Outlook 2007: Giving you the HTML Signature…

Missing your HTML signatures or showing off the flashy feedburner signature in Outlook 2007? Well, look no further. It’s been months since I have been using Outlook 2007 and no matter whatever options I tried, it just didn’t work! Douglas raised the flag earlier in this post and since then I have been looking around on and off till I discovered this solution:

You just need to edit the HTML signature file at

C:\Documents & settings\user name\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures

Create a HTML file and add your Feed burner script.

Done!

NOTE: If your files are hidden, you will not see Application Data. Unhide the files and folders to see this.

1st Year: Popular Posts

In comparision to my best, these posts were the most popular posts. You can see them in the popular posts tab at the top, but they list only Top 10. In addition to the top 10, these posts, brought a lot of link love and traffic.

UPDATE: Plugin does not work anymore. It had a corrupted table in the database. I have dropped it for now.

Popular Posts (Tab)

  1. uninstall office 2007 beta 2 TR
  2. Create MOSS 2007 VPC Images: Step by Step Guide
  3. SharePoint 007 – WSSv3 Unattended Install in Custom Path
  4. HowTo: Convert Non-Widget to Widget Ready WordPress Theme
  5. VISTA: BETA2 Keys Lost
  6. WSS v3 Templates: not just one, but all!
  7. How To: Control Spam on WordPress Blog
  8. Preparing For Daylight Saving Time (DST) Changes In 2007
  9. VISTA: ReadyBoost!
  10. Microsoft Vista Ultimate – Bill Gates Edition

Popular Posts (Web Stats)

  1. SharePoint: Move WSSv2 MSDE DB to WSSv3
  2. Move WSSv3 Database
  3. WSSv3 Unattended Installation
  4. WSSv3 Application Template Installation
  5. Move WSSv2 MSDE DB to WSSv3 Database
  6. SharePoint PSConfig Demystified
  7. SharePoint Config Wizard Error Resolved
  8. Create 2007 MOSS Theme
  9. SharePoint: Script to Install All Application Templates
  10. Sync Google Calendar with Outlook
  11. Sync Outlook Calender with Google Calender
  12. Google Calendar to Windows Mobile Sync
  13. Importing old emails into Gmail
  14. Windows Live Hotmail Plus: 4GB
  15. Vista + WLM Error Code 81000306

Most of these are from my best posts, blogged earlier. Enjoy reading these.

1st Year: My Best

In last 1 year, I have written some real good posts. As is written in blogosphere, content is king and it’s this very content that brought heaps of traffic to my blog. I have not seen a single of these posts fail on me. Some of these posts, got me link love, whilst some got me the initial comments and some got me raves.

To start with my passion topic –

SharePoint

  1. SharePoint: Move WSSv2 MSDE DB to WSSv3
  2. Move WSSv3 Database
  3. WSSv3 Unattended Installation
  4. WSSv3 Application Template Installation
  5. Move WSSv2 MSDE DB to WSSv3 Database
  6. SharePoint PSConfig Demystified
  7. SharePoint Config Wizard Error Resolved
  8. Create 2007 MOSS Theme
  9. SharePoint: Script to Install All Application Templates
  10. Create MOSS 2007 VPC Images: Step by Step Guide

Google

  1. Sync Google Calendar with Outlook
  2. Sync Outlook Calender with Google Calender
  3. Google Calendar to Windows Mobile Sync
  4. Importing old emails into Gmail
  5. Google Services Roundup (Complete Series)
  6. Inside Google HQ – Rocks!
  7. Inside Google HQ – Food & The Works!
  8. Inside Google HQ – Pets 
  9. Inside Google HQ
  10. Turn Gmail Chat Off

Microsoft

  1. Windows Live Hotmail Plus: 4GB
  2. Vista + WLM Error Code 81000306
  3. RSS Reader For Media Center
  4. Pimp your Outlook 2007
  5. uninstall office 2007 beta 2 TR
  6. Get your Live.com ID!

Other

  1. HowTo: Convert Non-Widget to Widget Ready WordPress Theme
  2. Mounting ISO images

Which was your favourite or if you are the newest subscriber, which is your favourite?

