Wednesday, March 31, 2010

iPad at the Apple Store at 9am Saturday

Didn’t order your iPad yet? Don’t want to wait until April 12th for it to arrive? Friendly Computers found this article useful and would like to share it with you.

There have been many rumors around whether or not Apple would have the iPad available in the Apple Store on Saturday. Now we’ve received official word from Apple that the company is planning to make them available for people that walk in off the street beginning at 9am on Saturday.

I ordered my iPad during the first day of pre-order, so as long as the local UPS Store can handle a Saturday delivery, mine should be arriving early morning Saturday. However, if you want to get your hands on one and don’t want to wait until April 12th for it to arrive, you might want to line up outside of your local Apple Store.

I figured that Apple would have some on-hand on sale day. After all, traditionally the Apple Store is the best source for any Apple products on launch day. I remember lining up for the iPhone and iPhone 3G, in hopes of grabbing one on launch day, and while the local AT&T stores were sold out, the Apple Store was still going strong.

By the way, if you’re still not sold on the iPad, check out Apple’s latestguided tours. They’ll definitely try to convince you to part with your hard earned cash.

Source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/mobile-gadgeteer/?p=2773&tag=wrapper;col1

Monday, March 29, 2010

AVG Rescue CD Cleans Your Infected Windows PC

There's any number of great antivirus tools that help protect your PC from viruses, but what about when you encounter an already-infected PC? Friendly Computers found this article very useful and would like to share it with you.

If a virus or spyware has crippled your PC to an extent that it won’t boot up normally to Windows (not even in the safe mode), then using a bootable rescue CD could be the last resort before you reinstall the OS.

You could use AVG Rescue CD (now available to AVG free users too) in such situations to repair your infected PC.  It is a portable version of the AVG Antivirus and can be used as a bootable CD or USB flash drive.

There are four other tools are available in the package which you could use to perform some other necessary functions. They are:-

  • Midnight Commander
  • Windows Registry editor
  • Ping
  • TestDisk

    Here is the step by step guide for creating AVG rescue CD/USB flash drive and removing viruses or malwares with its help.

How to create AVG Rescue CD (for USB stick)

Following steps tell you how to install AVG Rescue CD files onto a USB pen drive. The steps for installing it on a CD would be a bit more complex because you would need to download the iso file and then burn it onto the cd and make it bootable. Doing it on a USB drive is easier though.

1. Download AVG Rescue CD (for USB stick).

2. Plug USB flash drive in the USB port of your PC.

3. Now extract the downloaded AVG rescue RAR file in the USB drive.

4. Open the drive by double clicking on it to see all the files inside it.

5. Locate the “Makeboot.bat” file and double click on it to launch it.

Warning: Never launch this “Makeboot.bat” file from any other drive other than USB drive. If you launch it from the system drive, it will make it unbootable.

6. A command line window will appear.

avg-rescue cd

7. Press any key of your keyboard. Wait for few seconds. After some time a message will pop up saying “The AVG rescue USB should be bootable now”.

How to Remove Virus or Spyware using AVG Rescue CD

1. Insert the AVG rescue CD (bootable flash drive in this case).

2. Go to the boot menu in BIOS settings.

3. Select the source (CD-ROM drive or Removable devices) you want to boot from. It will depend on the method you used to create the AVG rescue CD. In my case, I selected removable devices because I’ll boot it through  the USB flash drive.

4. AVG welcome screen will appear. Press enter key or wait for 10 seconds to boot AVG rescue CD.

avg-welcome screen

5. Accept the license agreement.

6. Run the update of AVG. You can update via internet. If internet connection is not available then you could update it from previously downloaded files(stored in your computer) from the AVG website. If there are no update files saved then you can’t update it. Proceed to the next step.

AVG-update

7. After updating, main menu will appear. Select “Scan” option (selected by default) and press enter key to start the scan process.

arl_menu avg

8. Choose between two options – scan the volume or scan directory.

9. Run the scan.

10. After scanning is complete, scan report is displayed on the screen. You can take following actions: Report file, Delete all, Rename all.

So that was how you use AVG Rescue CD to boot into Windows and clean it up.

Source: http://www.guidingtech.com/2083/avg-rescue-cd-virus-spyware-removal/

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Long Live Your Laptop Battery!

Using laptop and trying to keep laptop battery working for as long as possible? Friendly Computers found this article very useful and would like to share it with you.

Laptop batteries are like people--eventually and inevitably, they die. And like people, they don't obey Moore's Law--You can't expect next year's batteries to last twice as long as this year's. Battery technology may improve a bit over time (after all, there's plenty of financial incentive for better batteries), but, while interesting possibilities may pop up, don't expect major battery breakthroughs in the near future.

