Wednesday, April 28, 2010

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Want to run Windows app on a Mac with OS X? Friendly Computers would like to share with you these useful tips.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacLove OS X but have that one stubborn app you can only run on Windows? With the right tools and setup, you can run individual Windows apps seamlessly on your Mac desktop, as though they were always meant to be there.

Over the years, we've covered virtualization, virtual machines—that is, running full-blown operating systems inside your main OS—quite a bit. What we're going to detail here, however, is not so much the setting up of one operating system (Windows) inside another (Mac OS X), but a setup that makes running one or a handful of must-have Windows applications on a Mac simple and seamless. It makes things much easier for non-expert computer users who just need access to an app that there isn't a Mac version for, and it makes the user experience feel less disjointed and cobbled together. When you're done here, you should be able to run that must-have Windows app on your Mac as though it's just another Mac application.

We'll highlight two methods for achieving this kind of setup. One is with Parallels, which is easy to set up, offers great OS X integration, and isn't entirely cheap. The other is withVirtualBox, an app that's free on any platform, but requires a good bit more fiddling, and doesn't offer all the just-works options of Parallels. (Skip straight to the Parallels orVirtualBox sections.)

Method One: The Parallels Solution

At about $80 for a license, Parallels (Desktop 5 for Mac, in this case) is not exactly free, we know. Parallels is, however, a really smart, attractive, and powerful virtualization tool built for one purpose: making Windows applications accessible on a Mac. If you have a Windows disc and license handy—especially Windows 7—it makes Microsoft's operating system feel like it was made to fit inside a Mac.

The shortlist pitch for why you should consider Parallels for your Mac:

  • Windows app icons on your Dock: Not everybody uses the Dock, but those who do will find it very helpful to have both individual application icons on it, rather than having to hunt them out in a virtual Windows desktop.
  • Virtual Windows folder: If you need access to a few Windows apps and components on a regular basis, Parallels keeps a Windows-badged folder stocked with everything stashed inside your virtual Windows installation.
  • File type associations: If you need to open Microsoft Word .doc files inside an actual Word app inside Windows, and not with Mac's own TextEdit app, Parallels can make that happen. If the Mac has no idea what the file is, but a Windows app might, Parallels is on top of that, too.
  • Look and feel: It's not an essential tool to getting work done, but having your desktop feel integrated, and your applications feel like they belong on your computer, can matter more than you'd think. Parallels does a pretty great job of forming the windows, buttons, and frame of Windows applications so that they feel right on a Mac.

Adam had previously detailed running Windows apps on a Mac with Parallels, but Parallels has come a long way since 2006, and it's worth taking a look at the most seamless integration around.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacIt's also worth noting that Parallels doesn't always cost $80. You can try it free for 15 days, upgrade from older versions for $50, and often find promotions around the web that get you the app for less, or get you Parallels in combination with other software. I found a coupon link that bundled Parallels with H&R Block at Home. I didn't really need that, but it also mailed me a CD copy of Parallels (normally $6 extra) and a year's license to download the software (another few dollars extra), and it all came in under the total cost of what you'd normally pay. Shop and Google around.

I'm going to run through the installation of WordPerfect, an application some engineers, lawyers, and folks working in offices with IT policies that refuse to die must sometimes rely on. I'm setting it up on a MacBook so that the user—who may, in fact, be married to me—has the easiest possible access to it. When a WordPerfect file arrives via email, double-clicking it opens up WordPerfect. WordPerfect is added to the Dock, it looks (mostly) like a Mac app when it runs, and the virtual machine that supports it in the background disappears when it's closed down. Here's how to get there.

Install Parallels and Your Windows Application

Installing Parallels itself is fairly easy—grab the download from Parallels' site, double-click the resulting file, and enter your Mac administrator password to proceed. When it's finished installing, if it doesn't happen automatically, go ahead and run Parallels Desktop yourself for the first time—head to the Spotlight menu in the upper-right corner, type in Parallels, and hit the result.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacYou'll get a window that only has one real option, to create a new virtual machine. The easiest way to go through the process is use an installation DVD, though if you've got your installation disc stored as an ISO or Mac disk image, you can go ahead and point Parallels at that, too. Proceed through the Windows installation, and when you're done entering your license key, user name, time zone, and the like, and moved through the virtual reboots, Parallels will be running on your desktop—a full Windows installation inside a little window.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacIf you've got an installation disc for your application, the easy thing is to just insert it. Parallels will likely detect that it's a disc with a Windows auto-run application and launch a familiar Windows pop-up, asking if you want to run "Install.exe," "Setup.exe," or whatever your disc offers. If not, open the CD from your Mac desktop, then double-click on any install/setup files that seem to have two red lines, looking like a pause symbol, attached to them.

