Evernote hits 100,000,000 users

Evernote, the note-taking web service that I’ve praised several times, has hit a rather substantial milestone – 100 million users.  Since there are actually multiple applications and services with a significant user overlap, there are a few ways to look at the numbers.  Check out their blog post that provides a few details.

Evernote 100M users

I use it for all kinds of things – meeting notes, technical specs storage, bookmarking and website clipping, and even as a searchable archive for this blog.  It is vital for me at work, at home, and on the move (specifically, offline folders for the mobile devices are godsent when traveling abroad).

To the Evernote team: thank you guys! You are amazing and your service is truly awesome.  Keep it up and make it even better.

Firefox 29.0

It’s been a long time since I stopped being a Firefox fan.  Back when it was the only full featured open source browser, it was awesome.  But then the development slowed down, the browser started eating memory like a starving Godzilla, and daily application crashes became a norm.  On top of it, Google Chrome came out.  It was faster, cleaner, and much more stable.  It lacked the functionality bits and pieces, but all that was nothing compared to the speed, polish, and stability.  And as years went by, Firefox, it seemed, didn’t even try to catch up.

firefox-29.0

Today, my Fedora updates pulled in brand new and shiny Firefox 29.0 and the first time in years I am actually liking it.  The first thing that stands out immediately is the much cleaned up user interface.  The tabs look slick and main menu is moved into a single icon to the upper right corner, much like Google Chrome has it.  The menu is also reworked into a customizable area of icons, rather than nested text items.  The second important addition is the browser synchronization.  Once you create an account and enable the sync, your tabs, passwords, history, and forms will automatically synchronize between different machines.  That’s a very handy feature for those who have different home and office computers or some other scenario with multiple devices.

There is still a long road for the Firefox browser to catch up with Google Chrome though.  Two things that come to mind are the performance and the ability to install/uninstall extensions without restarting the browser.  But I sure appreciate all the hard work that went into this version.  After all, open competition pushes all products and the end user ultimately benefits.  It’s been a long while since there was a feeling of competition in the browser marketplace.  It’s good to catch a scent of that again.

WhatsApp passes 500,000,000 active users

According to the WhatsApp blog:

Thanks to all of you, half a billion people around the world are now regular, active WhatsApp users. In the last few months, we’ve grown fastest in countries like Brazil, India, Mexico, and Russia, and our users are also sharing more than 700 million photos and 100 million videos every single day. We could go on, but for now, it’s more important that we get back to work – because here at WhatsApp, we’re just getting started.

Now that’s quite impressive, not only for the number of active users but for the amount of the activity as well.

WordPress 3.9 “Smith” released

A brand new and shiny version of the best CMS ever – WordPress – has been released.  Version 3.9, code-named “Smith” brings quite a few noticeable improvements.  Mostly, these are around the post editor – a new version of TinyMCE, previews for galleries and playlists for audio and video, in-editor image resize and drag-n-drop file uploads.  Also, widget settings were much improved, especially with the live preview before save.  Watch the quick release video and read more here.