Although your battery will eventually die, proper care can put off the inevitable. Here's how to keep your laptop battery working for as long as possible. With luck, it could last until you need to replace that aging notebook (perhaps with a laptop having a longer battery life).

I've also included a few tips on keeping the battery going longer between charges, so you can work longer without AC power.

Don't Run It Down to Empty

Battery settings in Windows 7. (Click for larger image.)Squeezing every drop of juice out of a lithium ion battery (the type used in today's laptops) strains and weakens it. Doing this once or twice won't kill the battery, but the cumulative effect of frequently emptying your battery will shorten its lifespan.

(There's actually an exception to this rule--a circumstance where you should run down the battery all the way. I'll get to that later.)

The good news: You probably can't run down the battery, anyway--at least not without going to a lot of trouble to do so. Most modern laptops are designed to shut down before the battery is empty.

In fact, Vista and Windows 7 come with a setting for just this purpose. To see it, click Start, type power, and select Power Options. Click any one of the Change plan settings links, then the Change advanced power settings link. In the resulting dialog box, scroll down to and expand the Battery option. Then expand Critical battery level. The setting will probably be about 5 percent, which is a good place to leave it.

XP has no such native setting, although your laptop may have a vendor-supplied tool that does the same job.

Myth: You should never recharge your battery all the way.

There's considerable controversy on this point, and in researching this article I interviewed experts both for and against. But I've come down on the side of recharging all the way. The advantages of leaving home with a fully-charged battery--you can use your PC longer without AC power--are worth the slight risk of doing damage.

Keep It Cool

Heat breaks down the battery, and reduces its overall life.

When you use your laptop, make sure the vents are unblocked. Never work with the laptop on pillows or cushions. If possible, put it on a raised stand that allows for plenty of airflow.

Also, clean the vents every so often with a can of compressed air. You can buy this for a few dollars at any computer store. Be sure to follow the directions on the can, and do this only when the notebook is off.

Give It a Rest

Removing a battery from a laptop. (Click for larger image.)If you're going to be working exclusively on AC power for a week or more, remove the battery first.

Otherwise, you'll be wearing out the battery--constantly charging and discharging it--at a time when you don't need to use it at all. You're also heating it up (see "Keep It Cool," above).

You don't want it too empty when you take it out. An unused battery loses power over time, and you don't want all the power to drain away, so remove it when it's at least half-charged.

Never remove the battery while the computer is on, or even in standby or sleep mode; doing so will crash your system and possibly damage your hardware. Even inserting a battery into a running laptop can damage the system. So only remove or reinsert the battery when the laptop is completely off or hibernating.

If you've never removed your laptop's battery and don't know how, check your documentation. (If you don't have it, you can probably find it online.) The instructions generally involve turning the laptop upside-down and holding down a button while you slide out the battery.

Myth: Refrigerate your battery.

Some people recommend you store it in the refrigerator, inside a plastic bag. While you should keep a battery cool, the last thing you want is a wet battery, and condensation is a real danger in the fridge. Instead, store it in a dry place at room temperature. A filing cabinet works fine.

You don't want the battery to go too long without exercise or let it empty out entirely. If you go without the battery for more than two months, put it in the PC and use it for a few hours, then remove it again.

Also, before you take the laptop on the road, reinsert the battery and let it charge for a few hours before unplugging the machine. Allow the battery time to get a full charge before you remove the AC power.

Heal a Sick Battery

Myth: You can rejuvenate a worn-out battery.

This isn't, strictly speaking, the case. You can't make old lithium hold more electrons than it can currently manage.

But if the battery is running out unexpectedly fast, or if your laptop is having trouble figuring out how much power it has left, you might be able to fix the battery's "gas gauge," so it at least gives a more accurate reading.

If you suspect the battery can't tell if it's charged or not, run it through a couple of cycles. Drain it of all its power (yes, this is the exception to the "don't drain the battery" rule mentioned above), recharge it to 100 percent, and then repeat.

But how do you drain the battery when Windows won't let you do just that? Don't bother with the settings described above. They're not safe (you might forget to change them back), they may not be getting an accurate reading, and they quite possibly won't let you set the critical battery level to 0 percent. (If they did, it would crash Windows.)

Instead, unplug your AC power and keep your laptop running (you can work on it if you like) until it automatically hibernates. Then reboot your PC back and go directly to the system setup program.

I can't tell you exactly how to get there; each computer is different. Turn on your PC and look for an onscreen message (one of the first you'll see) that says something like "Press the X key for setup." Immediately press the designated key.

It may take a couple of times to get the timing right. If there isn't enough power to let it boot, plug in AC until you're at the setup program, then unplug it.