If you're looking to install from an executable package you can download, the easy solution is to open Internet Explorer from the Windows frame (or the Windows-badged folder that just showed up on your Dock), head to the software's web site, then download and run the installer right from the web. If that doesn't fly, you can always just drop the .exe file or installation folder onto a USB drive from your Mac OS, then un-plug it and plug it back in. By default, Parallels should automatically pick up the device and offer it to Windows. If it doesn't, right-click on the glowing Windows-like icon on your dock, hover over the Devices menu, and then select the drive you've dropped it on.

Got your application installed? Let's make it so it runs like any other Mac application.

Fine-Tuning Your Parallels Setup

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacSee that folder that's now sitting on the far-right side of your folder bookmarks? It contains the majority of applications contained in your little self-contained Windows installation. Click on it, then pick out the application you just installed and click that. In almost every case, you'll witness the small miracle of a Windows application launching inside a Mac. It may look a little incongruous, with its Windows title bar and coloring, but we'll fix that right now.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Once your virtual Windows is launched, Parallels adds a Start-Menu-style Windows icon to your dock. Right-click on it. Head up to the View menu that pops out of the Start button and select "Coherence" in the top-most section, if it's not already selected. If you don't see it, your Windows machine has already paused or suspended, but you can start it back up by hitting "Resume" from the Actions menu. This sets Parallels to hide away the bulk of Windows—the desktop, the taskbars, nearly everything—so that the only evidence of Windows you see is the window for the application you're using, along with one or two Dock icons. From the same right-click menu, under the "View" section, choose "Use MacLook." This applies a theme to Windows that makes it a good bit less incongruous when its applications are running on your Mac screen.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacBack to that application you've got running in Windows. If you're using your Mac Dock to launch applications, right-click on the icon of your Windows app and choose "Keep in Dock." If you're more inclined to launch an application from Spotlight or Quicksilver, you should be able to find your app, since there's already a shortcut created inside that "Windows Applications" folder on your Dock. Want to put the shortcut somewhere else? Right-click on that folder full of Windows applications, then simply make a copy of the shortcuts you need, wherever you need them.

File Associations, Shared Folders, Auto-Suspending

We're now going to configure our Windows virtual machine for a little smoother integration. Open up Parallels Desktop from Spotlight, hit the Virtual Machines menu, and select "Configure." If you're using a Dock, you can also right-click on the glowing Windows orb and select "Configure."

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Hit the Shared Applications category on the left, select your crucial Windows application, then click the SmartSelect button in the resulting panel.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacIn the case of WordPerfect, it uses pretty specific file formats not used by other applications, so you can see that Parallels has already informed the Mac that if it encounters a .wpd file, it should launch the virtualized WordPerfect and pass that file to it. Other applications may use formats that a Mac can open, too—Word files, particular image files, and the like. You can get specific in this menu, parceling out, for example, basic JPG and PNG opening to Mac's Preview, but opening TIFF files in that one Adobe app you only have a Windows copy of. In any case, when you see a file in your Mac that your Windows application will end up opening, you'll know it—the icon will be formatted for that app, and have the distinct Parallels "stripes" in the bottom-right.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Now, in the Shared Folders category, you can choose to keep your Mac home folder—containing Documents, Music, Pictures, and all your stuff, really—shared with Windows, which makes it fairly easy to trade files back and forth to an application like WordPerfect. You can go one further, though, by "sharing" your Desktop or Documents folder with Windows. Check off the options if they're there, or hit the + button and set up the synchronization between your Mac and Windows desktops and documents. Now, when you've got an app like WordPerfect running, you don't have to dig into your Mac home folder to find a place to save. Save a file to what Windows considers its own Desktop, and it'll show up on your Mac Desktop.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Finally, in the Startup/Shutdown category, I recommend the setup pictured above. Your virtualized Windows suspends itself when nothing is happening with any Windows application, which saves you memory and battery power, but makes it fairly quick to pull applications back up when you need them. Setting the startup view to Coherence also eliminates having to watch a glitchy Windows desktop appear and disappear as it boots up. On the Mac's shutdown, I like to quit out of Parallels, so it's a clean slate when starting up again, but you can set Parallels to suspend its machine instead when you power things down.