1st Year: Stats

It’s true, pictures worth a thousand words. So here comes stats from Feedburner, Google Analytics and Reinvigorate (less then a year though with Reinvirogate) for this blog in it’s 1st year.

Top Countries

google_topcountriesgoogle_topcountries Hosted on Zooomr

Yearly Traffic

re_yearlyre_yearly Hosted on Zooomr

Referring Domains

re_referrerre_referrer Hosted on Zooomr

Browsers

re_browsersre_browsers Hosted on Zooomr

Top Cities

feedburner_topcitiesfeedburner_topcities Hosted on Zooomr

All Time Stats

feedburner_stats_alltimefeedburner_stats_alltime Hosted on Zooomr

Popular Feed Items

feedburner_popularfeeditemsfeedburner_popularfeeditems Hosted on Zooomr

Operating Systems

feedburner_os

Languages

feedburner_lang

Aggregators All Time

feedburner_aggregators_alltime

Tomorrow: My Top Posts.

Google Services – Part 3

I know, I was going to do the gmail in the series, but I got distracted with Google Docs and Spreadsheets!
I am writing this from Google Docs and this will be updated, as I explore features.

Alpesh Nakar
http://alpesh.nakars.com

Testing Google Docs.
It can be collaborated and when updated, you will be notified if you subscribe to RSS Feeds. This is subject to me inviting you!
It can be published and you can see the document from a unique URL assigned by Google which is this.
It has Revisions, revisions history. Now that is awesome!

It can be edited on the fly! It can be published to a blog as well!!
WOW. You sure need a broadband connection for this. I think. Lets see.
Wonder if I can use my Windows Mobile to access this.
I will try it tonight :-)

First Edit: I published it to my SharePoint Blog and realised that my google services series is not published there. So, I was able to remove the post from Google Docs – Publish Option – Remove from Blog. My guess is that I will have to republish this. Lets see how it handles this.

Update: Does not work with Mobile. http://docs.google.com does not support this browser.

Secondly, Garamond fonts used in the document messed up my post and the blog site. Did you notice that before? Well, I was not amused. I am editing this from WordPress Editor and I am going to take a dig with normal fonts tomorrow. Lets see. I trust blogging/publishing is secondary. However, must note that you need a good connection. Is it true that you need a good broadband connection? You my readers, leave your comments on this.

Google services – part 2

Continuing from my earlier post on Google services, I look at how another Google Labs product has helped me in my ITsphere.

Before I got hooked on to Google Reader, I had tried many rss feed readers / aggregators. This post tracks my path to the final destination.

I would like to highlight the fact that I have not been into blogosphere for long. It’s less then a year *grins*

I started off with FireFox ‘bookmarking’ some feeds. And then IE7 beta got released and since I wasn’t really into rss feeds, I ported across to IE7 beta. Then the unstoppable happened!!! I was adding feeds by the dozens and since IE7 was in beta, I had to find a better alternative.  My quest to find an alternative, that I could use anywhere, anytime ;-) Not limited to one workstation. Honestly, I did not once think that Google Services would cater to my RSS Feed need. It just did not happen.

Well, so what was the alternative? It was Squeet! Yeah – the best solution I found then. Its your feeds in email, so nothing like it. Subscribed, received in Outlook, rules took care of everything else! They also had nice add-ons for IE7 & Firefox. It is rather unfortunate, that I had to move away from Squeet – in a way that is how I found Google Reader!!! Hooray! I was receiving rss feeds-Squeet-emails regularly and as I kept adding the feeds, Squeet matched it with performance. As a backup, I had some sites in IE 7 beta. After couple of months, I noticed IE 7 show new feed items. At that time, I was too busy with our Microsoft Operations Manager rollout, so had not noticed that emails from Squeet had been heading south! Hmm, I tried to login into my account and it was locked out – at Squeet. Well, the reason was that a lot of emails had been bouncing off. There was no reason, since I got all my emails. This was my work email. Also I have subscribed to a couple of SharePoint discussion groups and had been regularly receiving emails on them.

