Choosing an Online Recipe Sharing Site

10 01 2009

I’ve taken to cooking again, so I’ve been hunting down recipes online. Although googling recipes has been straightforward and effective so far, I want to be able to save recipes, notes, and reviews in a central location. Do any of the plethora of online recipes website stand out from the others? This post briefly notes three top options.

  • Epicurious.com: If you are looking for a website that “has it all,” then Epicurious is probably it. One glance at TopTenReviews’ comparison chart reveals that Epicurious far outpaces the competition in its features, and the review itself highlights the site’s inclusion of restaurant reviews and excellent online community, featuring user-generated video how-tos.
  • AllRecipes.com: Although TopTenReviews puts them in at #7 in their top ten, TopTenReviews can tend to focus too much on just counting up cool features and too little on actual usability. With sites like Yelp likely better for restaurant reviews than any online recipe site, some of the fancy add-ons at Epicurious seem frivolous if all you’re really looking for are recipes, which AllRecipes delivers above and beyond any other site. Unlike other top-rated sites, AllRecipes has had a recipe for all of my recent dishes, and they’ve all been accurate and delicious. With stuff like indentation and font styling, the layout of each recipe here is more readable than at Epicurious.
  • Google & Diigo: As much as I’m starting to like AllRecipes, you probably won’t be able to find every recipe you want there, so you’ll inevitably resort to googling recipes off other sites. Unless you want to be a dedicated AllRecipes contributor, you’ll want an easy way to save recipes from other sites, for which an online bookmarking site like Diigo or Delicious should do the trick. In fact, you could just skip the membership at AllRecipes and/or Epicurious altogether and keep all your recipes tagged as such through your bookmarking service.

In any case, it probably does not make a whole lot of sense to post recipes to your blog, unless it specializes specifically in cooking. For my part, I’m moving my recently posted chai recipe to AllRecipes and will continue to review recipes there but save the ones I like to Diigo.





5 Free Webcomics Hosting Sites

21 12 2008

I have relocated this post to Cheapskate Reviews. See you there!





5 Ways to Publish Your Comics Online

21 12 2008

I have relocated this post to Cheapskate Reviews. See you there!





8 Alternatives to Facebook’s Fundamental Features

30 11 2008

or How to Use Facebook Without Actually Using the Site

I am apparently one of many whose email notification preferences Facebook has lost over the past week, which means one of two things: 1) our information is not secure on Facebook, or, more likely (according to me and other respondents here), 2) Facebook just reset our preferences in a lame attempt to direct more traffic their way. Because I don’t want my photo collection to be accidentally “lost” and am mildly offended by gimmicky attempts to get me to use their already massively-trafficked site (AND I am just creating another elaborate procrastination ruse), I’m finding replacement options for Facebook’s various key features. My goal here is not to deactivate my profile and lose all the benefits of Facebook but rather to relocate my important files (photos) and minimize my interaction with the site. In some ways a continuation of my review of Web 2.0 services, here are the top options for supplanting Facebook’s features, from most seamless to least.

