Boxcar Very
Posted in Uncategorized on 03/03/2010 12:58 am by admin
Boxcar Very
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Google Adds Gmail and Calendar Push Notifications to iPhone App
How is that terrible? I use boxcar, but the result is the same and I love it.
When I hear the e-mail sound I look at my screen and I know whether or not I want to pick up the phone, unlock it, launch mail, and wait for the message to load in the inbox.
Why would I want to do that every single time a message comes in? Most of the time they're not messages I care to look at right now. I have five "2 second glances" per hour. You'd suggest I turn them each into 20 second "mess with the phone" moments?
http://install-how.blogspot.com/2011/03/google-adds-gmail-and-calendar-push.html
I'm not understanding how that's better.How is that terrible? I use boxcar, but the result is the same and I love it.How is that terrible? I use boxcar, but the result is the same and I love it.When I hear the e-mail sound I look at my screen and I know whether or not I want to pick up the phone, unlock it, launch mail, and wait for the message to load in the inbox.
Why would I want to do that every single time a message comes in? Most of the time they're not messages I care to look at right now. I have five "2 second glances" per hour. You'd suggest I turn them each into 20 second "mess with the phone" moments?
I'm not understanding how that's better.
The reason it's terrible is because as soon as a second notification comes in IT OVERRIDES THE FIRST ONE wiping out your usage example entirely. I received 2 new emails (heard the vibrate motor for each) over push gmail (using the Exchange setup written by Google) while writing this response less than 3 seconds apart. With your system I would have only seen the latest one, and that's not including other things using the APNS such as games, facebook, foursquare, etc, all adding to the noise. With the notification system currently in place, only the latest notification is visible without 20 second "mess with the phone" moments, as you put it. And then when you DO finally unlock the phone, you get the push notification pop-up barrage where X number of pop-up bubbles happen in a row, and that is awful to deal with a regular basis. YMMV.
I can sort of see your point, but the experience is currently terrible IMO. If the notifications stacked and rolled downwards or something you'd have a much better point.
http://install-how.blogspot.com/2011/03/google-adds-gmail-and-calendar-push.html
When I hear the e-mail sound I look at my screen and I know whether or not I want to pick up the phone, unlock it, launch mail, and wait for the message to load in the inbox.
Why would I want to do that every single time a message comes in? Most of the time they're not messages I care to look at right now. I have five "2 second glances" per hour. You'd suggest I turn them each into 20 second "mess with the phone" moments?
I'm not understanding how that's better.
The reason it's terrible is because as soon as a second notification comes in IT OVERRIDES THE FIRST ONE wiping out your usage example entirely. I received 2 new emails (heard the vibrate motor for each) over push gmail (using the Exchange setup written by Google) while writing this response less than 3 seconds apart. With your system I would have only seen the latest one, and that's not including other things using the APNS such as games, facebook, foursquare, etc, all adding to the noise. With the notification system currently in place, only the latest notification is visible without 20 second "mess with the phone" moments, as you put it. And then when you DO finally unlock the phone, you get the push notification pop-up barrage where X number of pop-up bubbles happen in a row, and that is awful to deal with a regular basis. YMMV.
I can sort of see your point, but the experience is currently terrible IMO. If the notifications stacked and rolled downwards or something you'd have a much better point.
The reason it's terrible is because as soon as a second notification comes in IT OVERRIDES THE FIRST ONE wiping out your usage example entirely. I received 2 new emails (heard the vibrate motor for each) over push gmail (using the Exchange setup written by Google) while writing this response less than 3 seconds apart. With your system I would have only seen the latest one, and that's not including other things using the APNS such as games, facebook, foursquare, etc, all adding to the noise. With the notification system currently in place, only the latest notification is visible without 20 second "mess with the phone" moments, as you put it. And then when you DO finally unlock the phone, you get the push notification pop-up barrage where X number of pop-up bubbles happen in a row, and that is awful to deal with a regular basis. YMMV.
I can sort of see your point, but the experience is currently terrible IMO. If the notifications stacked and rolled downwards or something you'd have a much better point.
About the Author
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Boxcar $117.9 A boxcar is a railroad car that is enclosed and generally used to carry general freight. The boxcar, while not the simplest freight car design, is probably the most versatile, since it can carry most loads. Boxcars have side doors of varying size and operation, and some include end doors and adjustable bulkheads to load very large items. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 176 Publication Date: 2010/04/15 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.40 inches |
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The Boxcar Children $22.74 Provides the classic tale of a group of orphaned children who, determined to stay together, set up residents in an old boxcar and work together to make it a home of their very own. Read by Phyllis Newman. Book available. |
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Boxcar Bertha $68.51 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles Boxcar Bertha (1972), director Martin Scorseses second film, is a loose adaptation of Sister of the Road, the fictionalized autobiography of radical and transient Bertha Thompson as written by physician Dr. Ben L. Reitman. One of producer Roger Cormans famous exploitation films, the movie was made with a modest 600,000 budget and taught Scorsese how to make films quickly and economically. Besides the name of the heroine and her freight riding, very little of the film bears any resemblance to the original story written in Sister of the Road. The film tells the story of Bertha Thompson (played by Barbara Hershey) and Big Bill Shelly (played by David Carradine), two train robbers and lovers who are caught up in the plight of railroad workers in the American South. When Bertha is implicated in the murder of a wealthy gambler, the pair become fugitives from justice. While this story adheres to certain conventions of exploitation narrative, it also offers a surprisingly frank look at race and gender issues in the 1930s. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 84 Publication Date: 2010/09/11 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.20 inches |
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[CD] The Boxcar Children By Warner, Gertrude Chandler/ Newman, Phyllis (NRT) $17.1 Provides the classic tale of a group of orphaned children who, determined to stay together, set up residents in an old boxcar and work together to make it a home of their very own. Read by Phyllis Newman. Book available. Author: Warner, Gertrude Chandler/ Newman, Phyllis (NRT) Series Title: Boxcar Children Mysteries Publication Date: 2006/04/11 Binding Type: CD/Spoken Word Grade Level: 34 Language: English Depth: 0.25 Width: 5.75 Height: 5.00 |
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