That's how I set up WordPerfect to run on a MacBook in such a way as to be nearly invisible as a Windows application. There are many, many more settings you can explore, including those that set up the keyboard shortcut equivalents between Windows and Mac applications, but those are best discovered and configured to one's own tastes.

Not quite sold on the utility of Parallels over a DIY solution? Here's how you can achieve nearly the same end result, though with, admittedly, less convenience and cohesion.

Method Two (the Free One): VirtualBox in Seamless Mode

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac
VirtualBox requires a bit more hands-on operation to get Windows 7 installed. Luckily, we've run down those operations before. Consult our beginners guide to creating virtual machines in VirtualBox for help getting Windows installed. If you'd been considering a Boot Camp installation, or already have Windows installed in a Boot Camp partition, you can still benefit from VirtualBox. Blogger and entrepreneur Anil Dash has written up a guide to running Windows 7 under Mac OS X 10.6 for free, which makes your Boot Camp installation VirtualBox-friendly and then links the two up for the best of both worlds.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacAfter you've got Windows 7 installed, you'll want to be sure to install VirtualBox Guest Additions, which is really a two-click process—hit "Install Guest Additions" from the Devices menu of VirtualBox, and then choose to run the installer when when it pops up. Restart your Windows installation after it finishes. Fire up a new "Seamless" option by selecting it from the Machine menu, or hitting Left Command+L.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

You'll notice that Windows basically disappears—except for your toolbar/taskbar, which hovers over your Dock, or at the bottom of your screen, if you don't use a Dock. That's, well, ugly. Right-click on the Windows taskbar, select Properties, and look for the option to auto-hide the taskbar.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Now it's out of the way, but what about when you need to get to something? VirtualBox lets you assign a key, or key combination, on your Mac to represent the Start menu. It's Ctrl+Esc by default, but you can change it in your VirtualBox preferences. Given the power of the Start Search feature in Windows Vista and 7, it's easy to launch applications by typing out the first few letters—kind of like Spotlight. When applications launch, they get a Mac-like window frame, and closing them means Windows basically disappears.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

Be sure to head into the settings of your Virtual Machine for Windows and set up the Shared Folders. It's not that much harder than Parallels, really, but the way they show up—as network drives—is a bit different. You can connect your Windows and Mac desktops and document folders for easy file saving and retrieval.

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a Mac

To finish up making your VirtualBox a bit more convenient than just running a Virtual Machine, learn the keyboard shortcuts for pausing the machine when not in use (Left Command + P), and be sure to choose the "Save Machine State" option when shutting down VirtualBox. That way, when you fire up Windows 7 again, it will resume in its Seamless state, waiting for you to launch the Start menu and get at what you need.

Another Possible Option: WineBottler/CrossOver

How to Seamlessly Run That One Windows App You Need on a MacWhen WINE works, it's a great thing, running applications meant for Windows on Mac or Linux, without the overhead of an entire virtual machine. Thing is, it doesn't always work. Luckily, two applications that make it easy to try out an app in WINE on Mac exist: CrossOver Mac, a paid application that offers a trial period, and WineBottler, a custom build of WINE that works great at framing small Windows apps as native OS X programs. Both are worth looking into if you've got one or two applications you need to run, but don't necessarily need access to an entire Windows OS.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5521308/how-to-seamlessly-run-that-one-windows-app-you-need-on-a-mac

Monday, April 26, 2010

Use Office 2010 to map a local drive letter to your free 25GB Live SkyDrive

Friendly Computers found this article very useful.