  1. Status Updates – Twitter: Your Facebook status can be handy for keeping friends and family updated about recent activities, but services like Twitter specialize in this capability and offer far more flexibility in how it can be used and accessed. I already update my status on Facebook using Twitter via Facebook’s Twitter application and will continue to do so for those who want to track me on Facebook. As for me, I’ll stalk you on Twitter or using my chat client (below).
  2. Chat – Pidgin: Chatting with friends on Facebook is fun, but you do not have to actually be on Facebook to do so. Although Web 2.0 darling Meebo gets great reviews, only Pidgin has a plugin that enables you to chat with Facebook friends alongside AIM Buddies and other chat contacts. Although using Pidgin does require the installation of additional software, this program makes up for it with additional uses like email notifications and updates accessible in your status bar. You can also reply to friend requests using Pidgin, eliminating another reason to visit Facebook.
  3. Messaging – Email: Email is an essential form of communication, but you do not need to do any of it through my Facebook Inbox. In fact, if you (ironically) keep message notification alerts from Facebook “on,” then you can read your messages in your chosen email client and reply there, assuming you know the sender’s email address. Folks sending me mail in Facebook will be get a response from mulrah@inbox.com sent over GMail from now on.
  4. Link Sharing – Diigo: People love to share links on Facebook, but you don’t have to get on Facebook to follow suit. As mentioned elsewhere, Diigo is my favorite for social bookmarking, and it can automatically update to delicious, which in turn can feed Facebook without you ever visiting the site. If you want to follow what I’m bookmarking outside of Facebook, just subscribe to this page. If you’re more interested in sharing and viewing friends’ favorite news stories, then I have also recommended Google Reader.
  5. Photo Backup – Export Photos: If you don’t already use SmugMug, my original recommendation from a previous post for photo sharing, or another service like Flickr or its trendy alternative Zooomr, then just use the Export Photos app to download your Facebook albums to your computer for a quick backup.
  6. Events – Socializr & 30Boxes: Facebook’s Calendar app is useful only for setting up group events for friends who are on Facebook already, but, if you’re like me, most of your events will include invitees who are not on Facebook. Therefore, you inevitably must use another site, and I highly recommend Socializr (not eVite!). While the Birthday Calendar app is pretty useful, I have it integrated with my calendar on 30Boxes, so I can see upcoming birthdays without ever entering Facebook.
  7. Lifestreaming – Firefox Toolbar (or Flock) and Feed Reader: I must admit that, though quite a time waster (or is it?), I do enjoy seeing posts, status updates, and photos available on the Facebook Home page. Although I appreciate Facebook’s clever ability to select the posts included on my “News Feed” so I don’t get overwhelmed, I don’t mind not coming to Facebook to see feeds because I can separate out the feeds by type for the most appropriate client. I recommend using a feed reader like Google Reader or Bloglines* to subscribe to friends’ posted items feeds, and you can use this for notifications and status updates too. The Facebook Toolbar for Firefox (basically built into Flock) has a sidebar that streams updates from your friends’ status changes and icons you can add to your toolbar that show various notifications without you ever having to visit Facebook itself. The only thing missing is a way to see your friends’ photos without visiting Facebook. As an aside, until more people I know start using lifestreaming services like Profilactic and Friendfeed, these services are not terribly useful alternatives to Facebook.
  8. Reconnecting with Former Classmates – LinkedIn, sort of: I previously had recommended Classmates.com, but, despite finding a couple people there who weren’t on Facebook, none of them seem to visit the site. This is not surprising, as the lifeless interface has nothing to draw people back to it after they sign up. I’m currently experimenting with LinkedIn, which seems to have a ton of former classmates signed up, but this is more appropriate for building a professional network than reaching out to old friends to share photos, play games, etc. Facebook will probably remain “stickiest” in this area, drawing me back to the site, albeit far less than I’d been visiting previously.

Thus, these eight resources should cover nearly all of my Facebook activity, backing up my data and avoiding trafficking Facebook as much as possible. Way to stick it to them! I do not use Facebook as much as others or for the same purposes; I’m not trying to find replacements for “SuperPoke!” or “Top Friends.” Perhaps my most particular use for Facebook has been Chess Pro, and I will now be trying Red Hot Pawn, the only site that seems to have a clean interface and leans toward correspondence chess.

* After twelve hours since I tried this on Bloglines, I have yet to see a Facebook item post, but adding it to the feed reader on my phone’s Opera Mini shows all the posts perfectly. What’s up, Bloglines?





10 Excellent Independent Web 2.0 Services

11 07 2008

I have updated and moved this post to Cheapskate Reviews. The revised post focuses more heavily on web apps that are better than Google’s alternatives, so a couple of the services that do not really compete with Google did not make the cut.

  1. Social NewsNewsvine: There are a ton of social news sites out there catering to every different type of online community, and none of the best ones are owned by major corporations. That doesn’t keep their revolutionary democratization of media from being subverted. In general, according to this dude, Digg leads the pack in terms of popularity, but could eventually give way to Newsvine, which caters more to mainstream interests. Ultimately, it’s really about the user group you want associate with as you intake your news, and, as this post shows, Newsvine’s community does a better job promoting thoughtful, informative articles than Digg. If I want to waste time with random links, there’s always…

  2. Website Discovery – StumbleUpon: Reviewers tend to lump StumbleUpon with social news or social bookmarking, but it really falls between the two in its own unique niche of website discovery. Web developers invariably compare it favorably to the likes of Digg because it is better at feeding them traffic, but anyone looking for interesting daily news will be sorely disappointed by StumbleUpon. Similarly, StumbleUpon does not fare well in comparisons with social bookmarking. However, in the realm of discovering new websites and rating what’s already out there, StumbleUpon has no peer and no real competition that I’m aware of.

ConsumerSearch also recommends blog hosts (WordPress), online backup services (MozyHome) and job sites (SimplyHired), and there are dozens of other well-regarded web apps and services (Twitter, Pingg, Mint, Comic Space, AllRecipes) that do not really overlap with Google’s offerings.





Googleland: Search, Email, & Feed Reader

10 07 2008

This post was a little wordy. Read the first paragraph of this new post on Cheapskate Reviews to get the point much more quickly.