So absolutely no reason for rss feeds-Squeet-emails to fail. Well, I got the account unlocked couple of times. In the meantime I had started exploring live.com. Great clean concept, used only for rss feeds. I was able to import my opml, easily and without any dramas. Basically it had this Share Point look and web part concept ( the concept that I love). BUT! There is always a but! I found organizing my feeds bit too horrible!

So I moved on to Great News! Fantastic. I just loved it! However, this was workstation bound. And then… I came across Google Reader! Literally came across. Seriously, I have not considered any other RSS Feed readers out there. I love Gmail and I just got into Google Reader. I know, this post is supposed to by about Google Services, but bear in mind, there is always a reason, why you end with Google Services and this is what I am highlighting. Other products and services fail to deliver, their marketing and promises baseless, and Google Services don’t rave and rant, but deliver! Trust me, did you ever know or for now know, when will Google Reader come out of Google Labs, to be a fully functional Google Service like Google Search or Google Product like Writely? They will deliver and let you scramble for it aka gmail!

I have been hooked to Google Reader ever since and more so now, primarily because of the following reasons:

  1. Web-Based: This eliminates my biggest hurdle of 24x7x365 access.
  2. OPML: Import/Export was painless.
  3. Manage Subscriptions: Bewdy! I was able to tag, manage my subscriptions as easily as you apply labels in Gmail.
  4. Read View: Plain and simple, with a choice of expanded and list view. Automagically mark a feed read as soon as you move to the next feed.
  5. Add Subscription: Never been so easy! Type in the Website address and voila!! – choose the tag or ‘folder’
  6. List View: You can see updated subscriptions or all. Your subscriptions within the folders can be seen as a group or individual within the folder.
  7. Marking – You can star (favorite) your feeds like Gmail.
  8. Sharing – Does any other reader do this? For an example hit on My SharePoint Blog and check out what I mean by Sharing. This is awesome! You can even subscribe to my ‘shared feeds’ Basically, I share the feed and then if you have subscribed to the feeds, you will be notified. Another option for me to share – grab a code and put it on my blog/site and people can see what I have been upto ;-)
  9. ITs my news reader ;-) Back when I was in India, I did not open any Website, any newspaper but my Google Reader, because it works and displays like a charm on my iPaq!!!! I was on top of all my feeds :-)

Need I say more? What news reader rss feed aggregator you use?

Next in series – the mother of all Google Services, gMail!

My SharePointBlog

Exchange push mail and gprs… must read

Its been almost a week, since I have been back.

Quick stats:

  • Skimmed through hundreds of feed items in Google Reader. Yes skimmed. Why? Read on
  • Read through 15 work emails - what 15?!!!

Yeah, you are right! I was on top of emails, thanks to HP iPaq 6300 series, Exchange 2003 SP2 – Push Email and last but not least – probably- cheapest gprs connectivity in the world.

You know how much it cost me? Wanna make a guess? 1…2…3… Ok, have you come up with an answer? Honestly email me or comment your answer. Would love to read it!! Come on…

Well I bought pre-paid with talk time of AU 30$. (I still have some talk time left… with international roaming in Australia!)

Ok, the point of the post…. GPRS. Well, to get activated, I called up the customer care. I was given2 options… Free GPRS to providers site. Settings will be sent via sms. (No good for me, its not a NOKIA) and option 2 – the real one – called Mobile Office would cost me as follows:

Activation – AU $ 1.5 (You read it right, although I could not believe it when I heard it!!)

Data Cost – (hold on….) Wanna make a guess…?  1…2…3… Ok… AU $ 0.20 per day UNLIMITED!!!! I almost dropped the PDA!! I was like, “Are you sure?” She said yes!

I am sure, corporates use exchange push mail and gprs, and they may or may not be using this. However this business model is targeting teens, grads – their first job most likely to be a call center – who have 100% disposable income and they are not interested in push mail and gprs, but ringones, wallpapers, etc which costs extra.

Well, whoever benefits from this, including me, its something that should be available here in Australia too. I just don’t believe, how we get ripped for downloading mails, or checking mails.

That brings me to another point and which is an upcoming post. In India, I did not only access office (exchange) mails, rss feeds but also my personal domain emails, gmail and live mails :-) – benefits of google and gprs.

Well, what do you do at 0200 hours sitting in a hospital lounge?!!!