Live SkyDrive is an awesome service. 25GB of web storage for free? Yeah, that sounds good to me. Sure, the 50MB per file limit is a little bit of a downside but it's still a great place to store documents, music, and photos.
Heck, if you tell an app like 7zip to chunk big files up into 50MB pieces you can store whatever the heck you want. If only there was a way to access your SkyDrive storage like a local hard drive without an app like Gladinet or SD Explorer...Why, that'd make it like a free Dropbox account x 12.5!
As it turns out, there is a way to do that -- and it's pretty darn easy to do now that Office 2010 is here.
Here's what you'll need to to turn your SkyDrive into your Z: drive (or whatever letter you choose):

  • Office 2010 -- a trial version or unexpired beta is fine
  • a Windows Live account
  • ...the ability to follow directions

That's about it. Let's go!

Fire up Powerpoint and create a new blank presentation (file -> new). Next, head back to the file menu and click save & send then choose save to web from the submenu.

Choose to save to SkyDrive. After logging in, you'll be able to choose a save location. Click it, then note the location which appears in the save window's address bar:

It's all downhill from here. Click at the end of the line (after Documents, for example) to highlight the path. Copy it to the clipboard.
Now right-click Computer on your start menu and choose map network drive. Select a drive letter, paste in the path, and choose to reconnect the drive. For reconnection to work, you need to have theWindows 7 online ID provider for Windows Live installed and your ID linked to your Windows login.

Now just click OK, and you're done! If everything went well, a new Explorer window (like the one at the top of this article) will appear with the contents of the folder you mapped. You'll have to repeat the process if you want access to multiple folders -- just save & send again and pick a different location!
Drag and drop files to SkyDrive...sync from your desktop to the cloud with SyncToy, you name it!

Source: http://www.downloadsquad.com/2010/04/25/use-office-2010-to-map-a-local-drive-letter-to-your-free-25gb-live-skydrive/

Monday, April 19, 2010

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad

Got an iPad and want to access video, audio and documents on your desktop or laptop? Friendly Computers would like to share with you these useful tips.

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPadI don't buy into the iPad as a laptop replacement—not quite. But it is fantastic at tapping into your computers to access video and audio, documents, and even your full desktop, remotely. Here's how.

The iPad is first a foremost a device for consuming media, and where is most of your media if not on your desktop or laptop? All your videos, both self-created and downloaded; your music collection, which is so much larger than your iPad's flash storage can dream of accomodating; your store of documents, which contain so much information about you, your work and your interests. On your iPad, this stuff is too often there, not here—but it doesn't have to be.

You can easily access all of these things from your iPad with a set of simple-to-use apps, and where those don't work, you can actually control your computer—mouse and all—from your iPad. Here's what you need:

Audio and Video

Audio and video streaming on the iPad is, for the time being, the domain of two apps: Air Video and StreamToMe. They're extremely similar, sharing their $3 price, iPhone compatibility, and an underlying video conversion library, but a few key differences will determine which one you need to download. So!

If you...

• Have a Windows PC
• Don't need to stream audio
• Tend to store your content in h.264/mp4 files

Go with Air Video. It's a wonderful app, which lets you stream video—even in formats not natively supported by the iPad—both locally and remotely (with simple port forwarding), and which has both Mac and PC server software. It's flexible as well, giving you precise control over streamed video quality, and options for either transcoding video live, or pre-converting it before streaming.

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad


h.264 playback, even in HD, seemed cleaner and bit smoother than in StreamToMe, so if you've ripped or downloaded most of your content in that format, Air Video is a slightly better choice. It transcodes your downloaded .avi file beautifully, too.

(Note there currently isn't a good DLNA streaming app, though once its bugs are worked out, PlugPlayer shows promise. For the time being, Air Video is the only way to stream and transcode your video library stored on a Windows PC)

If you...

• Have a Mac
• Want to stream audio files as well

Then you should download StreamToMe. It too can transcode video in real time, so you don't need to worry about converting your home video files or P2P downloads. Its main advantage over Air Video is that it can stream audio. It'd be nice if the app had an iTunes-style artist view, but if your iTunes music folder is organized by artist name and album title (if you haven't told it to do something else, iTunes will have taken care of this for you), navigating through and playing songs is pretty straightforward.
How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad
The setup routines for both apps are nearly identical. Each requires a server app to be run on your computer, which needs to be pointed to your video library, and each will automatically recognize your computer over a local network. For remote streaming, each app provides guidance for which ports to forward on your router. (For instructions for your specific router, check here.) This means you can stream your home video from anywhere—work, a hotel room, whatever—over Wi-Fi.

