Wii Music

September 19, 2008

Wii Sports™ introduced new players to the world of video games. Wii Fit™ got even more people interested in fun and fitness.

Now Wii Music™ builds on that inclusive legacy by letting people turn their living rooms into fun concert halls. It brings the experience of performing music to people who think learning an instrument is too difficult. Wii Music launches exclusively for the Wii™ console on Oct. 20 and aims to bring a deeper love and appreciation of music to everyone.

Players can improvise jams on the fly with more than 60 instruments. You will find rock favorites like the electric guitar; orchestra standards like trumpet, saxophone and clarinet; and even international instruments like steel drums, marimba and sitar. Players simply select their instruments, and then move their Wii Remote™ and Nunchuk™ controllers as though they were playing the real thing. Wii Music turns players’ movements into great music, even if you’ve never picked up an instrument before.

 

Budding musicians can play along to the beat of a diverse array of more than 50 songs from a variety of genres including popular, licensed, classical and Nintendo songs. Or players can improvise by adding new beats or creative twists to the songs. The combinations are endless, and it’s all for the joy of creating fun new tunes.

Once players have their song the way they like it, they can forward it to friends who are also playing Wii Music via the Wii Message Board. Those friends can then put their own spin on the tune and send it back – or pass it along to their friends.

PR email

Source


Super-Anticipated Cell Phones

September 17, 2008

Some really exciting news in the cell phone world coming out now, including updates on some phones that are really revolutionizing not only their brands but what we expect from a cell phone. News about the Samsung Omnia, Blackberry Thunder/Storm, Blackberry Pearl Flip, and the most anticipated- HTC Dream running Google’s Android is all here.Take a look.

 

Blackberry Thunder/Storm

This is arguably the biggest news. This new phone (now called the Blackberry Storm for Verizon) isBlackberry’s first-ever touchscreen phone! It just got official from Verizon and Blackberry today, but it looks to offer a lot of nice features:

  • Verizon 3G
  • New “click” interface and keyboard
  • All-touchscreen phone with a “high resolution” screen
  • 3.2 megapixel camera
  • “real” web browser
  • Verizon’s Visual Voicemail

Rumor is, according to the Boy Genius Report, that this will come in the first 2 weeks of Novemberand will also be a Verizon exclusive (sorry Sprint, T-Mobile and AT&T users ( ).

The Blackberry StormPic from PC World.com

Samsung Omnia

Rumored to be coming to AT&T on October 7 (yes less than a month away), under a new name — Mirage (don’t ask us why the change in name happened; we’re as lost as you are ) ). A recap on the incredible features for this new phone:

  • 3G
  • GPS
  • all touchscreen
  • 3.2 inch screen- look out iPhone
  • Windows Mobile 6.1
  • AT&T Mobile TV (lets you watch some of AT&T’s live TV service — ESPN, MTV, CNN, NBC etc. — right on your phone)
  • 5 megapixel camera with face detection
  • 8 GB or 16 GB of memory (ala iPhone).

Just a note: These are only rumored features. Built-in 8 or 16 GB of memory and 5 megapixel camera are based on the specs from the European Omnia, and may very well disappear along with other features from the final AT&T Mirage version.

Samsung Omnia/ Mirage

Blackberry Pearl Flip

Fan of the Blackberry Pearl, but wish it was in a flip phone version? T-Mobile has you covered. They will soon be launching the first-ever flip Blackberry- the Blackberry Pearl Flip. This phone has standard flip phone features like an outside color screen, but adds some nice other features like:

  • Updated Interface
  • Blackberry Pearl’s “SureType” keyboard with Trackball
  • Wi-Fi
  • T-Mobile Fave 5’s
  • 2 megapixel camera with flash
  • “real” web browser!

Expect this to drop soon for what is rumored to cost $49.99 (this is a rumor, though we hope it sticks — $50 for this type of phone would be AWESOME!!!). In the meantime, check out the “Coming Soon” pages at T-Mobile and Blackberry.com with even more info and pics of the phone.

The New Blackberry Pearl Flip (Pic from T-Mobile)

HTC Dream

The least information is known about this one, though we know its officially from T-Mobile and Google! Yup. Next Tuesday the 23rd, Google and T-Mobile will be holding an event for the Dream, and reveal everything. We do know it’s got:

  • New Google Android OS (rumored to rival the iPhone)
  • T-Mobile 3G (where available of course; T-Mobile just started rolling this out)
  • Touchscreen with Sidekick-like build
  •  Wi-Fi.

We will know more next Tuesday and will of course keep you updated.

T-Mobile/ Google Event Invite (notice 3G logo at the top). Pic from Boy Genius Report

Is this exciting or what? Any of these phone catch your eye — particularly the two new Blackberry models? Pop in a comment to share your sentiments.

 

Source: http://teentechblog.com/2008/09/16/rumors-and-releases-on-much-anticipated-cell-phones/


Launchy

September 16, 2008

Here’s another neat little application I use all the time. Launchy runs in the background and provides a way to load applications quickly from the keyboard.

