing on iTunes is (they have Pandora too). New apps are being added all the time, and there is a GNTP library and command line tools that you can use to work with almost any API.
Neat stuff. Not perfect, but I like it so far.
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