Firebug can make Gmail slow

If you are using FireBug while using Gmail, it could be slowing down your browsing experience. If you’d rather not turn off FireBug completely, here are some simple steps to improve the speed of Gmail from the Gmail help files.

  1. Click the green or red icon in the bottom right corner of the browser window to open Firebug.
  2. Click the Console tab.
  3. Select Options.
  4. Uncheck Show XMLHttpRequests.
  5. Click the Net tab.
  6. Select Options.
  7. Check Disable Network Monitoring.

Unfortunately, there is no fix for Mac users other than disabling or removing Firebug completely.

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Facebook and the future of college social networks

I’ve been reading about all the recent changes at Facebook like integrating information feeds for their user’s actions at other sites and the privacy wall that continues to get lower. A Techcrunch article talks about competitors for Facebook in the “college students only” market and how viable any of them are. Many of the comments on that story point to a resistance by Facebook users to ever want to leave what they have with Facebook. There is, however, one angle to this social networking concept most are missing.

While the initial idea won’t seem as cool or even trustworthy to most students at first glance, University-sponsored social networks are a hugely overlooked opportunity.

Indiana University, as an example, has over 98,000 students spread across 9 campuses. That’s almost 100,000 users already tied together in the same system with usernames and passwords. If IU were to build out a social network, they would immediately have these users in the system (actually using the system is another thing). While this isn’t anywhere near Facebook’s millions of users, I’d be willing to bet that the day to day interactions of the average college student on Facebook is 90% related to his/her friends at the same campus.

In order for this to work, IU would have to be a bit liberal on students usage (read: free speech) and not censor everything it doesn’t like. But, with a strong word-of-mouth campaign and support from a few key on-campus student groups, the social network could take off quite fast. What IU would end up with is a closed social network in an excellent niche. With modest advertising, the site would pay for itself easily. The university would also have a new medium for communication with the student body.

Parting thoughts:

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