Documents

Document sharing on the iPad isn't particularly easy, relying on the awkward iTunes file sharing system, which only lets you access documents in the app they've been flagged for. To browse apps in a more useful way, you'll need get an app called GoodReader. Its $1.

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad
GoodReader is an app that enables you to connect to all kinds of file servers, be they cloud-based (Google Docs, Dropbox, or MobileMe) or local (an FTP or WebDAV server). Once connected, GoodReader lists files that can be read on a given server, which are left up to the iPad's inbuilt viewers to display. This means that Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents, as well as a range of other text files, images, and even audio files, can be opened in the app.

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad
One of the most compelling features of GoodReader is that it can turn your iPad into a local file server, which you can mount and connect to from any Mac or PC. This feature lets you drag and drop your documents to the iPad, as if it were a NAS device. (GoodReader also shows up in the iTunes USB file transfer dialog, but Wi-Fi drag-and-drop transfer is much faster and easier, once it's set up.) Instructions for server setup are available here.

Additionally, using the app's "Manage Files" pane, you can sort, administer and email your documents as well. It's basically like having a disk for all kinds of media, on your iPad, along with a file browser. Ha!

Controlling Your Desktop

If you want full access to your computer, video, audio and document file servers won't be enough. What about your applications? Your iPad-incompatible files? Your entire desktop?To get that kind of control, you need to use VNC.

From our previous How To guide on the subject:

VNC (virtual network computing) is one of those tricks that never gets old, and having it set up can often save your ass-whether you left some info on your home computer that you need at work, want to check on your massive BitTorrent queue to schedule the evening's entertainments, or help your poor parents use clip art in Microsoft Word, having remote access can be handy dandy.

For full setup instructions for Windows and OS X, follow our guide here.

Once you've done that, you'll need an iPad VNC client. The iPad App Store already has a handful of VNC apps available for download. The ones I'd go with are Mocha VNC Lite (a free, limited-capability app), and if you find you like the VNC concept, the $12 Desktop Connect.

How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad
It's strange, controlling a mouse-based computer from a touchscreen device, but there's one option I've found makes life a lot easier: In Desktop Connect, turn Touchscreen Mode off. This options has you control the mouse as if the whole touchscreen is a trackpad, rather than having to guide the mouse directly with your finger. After a few minutes, you'll be clicking around Windows or OS X without thinking about it.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5519283/how-to-access-your-entire-computer-from-an-ipad

Friday, April 16, 2010

Folderico Color Codes Your Folders for Easy Organization

Want to organize your folders by color? Friendly Computers found this article very useful for that.

Folderico Color Codes Your Folders for Easy OrganizationWindows: If you like color coding your folders by project, urgency, or other markers, it's a huge hassle to do it through the default Windows interface. Folderico adds an icon-swapping menu to your right-click context menu for no fuss switching.

It isn't that you can't swap out the folder icons in Windows, it's just an enormous pain if you do it on a regular basis. Digging down into sub-menus on a per-folder basis isn't a hassle if you're tweaking your folders once in a blue moon but if you routinely swap folder icons or colors as part of your workflow going into the properties menu for each folder is far too tedious.

Folderico adds an entry to your right-click context menu-seen above—so you can switch folder icons and colors on the fly. Folderico includes the basic Windows 7 folder icon set and alternative icon set—you can add additional sets through the Folderico application.

Folderico Color Codes Your Folders for Easy Organization

One caveat regarding Folderico, it only adds the right-click menu in Windows 7 32-bit. You can install it and use the software interface to tweak folders on Windows 64-bit but that isn't much faster than digging into the default menus by hand.

Folderico is freeware, Windows only.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5518165/folderico-color-codes-your-folders-for-easy-organization

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Shift Your Fingers One Key to the Right for Easy-to-Remember but Awesome Passwords

Want to keep your passwords strong but don’t know how to remember all long and strong passwords? Friendly Computers would like to share with you this useful tip.

