Test your home page by clicking the "Home" button on your browser. You should be taken directly to your iGoogle page. Keep your browser cookies enabled so you can stay signed in to your iGoogle account. If your browser deletes your cookies when you close it, you will have to sign into your iGoogle account every time you start up. Based in California, James Wright has been writing since Wright's articles have been published on various websites with a focus on technical fields such as computers and the Internet, and were also featured in a now-retired publication for an online artistic community.
Google, System Requirements for Using the Product To utilize the iGoogle personalized homepage, one need merely have access to the internet and a web browser. Wherever Google works, iGoogle should work as well. It is really that easy. However, if you wish to download the iGoogle widget to your desktop or dashboard, your system must be either a or later Windows operating system or Mac OS X. Just as Google is free to use, so is iGoogle. There is no trial period, no purchase cost. One can simply log on and start using it today.
You must first create a Google Account, but even that is free. Even the downloadable widgets are free. The free and easy nature of iGoogle really seem to be its main advantages.
The ease advantage of iGoogle is, as Edward Metz points out in his article Riding the Waves of Today's Online Web Tools, 'You don't have to be a programmer or aspiring web guru to make [iGoogle] work for you.
It's as easy as point and click' These are worth inspection, as the site looks fairly drab without one. In fact, at first blush it's downright blah. But with a little work, you can closely recreate what you left behind at iGoogle. If you want to reconstruct your iGoogle page, igHome can do it -- though it's worth checking out some of the other alternatives, which may just sway you from this old-fashioned format.
Another iGoogle doppelganger, iGoogle Portal, gives you a custom selection of information widgets and RSS feeds, then lets you organize them as you see fit. In some ways it's better than igHome, though it also has a few shortcomings. To begin with, iGoogle Portal iGP looks a bit cleaner and more appealing than igHome, and offers a lot more layout options.
You can configure nearly any number of columns, and they needn't all be the same width: iGP offers nine page templates, some mixing page-width widgets with column-width ones for a varied look. The site also offers tabbed pages, but not just for widgets; you can also devote a tab to a specific website, a neat way to integrate favorites into your portal.
And you can adorn each tab with a colorful little icon, a nice visual touch. However, iGP lacks igHome's convenient Google-services toolbar, and in my testing, layout changes such as the number of columns didn't always seem to apply correctly.
Also, it failed to properly import my iGoogle settings, displaying only one of the widgets I'd configured there. Those wrinkles aside, iGoogle Portal is worth a look for anyone who wants an iGoogle-style portal with a good mix of layout options. Here are the latest Insider stories.
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