Leave the notebook on until it shuts off. This can take some time (45 minutes on my laptop); setup uses a lot less power than Windows.

Once the PC is off, plug in the AC power, then wait a few hours before rebooting to Windows and making sure you've got a full recharge.

Repeat the process once or twice.

With luck and proper care, your battery will still be useful when you're looking for a new laptop.

Longer Life Between Charges

The tips above should lengthen the time before you need to replace your laptop's battery. But on a daily basis, we're far more concerned with another type of battery life: how long we can keep our laptop running without AC power. You may know most of the following tips already, but it never hurts to refresh (or recharge) your memory.

Dim your screen
Your laptop's backlight requires a lot of juice. Keep it as dim as you can comfortably read it.

Shut off unneeded hardware
Turn off your Bluetooth, and if you're not using the Internet, turn off your Wi-Fi receiver, as well. Don't use an external mouse or other device. And muting the PC's sound system not only saves power, it avoids annoying everyone else in the café.

Avoid multitasking
Run as few programs as you can get away with. If possible, stick to the one application (word processor, browser, or whatever) you're currently using, plus your antivirus and firewall in the background.

And if you're not on the Internet, you don't need those two.

Avoid multimedia
Save chores like photo editing and watching old Daily Show videos for when you have AC power. And if you must listen to music, use your iPod (or similar device).

Know when to sleep and when to hibernate
Choose Sleep or Hibernate depending on how long you plan to be away from the computer. (Click for larger image.)You need to think about when you want to save power by sending your laptop into Standby or Sleep mode, and when you want to hibernate it.

There's a difference. XP's Standby and Vista and Windows 7's Sleep modes keep your PC on, using some power, but less of it than in normal use. Hibernate saves the PC's state to the hard drive, then shuts it off entirely, so that no power is used.

On the other hand, Windows takes much longer--sometimes minutes--to go into and come out of hibernation. And those are minutes that the battery is draining heavily and you can't work.

XP's Standby mode isn't really all that efficient. If your laptop will be inactive for more than about half an hour, hibernate it. Otherwise, use Standby.

But Vista and Windows 7 do a much better job with their Sleep mode. Don't bother hibernating your PC unless you think you're going to go more than two or three hours without using it.

Myth: Adding RAM saves battery life.

True, more RAM means less hard drive access, and the hard drive uses a lot of electricity. But RAM uses electricity as well, and unless you're doing a lot of multitasking (not a good idea when you're on battery power), more RAM won't reduce hard drive use.

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/191574/long_live_your_laptop_battery.html

Monday, March 22, 2010

doubleTwist is an iTunes Alternative that Supports Several Devices

Friendly Computers found this article useful and would like to share it with you.

There are a lot of iTunes users out there, but unfortunately you can’t use it with all of your portable devices. Today we take a look at doubleTwist, which allows you to sync your media with a multitude of portable devices and easily share it as well.

Note: You can run doubleTwist on Windows or Mac, and here we take a look at the Windows version.

Install & Setup doubleTwist

Download and install doubleTwist using the defaults in the wizard…

1

Installation takes several moments and you’ll see the progress while it finishes up.

2

After installation is complete, sign up for an account if you don’t already have one. If you do have an account you can login right away.

3

Enter in your username, email address, and password then click Sign Up.

You’ll get an confirmation email and need to activate the account before you can sign in.

5

Once you’re all signed up, launch doubleTwist and you’ll be ready to start using it.

6

doubleTwist Music

The default music store is Amazon MP3 store which might appeal to those of you who are tired of the iTunes music store. A lot of times the music is cheaper and available at higher bit rates.

7

You can start searching for music in the Amazon Music Store and previewing songs.

8

To purchase anything though you will need to sign into your Amazon account.

9

Under Playlists it allows you to import your playlists from iTunes and Windows Media Player, which is a handy feature if you don’t want to set them up again.

10

Of course you can play your songs through the music player on your desktop.

11

Devices

One of the coolest things about doubleTwist is that it supports a lot of different portable media devices including iPod, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, Android, PSP, Smartphones, and much more.

Unfortunately for Zune users…there isn’t any support for the Zune of Zune HD yet.

12

Here we have a Creative Zen attached and can sync songs, pictures, and podcasts.

13

An HTC-S620 Smartphone running Windows Mobile…

14

Even a simple USB drive will be recognized and you can transfer your media to it as well.

15

Podcasts

Finding your favorite audio and video podcasts is easy with the search feature.

16

You can easily manage and subscribe to podcasts in the subscriptions section.

17

You can watch the video podcasts directly in doubleTwist.

18

Sharing Media

Also you can share digital media with your friends or add it to Flickr and YouTube.