Shift Your Fingers One Key to the Right for Easy-to-Remember but Awesome PasswordsYou're constantly told how easy it would be to hack your weak passwords, but complicated passwords just aren't something our brains get excited about memorizing. Reader calculusrunner offers a brilliant tip that turns weak passwords into something much, much better.

His clever solution: Stick with your weak, dictionary password if you must; just move your fingers over a space on the keyboard.

If you want a secure password without having to remember anything complex, try shifting your fingers one set of keys to the right. It will make your password look like gibberish, will often add in punctuation marks, and is quick and simple.

When John Pozadzides showed us how he'd hack our weak passwords, he listed his top 10 choices for getting started hacking away at your weak passwords. Let's take a look at how a few of those popular passwords fare when run through calculusrunner's method:

password => [sddeptf

letmein => ;ry,rom

money => .pmru

love => ;pbr

Something longer but still really lame, like, say, "topsecretpassword", becomes "yp[drvtry[sddeptf". These may not be perfect compared to secure password generators, but they're likely orders of magnitude better than a lot of people's go-to passwords.

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5516188/shift-your-fingers-one-key-to-the-right-for-easy+to+remember-but-awesome-passwords

Monday, April 12, 2010

Experience the iPad UI On Your PC

Don’t have an iPad but want to see how it works? Friendly Computers found this article interesting and would like to share it with you.

Want to test drive iPad without heading over to an Apple store?  Here’s a way you can experience some of the iPad UI straight from your browser!

The iPad is the latest gadget from Apple to wow the tech world, and people even waited in line all night to be one of the first to get their hands on one.  Thanks to a simple JavaScript trick, however, you can get a feel for some of its new features without leaving your computer.  This won’t let you try out everything on the iPad, but it will let you see how the new lists and pop-over menus work just like they do in the new apps.

Test drive the iPad’s UI from your browser

Normally, the Apple iPhone developer library online looks like a standard webpage.

image

But, on the iPad, it looks and feels like a full-blown native iPad app.  With a nifty JavaScript trick from boredzo.org you can use this same interface on your PC.  Since the iPad uses the Safari browser, we ran this test in Safari for Windows.  If you don’t already have it installed, you can download it from Apple (link below) and setup as normal.

image

Now, open Safari and browse to Apple’s developer page at:

http://developer.apple.com

image

Now, enter the following in the address bar, and press Enter.

javascript:localStorage.setItem('debugSawtooth', 'true')




image



Finally, click this link to go to the iPhone OS documentation.



http://developer.apple.com/iphone/library/iPad/



After a short delay, it should open in full iPad style!



image



The left menu works just like the menus on the iPad, complete with transitions.  It feels entirely like a native application, instead of a webpage.  To scroll through text, click and pull up or down similar to the way you would use it on a touch screen.



Some pages even include a pop-over menu like many of the new iPad apps use.



sshot-296



Note that the page will be rendered for the size of your browser, and if you resize your window the page will not resize with it.  Simply press F5 to reload the page, and it will resize to fit the new window size.  If you resize your window to be tall and narrow, like the iPad in horizontal mode, the webpage will change and the left menu will disappear in lieu of a drop-down menu just like it would if you rotated the iPad.



sshot-300



This works in Chrome as well, since it, like Safari, is based on Webkit.  However, it didn’t seem to work in our test on Firefox or other browsers.



image



We’ve previously covered how you can experience some of the iPhone’s UI with the online iPhone user guide.  Check it out if you haven’t yet:



View Mobile Websites in Windows with Safari 4 Developer Tools



image



Conclusion



Although this doesn’t let you really try out all of the iPad’s interface, it at least gives you a taste of how it works.  It’s exciting to see how much functionality can be packed into webapps today.




Source: http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/14724/experience-the-ipad-ui-on-your-pc/

Friday, April 9, 2010

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features

Waiting for a new generation of  iPhone? Friendly Computers has new about new iPhone and would like to share it with you.

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New FeaturesThe curtain has been pulled back on iPhone 4, and the list of new features is massive: There's multitasking (finally!), a refreshed interface, and literally hundreds of other changes, all coming this summer. Here's the rundown.

The new OS will ship in June (Fall for iPad, and a developer preview is available today, so we can expect to have plenty of apps updated and ready for launch.

