
Technology development is supposed to create a chain reaction. If a company develops a good software, sooner or later, another would invent a better one till we get the best software that the market can offer. This supposed reaction would somehow trigger to create improved versions of the older one... or better yet, just make a new one, a more sophisticated and user friendly technology.
Somehow,this notion is not true, especially to web browsers.
With the coming of age of the Internet Industry, people seemed to evolve too on the way they use it. Human behavior changes as the need, trend and market shift its gear, so to speak. I find it ironic for browsers, which is seen as the gateway to the internet abyss, did not evolve as much as it should have. With too many browsers available, people tend to use whatever is available. Personally, I couldn't find something that can keep its pace with human behavior - my browsing behavior.
Then came Flock 2.0.
Flock 2.0 has just been very recently released with the aim to empower its users to create a rich experience across the board - whether its information gathering, sharing, communication, self-expression and user to user interaction.
Looking closely into Flock, there were several applications which were integrated into the browser itself that makes it unique from the rest.
RSS - the browser syndicates rich content like photos and videos much like regular RSS syndicates blog posts. Now Flock users can add media RSS feeds.
MySpace - your MySpace contacts is integrated into the browser for fast and easy communication with friends, business associates and the like.
Firefox 3 - Flock’s underlying code has been upgraded to match that of Firefox 3.
The makers of this software technology has the end in mind of pushing the boundaries of innovation even when Flock was just on the planning stage. True to their mission, they have created an extraordinary browser which will encompass all others...and still finding ways to better it.
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