19

You can send any pictures, videos, or music in your library to other people by dragging it over. You can email users individually…

20

Or access contacts from your Gmail and Yahoo accounts.

21

There is a limit to how much you can send of video podcasts… only the first 10 minutes.

22

The person you send it to will get a link in their email that points to your My Feed page on the doubleTwist site.

23

There they can access the media you sent…in this example it’s a video podcast but you can share any media.

24

Other Features

Under My Profile you can change your avatar and personal information.

In Preferences you can choose where media is stored, its startup actions, podcast subscriptions, and manage device syncing.

 

Conclusion

It’s still in beta stage so expect some bugs, but overall doubleTwist is a solid media player that is easy to use with a clean interface. It’s simple and doesn’t try to do too much so is fairly easy on system resources. The main annoyance is it tries to catalog all of your media out of the box. Which may be alright for some users with smaller media collections, but very irritating to advanced users with large collections. Also there is currently no support for the Zune, but according to their forums, it’s on the way.

At the time of this writing it’s in public beta and can be downloaded for XP, Vista, Windows 7 (32 & 64 bit), and Mac OSX. If you’re looking for an iTunes alternative that works with several different portable devices, you might want to give DoubleTwist a try.

Download DoubleTwist Public Beta

See If Your Media Device is Supported by doubleTwist

Source: http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/13001/doubletwist-is-an-itunes-alternative-that-supports-several-devices/

Friday, March 19, 2010

The Right Hard Drive For You

Is it time to upgrade your laptop's hard drive? Friendly Computers found this article very useful and would like to share it with you.

Traditional hard drive have never been cheaper, and the advent of flash-memory based SSDs—that's solid-state drives—delivers a storage upgrade path that actually deliver solid, real-world benefits that you'll notice every single day. SSD-equipped PCs boot faster and are quicker to load applications. In fact, the only bad thing about SSDs is their cost—a 128GB solid-state drive can cost upwards of $400.

So what's the right storage solution for you? Read on, and I'll tell you what you need to know.

Option 1: The Cheapskate

The Right Hard Drive For You
SSDs sound pretty sexy, but you're running an old machine—say an Athlon 64—and you've got an immediate problem. Your porn collection has filled your old 500GB drive. You need more space, stat, and there's no reason to shell out more than your PC is worth for a 128GB SSD. Lucky for you, terabyte drives are cheap—$90 at Newegg for an awesome drive. There are a few key specs to watch out for when buying a hard drive for use as your system drive. The speed that the platters spin at has a direct correlation on the performance of the drive. Faster platters = faster data transfer. For an inexpensive, mainstream drive, that means you should be looking at 7200rpm exclusively. The number of platters is also relevant. The fewer platters there are in the drive, the faster the drive will be. For those reasons, I recommend Seagate's 7200.12 series 1TB drive. At $90, it's cheap, fast, and reliable.

Total Capacity: 1TB
Total Cost: $90

Option 2: The Budget-Conscious SSD Shopper

The Right Hard Drive For You
Today, the 128GB SSDs sit in the sweet spot for price to performance ratio. However, smaller SSDs don't necessarily sacrifice anything in terms of performance, just capacity. (The brand of controller used and configuration of the memory are much more important to SSD performance.) So, if you want to scrimp, you can buy a smaller SSD for Windows and your applications, and pair it with a traditional hard drive where you store your large files—like your music and video files. If you want to get really tricky, you can even use symlinks—special links that are invisible to applications but are between files or directories—so that your applications don't even realize your files are on different drives.

While Intel's mainstream 160GB SSDs cost about $500, the 80GB retail version comes in right around $220, and even includes a mounting kit, so it will slide into your 3.5-inch drive bays (most SSDs are 2.5-inch drives, sized for laptops and servers). That's not a ton of capacity, but it's more than enough if you just want to install Windows and your applications. You'll need to install games and store your media on a secondary drive, but for that you can use an inexpensive traditional drive, like the Seagate 7200.12 1TB. And, the quick boot and speedy application load times are more than worth the hassle. One caveat, when buying Intel SSDs, make sure you get the second generation drives (they'll have G2 in the model number). The first-gen models don't support TRIM, which is an important feature for maintaining the drive as you use it. We'll talk about TRIM in a moment.