New Features: Multitasking, App Folders and More

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
Multitasking: It's here, finally. It's handled with a simple task switcher: double click your home button, and you get a list of running apps. Select, switch, done. Multitasking is limited to audio streaming, VoIP and GPS apps, as well as a few other allowances: they can finish specific, important tasks in the background, for example. As far as non-music/nav/VoIP apps, those can be suspended in the background, but not left running. (See below.) Full details here.

Fast app switching: With iPhone 4's multitasking, most apps aren't actually running in the background—just certain functions of the app, like an audio stream or a GPS lock. But! All apps can now be frozen, in full, so that when you reopen them, they're restored to exactly the state they were in when they were closed.

Local notifications: Notifications can be sent between apps on the phone, not just from remote servers. In other words, if something important happens in an app you've opened and moved away from, a notification will pop up in whatever app you're using at the time, effectively saying "switch back to me!" It's a fairly clever way to keep track of multiple apps without the need for a start bar or dock-type interface. From Apple's dev guidelines:

The advantage of local notifications is that they are independent of your application. Once a notification is scheduled, the system manages the delivery of it. Your application does not even have to be running when the notification is delivered.

Apple's official line:

iPhone OS 4's new multitasking offers users a new way to quickly move between apps, and provides developers seven new multitasking services to easily add multitasking features to their apps. These services include background audio, so apps like Pandora can play music in the background, and VoIP, so VoIP apps can receive a VoIP call even when the iPhone is asleep or the user is running other apps. iPhone OS 4 provides multitasking to third party apps while preserving battery life and foreground app performance, which has until now proved elusive on mobile devices.

And some more technical details, again from Apple's developer guidelines:

An application can request a finite amount of time to complete some important task. An application can declare itself as supporting specific services that require regular background execution time. An application can use local notifications to generate user alerts at designated times, whether or not the application is running.

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
App folders: Now you can sort your apps into folders! That's homescreen clutter solved, just like that. Apple's description:

Folders help users better organize and quickly access their apps. Simply drag one app icon onto another, and a new folder is automatically created. The folder is automatically given a name based on the App Store category of that app, such as "Games," which the user can easily rename. Using folders, users can now organize and access over 2,000 apps on their iPhone.

2160, to be exact.

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
A new Mail app: Unified inboxes, multiple Exchange accounts, fast inbox switching, threaded messages: These new features are actually a huge deal, since the iPhone's mail client has barely changed since 2007, and Apple doesn't allow alternative mail apps. Apple's pitch:

iPhone OS 4 delivers the best mail experience on a mobile phone with its new Unified Inbox, allowing users to see messages from all their email accounts displayed together in a single inbox. With just a few taps, users can quickly switch between inboxes to see messages from any single account.

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New FeaturesiBooks: Oh hey, that iBooks ebook reader app and accompanying ebook store we first met on the iPad has ambled on down to the iPhone. Nice, since you can now take your books with you wherever you go, as oppose to wherever you go with your iPad.

Custom backgrounds: Jailbreakers have them. Hell, the iPad has them. Now you can choose a persistent background for your iPhone—and not just for the lockscreen.

Game Center: Apple's going to roll out a centralized gaming service—a multiplayer network like PSN or Xbox Live—to help connect games to one another, by the end on the year. There are 3rd-party services that already do this, like OpenFeint. They will probably die. Full detailshere.

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
iAd advertising: It looks like Apple's finally making use of Quattro, that mobile ad company it gobbled up a few months ago, by rolling out its own advertising platform, a turnkey ad plugin for app developers called iAd. The theory here is that instead of relying on links to external websites, which pull users out of apps whenever they tap on an ad, developers can use Apple's new tools to keep people in the app while still showing them advertising—sort of like popover browser windows. You can watch videos, play games, and even buy apps from within these ads. This is in the iPhone OS 4 developer tools, but it's not explicitly a part of OS 4, so you won't see apps with iAds until later this year. Full details here.

5x digital zoom: Could this hint at a higher quality camera in the next hardware? 3.2 megapixels seems a bit low for 5x digital zoom.

Bluetooth keyboards: Another carryover from the iPad, Bluetooth keyboard support will finally come to iPhone 4.