Total Capacity: 1.08TB
Total Cost: $310

Option 3: Handy Laptop Upgrade

The Right Hard Drive For You
While it's definitely tempting to put a speedy SSD in your laptop—after all quick load times and a complete lack of moving parts does sound spiffy—if you use your portable machine like I do, you'd probably rather have some extra space. Lots of extra space. That's why I recommend the Western Digital 640GB Scorpio Blue drive. It's a 5400RPM drive, but its balance of price to space is excellent, and it shouldn't eat through your battery too quickly. When you upgrade the hard drive in a notebook, you need to know what height drive your computer can accommodate. The easiest way to find out is to look in Device Manager (in Windows) or in System Information (in OSX) and see what model drive you have currently. Then Google that model number to find out thick your current drive is. Anything that size or smaller should fit. At 9.5mm, the Scorpio is a perfect upgrade for my MacBook Pro.

Total Capacity: 640GB
Total Cost: $99

Option 4: Balls to the Wall

The Right Hard Drive For You
What's a truly nutty storage solution? How about a pair of 160GB SSDs paired with 2TB of the fastest traditional hard drive in the world? While there are some faster SSDs out there, they're either based on untested controllers or have had problems in the past. When dealing with bleeding edge, we'll take reliable and slightly slower in some situations over speedier with a chance to lose our data, which is why we recommend a pair of 160GB Intel's X-25MG2's running in RAID0, paired with a speedy and spacious 2TB Western Digital Black drive. This gives you 320GB of storage on the RAID, more than enough space for Windows and all your applications and games, plus an extra 2TB for your music, videos, and... yes... your porn collection. It's the best of both worlds, but with a pair of $500 SSDs, it'll cost you!

Total Capacity: 2.380TB
Total Cost: $1280

The Care and Feeding of SSDs

There are a few things you need to know about SSDs, before you shell out big bucks for one. First, because of the way flash memory works, either the operating system or a vendor-provided piece of software needs to do some occasional housekeeping to keep write speeds up. If your drive supports the TRIM command—as the second-generation Intel SSDs I recommended do—Windows 7 will take care of the scut work for you.

If you're running XP or Vista, you'll need to manually run the Intel SSD Optimizer every few weeks or months, whenever you notice write speeds slowing down. It's part of the Intel SSD Toolbox. Unfortunately, the SSD Optimizer doesn't run on RAID arrays, so it's a bad idea to RAID your SSDs, unless you're running Windows 7.

You should prevent defragmentation programs from running on SSDs—they're not necessary and can actually degrade performance. Windows 7 will automatically disable defrag, but you'll need to turn it off manually in XP or Vista.

Unfortunately, there's no way to properly maintain an SSD on OSX today. OSX doesn't support the TRIM command and there aren't any OSX-native tools for Intel drives. The only way to restore like-new write speeds on a Mac is to backup your drive, format it, then restore from your TimeMachine backup. If you frequently write large files, you'll definitely notice the performance hit. For that reason, it's not a great idea to buy a SSD to upgrade your MacBook Pro today.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5496302/the-right-hard-drive-for-you

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Image hosting on the cheap: a look at three free services

Many people use image hosting to share their images. Friendly Computers would like to help you in choosing free image hosting.

Image hosting is the kind of service many people use for sharing their images. There are several great options that cost money—like SmugMug, for instance—but unless you're a major shutterbug, a free service might fit your modest needs and usage pattern better. Here we round up three of the top options for free image hosting around the Web—Flickr, Picasa, and Photobucket.

Flickr

Flickr has been around for many years, and is now owned by Yahoo. Most of us in Orbiting HQ have used Flickr for some time, and by virtue of its longevity, popularity, and well-documented API, many desktop and mobile imaging apps feature some kind of Flickr integration.

Like many image hosting solutions, Flickr has a free basic account which you'll only need a verifiable e-mail address to activate. If you already have a Yahoo ID, you're good to go; otherwise, you'll have to go through the registration process at Yahoo to get started.

Once that's out of the way, you'll have plenty of options for uploading images to Flickr. You can use Flickr's Web 2.0-ified uploading interface by clicking on the prominent "Upload photos & videos" link on the home page, or by clicking "Upload Photos" from the drop-down navigation menu labelled "You." You can select multiple images from your machine using a native file picker. Once you have your list, you can select to make the images public or private, and click upload.

screen shot

Once all the images are uploaded, you can add titles, tags, and descriptions. A Flash-based Organizr tool helps you arrange photos into "sets" (commonly called "albums" on other sites). You can also arrange sets of sets called "collections."

In addition to the online uploader, Flickr has a number of Flickr-made and third-party apps that you can use toget images into your photostream. Flickr makes an Uploadr app for both Mac OS X and Windows. iPhoto '09includes native Flickr support, but plugins exist for iPhoto, Aperture, and Adobe Lightroom for exporting images directly from those apps to your Flickr account. Other apps for desktop and mobile platforms are available as well.

screen shot

From any individual image page, you can edit tags, title, and a description; you can view shooting data; and logged-in users can add comments. Two easy sharing options include "Blog this," which will publish a post on a configured blog with the image and a link to its Flickr page. Clicking "All sizes" will let you choose from a range of automatically generated images sizes, and give you the option to copy HTML code to insert the image into a blog or webpage. Flickr's terms of service require a link back to an image's Flickr page when embedded in another site, so keep that in mind if you have to use custom code to insert images into forums.

Flickr has a number of ways to share images directly through the site. One way is by joining various topical groups. For instance, I'm a member of a Band Photography group for images of live bands, and a member of a group that's just for users of Tamron's 28-75mm f/2.8 zoom lens. You can also add Flickr members as a contact, and view that contact's images. Flickr provides an RSS feed with all new uploads from your contacts, so you can easily keep up with what your friends are posting.

screen shot

Other options for doing things with your images are available as well. Flickr includes integrated image editing via Picnik. Flickr also has integrated support for making prints, photo books, calendars, and more via SnapFish. And if you like, you can simply browse using Flickr's "Explore" options, which will show you images based on certain tags, locations, or "interestingness."

screen shot

A standard free account comes with a number of limitations. You can only upload 100MB of images per month, and images are limited to 10MB each. Flickr now allows short video uploads (90s max, 150MB per video), and free accounts are limited to two per month. Other limits: you can only post an image to 10 groups, browsing your photostream will only show the last 200 uploads, and you'll only have access to resized versions of your images.

Upgrading to a Pro account costs $24.95 per year. Doing so allows you to upload unlimited photos and videos, though images are limited to 20MB max. You get unlimited storage, unlimited bandwidth, archiving of and access to full resolution images, and the ability to share videos in HD. You'll be able to choose a custom URL name, replace uploaded photos with edited versions, post images to up to 60 different groups, and access detailed viewing and referrer stats. You'll also have the benefit of ad-free browsing and sharing, so not only will you not see ads while viewing the site, visitors to your images won't see them, either.

Picasa Web Albums

Of course, Yahoo isn't the only search company with an image hosting service. Some time ago, Google bought the Picasa image cataloguing and editing application, and added a Picasa Web Albums service to Google's stable of cloud services.

screen shot

You'll need a Google ID to get access to Picasa Web Albums. Once you have an account, you can start uploading images directly via the Web. Unlike Flickr, which has the concept of a photostream of continuous, not necessarily related images in chronological order (by upload date), uploads in Picasa Web Albums are always assigned to an album. The online upload tool allows you to select up to five images for uploading at one time. To get the best uploading experience, Google encourages you to use the Picasa application. It has been available for Windows for some time, but Google has released a beta for version for Mac OS X.

Picasa itself is quite comparable to iPhoto for Mac OS X, only it uploads images to Google instead of MobileMe, and it has a Windows version. It keeps track of your images, allows you to edit them, and collects images into virtual albums. Using Picasa, you can upload as many photos at a time as you want, up to your 1GB free storage limit. Google doesn't limit features for free users, just storage space. Additional storage starts at just $5 per year for 20GB, which is shared across Picasa, Gmail, and Google Docs. Options go all the way up to 1TB, which costs $256 per year, and also includes a free Eye-Fi WiFi-enabled memory card for direct Picasa uploads.

Like Flickr, individual image pages allow you to add and edit tags, titles, and captions. You have options to edit using Picasa (if it's installed), order prints online, and download the image. You can also click "Share" to send the image via e-mail using your Gmail account, or you can click "Link to this Photo" in the sidebar to get either a link to the Picasa page or HTML code to embed in another webpage.

screen shot

One nice feature that Google recently added to Picasa is facial recognition. iPhoto added this feature January of last year, buy Google takes it one step further—the facial recognition works via Picasa Web Albums, even if you don't use the Picasa application itself. You can link faces to your Gmail contacts, and sort all your images by who is in them.

Photobucket

Photobucket is another great sharing option if neither Flickr nor Picasa float your boat. Photobucket uses a Java-based uploader that lets you browse your file system for images to upload. It will also pull in images from any accessible URL, and offers options to upload via MMS or e-mail (Flickr offers these latter two options).

Like Flickr, the free option includes ads and a number of limits to uploads, resolution, and bandwidth. For registering, you'll get 500MB of storage space, in which you can store images limited to 1024x768 pixels and 1MB total file size. You'll have a 10GB per month bandwidth limit, with limited statistics reports about how your images are viewed.

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Moving up to a Pro account will cost $2.99 per month if you pay monthly, or $24.95 per year. Photobucket also offers a 20% discount if you pay for two years up front. Pro accounts have unlimited storage space and bandwidth, can upload images as high as 4000 x 3000 pixels, and can also access images via FTP. This last feature is especially nice if you need to replace images lost on a local drive or move images somewhere else at a later date. Pro users get ad-free albums, custom URLs for each album, support for Flash files in addition to photos and videos, "premium" tech support, and Photobucket promises to keep links to your images active.