• A bevy of other new developer features, including 1500 new APIs to play with: See here for more details.

Which Devices Get It, and When?

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
When the software ships in the summer, iPhone 3GSes and iPod Touch 3rd-gens devices will get all of the new features. The iPhone 3G and Touch 2G will get "many things," which doesn't include multitasking. I repeat: the iPhone 3G won't get multitasking, ever. iPhone 2Gs will be left on a hillside somewhere to die of exposure, or something.

Apple didn't drop any clues about the next iPhone's hardware, but it's a fair bet that we'll see some changes come June.

What About the iPad?

iPhone OS 4.0: The Best New Features
The iPad won't get the 4.0 upgrade until Fall of this year, a few months after the iPhone does. So, you'll be able to multitask on your dinky little iPhone before you'll be even be able to listen to Pandora and check your email at the same time on your giant iPad.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5512635/iphone-os-40-the-best-new-features?skyline=true&s=i

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

How Can I Convert PDFs and Other Ebooks to the ePub Format?

Can’t read PDF books in iBooks with your new iPad? Friendly Computers found useful tips how to convert PDFs to the ePub format.

This tutorial will guide you through the process of converting PDF files so that they can be read in iBooks, the iPad application.

iBooks uses an ebook format called ePub. Using a free converter application (and ebook manager) called calibre you can quickly convert PDF (and other file formats) to .epub files, which you can then transfer to your iPad for reading in iBooks. This tutorial will take you step by step through the entire process.

  1. Start out by finding a PDF you want to convert. In this example I used The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (which btw is free in the iTunes Book Store – but it’s a PDF I had handy, so that’s why I’m using it).
  2. Download and install calibre. It comes in versions for Windows, OS X and Linux. The interface is very slightly different in each version (not much). The screenshots in this tutorial are from the OS X version – but Windows users should have no problem at all following along.
  3. Once installed, open calibre. The first time you run calibre it will take you through a quick setup. The first thing you’ll want to do is specify your ‘ebooks’ folder. This is the location you’ll save your .epub files. Click the Change button.

  4. Select the folder you want to save all of your ePub files in.

  5. Back at the Welcome screen, click the Continue button.


  6. Select Apple from the Manufacturers list, and iPhone/iTouch + Stanza from the Devices list. Click Continue.

  7. You can ignore the information on this screen and click Continue. Or if you’re interested, give it a read. With that said, enabling Turn on the content server will not help us out.

  8. Now you’re at the main calibre interface. Click the Add books button in the top-left corner of the window.

  9. Navigate to a PDF file that you want to convert to an .epub file. Select it and clickOpen.

  10. Now click the small ‘arrow’ next to the Edit meta information and selectDownload metadata and cover files.

  11. calibre will now download additional information about your PDF/ebook – if it can find it. If it’s an eBook (as a .pdf), you may need to manually enter the book title and author name if it isn’t present when you load it into calibre initially.

  12. When it finds the additional meta data and a book cover, it will appear in the bottom pane of the calibre window.

  13. Now we’ll start the actual conversion process. Make sure your PDF file is selected in the main list of books, and then click the small arrow next to the Convert E-books button. From the list that will appear, select Convert individually

  14. You’ll be prompted with a “summary” window prior to calibre making the final conversion. Click the OK button.

  15. Depending on the size of your PDF/eBook the conversion process will vary. It took less than 10 seconds to convert my 200 page PDF. If you’re using a Mac and have growl installed, you’ll get a window notifying you that the conversion has finished.

  16. And now in the folder you specified way back in step #3 will contain an .epub version of your PDF. This is the file we’ll upload to your iPad.

  17. Connect your iPad to your Mac or PC, and launch iTunes. From the iTunes menu select File -> Add to Library…

  18. Navigate to your newly created .epub file, select it and click Choose.

  19. The new .epub file will now appear in the Books section of iTunes.

  20. If you sync all your Books to your iPad, select your iPad in iTunes and select theBooks tab. After confirming your new .epub book is listed, click the Sync button.

  21. Now launch iBooks on your iPad. There it is! From PDF to ePub and into iBooks.

Source: http://www.simplehelp.net/2010/04/05/how-to-convert-pdf-files-to-epub-files-to-read-on-your-ipad-with-ibooks/