One area that sets Photobucket apart from other services are the extensive sharing options. You can link your Facebook, MySpace, or Twitter accounts to share directly with those services. You can also grab a link to the Photobucket page, a direct link to the image file itself, HTML embedding code, and IMG code compatible with most popular bulletin boards and forums. You can send an image directly to a cell phone as an MMS, but it'll cost you $1.99 for the privilege each time.

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Also similar to Flickr, you can edit images directly via built-in support for FotoFlexer.com, which offers a number of options similar to Picnik. Photobucket partners with Kodak to offer traditional prints as well as photo-adorned gifts like mugs, cards, puzzles, and t-shirts via Kodak. You can also have prints sent to a local Target store for printing and pickup.

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Now get uploading and sharing

These are just a few of the many options available. There are several sharing sites, such as TwitPic and yfrog that are specifically for sharing with Twitter. There are other services, such as Skitch, which interface for sharing directly from a screen grabbing app. But these three options are the most popular staff for free, general purpose image hosting.

Source: http://arstechnica.com/web/news/2010/03/image-hosting-is-the-kind.ars

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

How Google Crunches All That Data

Friendly Computers would like to share with you this article.

If data centers are the brains of an information company, then Google is one of the brainiest there is. Though always evolving, it is, fundamentally, in the business of knowing everything. Here are some of the ways it stays sharp.

For tackling massive amounts of data, the main weapon in Google's arsenal is MapReduce, a system developed by the company itself. Whereas other frameworks require a thoroughly tagged and rigorously organized database, MapReduce breaks the process down into simple steps, allowing it to deal with any type of data, which it distributes across a legion of machines.

Looking at MapReduce in 2008, Wired imagined the task of determining word frequency in Google Books. As its name would suggest, the MapReduce magic comes from two main steps: mapping and reducing.

The first of these, the mapping, is where MapReduce is unique. A master computer evaluates the request and then divvies it up into smaller, more manageable "sub-problems," which are assigned to other computers. These sub-problems, in turn, may be divided up even further, depending on the complexity of the data set. In our example, the entirety of Google Books would be split, say, by author (but more likely by the order in which they were scanned, or something like that) and distributed to the worker computers.

Then the data is saved. To maximize efficiency, it remains on the worker computers' local hard drives, as opposed to being sent, the whole petabyte-scale mess of it, back to some central location. Then comes the second central step: reduction. Other worker machines are assigned specifically to the task of grabbing the data from the computers that crunched it and paring it down to a format suitable for solving the problem at hand. In the Google Books example, this second set of machines would reduce and compile the processed data into lists of individual words and the frequency with which they appeared across Google's digital library.

The finished product of the MapReduce system is, as Wired says, a "data set about your data," one that has been crafted specifically to answer the initial question. In this case, the new data set would let you query any word and see how often it appeared in Google Books.

MapReduce is one way in which Google manipulates its massive amounts of data, sorting and resorting it into different sets that reveal new meanings and have unique uses. But another Herculean task Google faces is dealing with data that's not already on its machines. It's one of the most daunting data sets of all: the internet.

Last month, Wired got a rare look at the "algorithm that rules the web," and the gist of it is that there is no single, set algorithm. Rather, Google rules the internet by constantly refining its search technologies, charting new territories like social media and refining the ones in which users tread most often with personalized searches.

But of course it's not just about matching the terms people search for to the web sites that contain them. Amit Singhal, a Google Search guru, explains, "you are not matching words; you are actually trying to match meaning."

Words are a finite data set. And you don't need an entire data center to store them—a dictionary does just fine. But meaning is perhaps the most profound data set humanity has ever produced, and it's one we're charged with managing every day. Our own mental MapReduce probes for intent and scans for context, informing how we respond to the world around us.

In a sense, Google's memory may be better than any one individual's, and complex frameworks like MapReduce ensure that it will only continue to outpace us in that respect. But in terms of the capacity to process meaning, in all of its nuance, any one person could outperform all the machines in the Googleplex. For now, anyway. [Wired, Wikipedia, andWired]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5495097/how-google-crunches-all-that-data

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Why Windows XP Users Upgrading Their Hard Drives Should Be Wary

Friendly Computers would like to share with you this article.

Considering the fact that Windows XP is still the most-used OS worldwide, anyone considering swapping out their old hard drives for a new one should heed this advice: be careful. You may want to even consider not doing it.

Why am I getting all cautious on you? Because of warnings by both the BBC and Ars Technica, who have delved into the new generation of 4K hard drives and found there to be compatibility issues.

The problem rests with the hard disk sectors, which are the smallest unit of a hard disk. Each sector, or block, has 512 bytes, but has a certain percentage of "wasted space," which can't store anything. The new 4K sectors that are being ushered in before January 2011 (the deadline the International Disk Drive Equipment and Materials Association has given manufacturers) have less than eight times the wasted space, with each sector given more than double the capacity—4,096 bytes, to be exact.

Using XP with new drives could slow down the write-time noticeably, but more advanced drives will trick XP into thinking it still has 512-byte sectors. If you do have a PC running XP, and want to upgrade your drive at some point, Ars Technica's write-up on the issue is a verbose, detailed look and definitely worth your time.

Failing that, just buy a new laptop running Windows Vista or 7, OS X Tiger, Leopard, Snow Leopard or Linux (after September 2009), as there are no 4K hard disk compatibility issues there. [BBC via Ars Technica]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5490875/why-windows-xp-users-upgrading-their-hard-drives-should-be-wary

Monday, March 1, 2010

Five Best Music Streaming Services

Friendly Computers would like to share with you this article.

The internet has revolutionized nearly every form of media, and music is no exception. This week we look at the five most popular music streaming services to see how people are getting their music fix.

Grooveshark (Web-based, Free)


When you're ready to listen to some tunes online, Grooveshark allows you to jump right in. Unlike many services that require a subscription to use, Grooveshark lets you search for music and build a playlist as soon as the site loads. If you want to save the playlist, however, and access other session enhancing features like flagging songs to enable the music suggestion service, you'll need an account. Aside from manually building a playlist, you can also listen to Grooveshark Radio, their suggestion engine. One of Grooveshark's most unique features is that if you can't find a song or artist you love, you can upload the music from your own collection to build the Grooveshark database.

Spotify (Windows/Mac/Mobile/Web-based; Basic: Free/Premium: €9.99 month)


First the bad news about Spotify: as of this writing, 02/28/2010, Spotify isn't available in the U.S. due to various legal issues and licensing requirements. The good news is that Spotify is an incredible music service, and we're always hearing whispers that it'll soon be available stateside. You can collaborate on and easily share playlists using the service—as easily as you share a link to a YouTube video for comparison's sake. A premium account adds more features, like commercial-free listening or the ability to listen to your playlists on your mobile phone. Premium service also enables offline mode for local storage of music, higher quality streaming, and travel access—so should you visit a country like the U.S., where Spotify isn't available yet, you can still enjoy it.

Pandora (Web-based; Basic: Free/Premium: $36 per year)


Pandora is the easy-to-use front end for the massive database of attributes generated by theMusic Genome Project. The Music Genome Project analyzes songs with up to 400 different attributes so when you tell Pandora "Play me something like the song Punkrocker by The Teddy Bears featuring Iggy Pop" it doesn't just return a song that people who liked "Punkrocker" also liked—it returns a song that is also "genetically" related to your suggestion. Pandora may not have the most bells and whistles of the music sharing services rounded up today, but the power of the Music Genome Project and ease with which you can create and rate personalized streaming radio stations has won Pandora many fans. Upgrading from free to premium service allows you to stream more than 40 hours a month, gives you access to a dedicated desktop client, and increases the quality of your audio stream.

Last.fm (Web-based/iPhone, Basic: Free/Premium: $3 per month)


Last.fm is another service that not only streams music but generates suggestions for new music based on what you like. In addition to building playlists and enjoying tunes on the web, you can "scrobble" your own music collection to Last.fm—which basically means you let Last.fm track the songs you're listening to and add them to your Last.fm profile, allowing you to both listen to them and use them to increase the scope of Last.fm's suggestion engine for better personalized picks. In addition to listening to streaming radio and building personalized stations, Last.fm also allows direct music download—when authorized by the copyright holder—so you can expand your personal collection as you listen.

Lala (Web-based, Free with per-song fees)


Lala's claim to fame is the ease with which you can listen to both your own music over the web and purchase new music inexpensively. Lala has a database of 8 million songs that you can listen to once for free, purchase for online play for $0.10, or buy as a DRM-free MP3 for $0.79. If you have a song in your personal collection—on your computer at home—you can add it to the Lala database to allow unlimited play without paying a fee. Lala doesn't sport a hefty music recommendation engine like some of the other contenders in the Hive Five—although we didn't find the one they have lacking—but instead focuses more strongly on connections between people to drive music suggestion. As a result Lala supports easy rating and playlist sharing with friends to encourage organic music discovery.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5480688/five-best-music-streaming-services