Hit Alt-Space and type the first few keystrokes of the application you want to launch – then Enter and away you go. If your Start Menu looks anything like mine this will be a whole lot quicker than searching through your list of programs.

It also indexes your files, music etc and a few other nice bits & pieces.

And it’s free! Go get it …. )

image

PS – And don’t forget to Donate if you find it useful


August Stats

September 12, 2008

Here are some stats about this here blog:

  • For the first time, another website has referred people here more than my own. You can visit it here.
  • My most viewed blog is still my Download Windows 7 blog, with a good 600 page views on all of my others.
  • The search engine term that brought the most people to my site is still :”windows 7 rapidshare”
  • Total views: 2,912; (1200 more than last month!)
  • Busiest Day: 90 views — Thursday, August 21, 2008
  • Posts: 71
  • Comments: 44
  • Categories: 31
  • Tags: 116
  • I have had 177 spam comments
  • And we still have a Google Pagerank of 3 

Apple hacks the New York Times

September 11, 2008

s”]Apple has taken over the New York Times


Google Chrome Speed Test

September 9, 2008

I love Google Chrome. It’s so fast! The only thing I miss is the Stumbleupon…

Here’s a speed comparison from CNET: (Higher numbers are better!)

 

Google introduced Chrome in part because it wants faster browsing and the richer Web applicationsthat speed will unlock. So how does Chrome actually stack up?

 

Chrome JavaScript benchmarks. 

Google’s Chrome overpowers the other browsers on the five subtests by which Google measures its browser’s JavaScript performance.

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

 

Lars Bak, the Google engineer who was the technical leader for Chrome’s V8 JavaScript engine, said at the launch event Tuesday he’s confident Chrome is “many times faster” than the rivals at running JavaScript, the programming language that powers Google Docs, Gmail, and many other Web applications.

But when pressed for specifics, he told me to try them out. So I did.

Google offers a site with five JavaScript benchmarks. On each one of these tests, Chrome clearly trounced the competition. I hope benchmarking experts and developers will weigh in with comments about how well these tests represent true JavaScript performance on the Web–either for ordinary sites or for rich Web apps.

Here’s the site description of the speed tests:

• Richards: OS kernel simulation benchmark, originally written in BCPL by Martin Richards (539 lines).

• DeltaBlue: One-way constraint solver, originally written in Smalltalk by John Maloney and Mario Wolczko (880 lines).

• Crypto: Encryption and decryption benchmark based on code by Tom Wu (1,689 lines).

• RayTrace: Ray tracer benchmark based on code by Adam Burmister (3,418 lines).

• EarleyBoyer: Classic Scheme benchmarks, translated to JavaScript by Florian Loitsch’s Scheme2Js compiler (4,682 lines).

 

Google Chrome JavaScript score. 

Google’s overall score is head and shoulders above the competition for executing JavaScript.

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

 

A few notes: First, your mileage may vary; I ran these tests on my dual-core Windows XP machine.

Second, my apologies here to Opera, whose browser I don’t have installed.

Third, I tried to run the SunSpider benchmark tests as well, but perhaps because a lot of other curious people had the same idea on the day Chrome launched, I couldn’t get to the site.

 

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10030888-2.html


Why to Change from Vista to Linux (Good post I found, don’t entirely believe it. I recommend XP)

September 8, 2008

Windows Vista has been out for almost two years now but it still suffers from stability and compatibility issues, let alone an insatiable desire for beefier hardware. You don’t have to live with it; here are five reasons why Linux makes a better choice for your computer.

One of the many differences between a computer and an appliance is that your computer’s system software can be easily updated. New features can be added. By contrast a whitegoods maker can’t easily add new features to their microwaves or washing machines once they’ve been constructed and sold. This is a realistic thing: even the simplest appliance can have programming flaws, or gain from improved logic or more user options.

Most all readers will no doubt have upgraded the operating system on their own computer at some point, whether from Windows ’95 to Windows ’98 or Windows XP to Windows Vista or some other step.
Yet, an operating systems upgrade doesn’t necessarily have to wend its way through the range offered by one vendor. After all, just as you can replace the software that drives your computer in the first place so too you can replace it with anything that targets the same hardware.

This gives rise to many a possibility. You might love the look of the Apple MacBook but prefer Microsoft Windows over MacOS. No problem; Apple even make available a CD of Windows drivers for their MacBook hardware. Of course, I happen to think there’s another operating system you might want to consider, and here are 10 reasons why you would benefit from upgrading your Windows Vista computer to a modern Linux distribution like Ubuntu.

You can update every single piece of software on your computer with a single action.
The value of this can’t be underestimated. If you wanted to make sure you had the latest security patches, bug fixes and general enhancements for every single item of hardware and every single piece of software on your computer you would need to check an awful lot of places.

Microsoft Update is a good starting point, and will identify available upgrades for all your Microsoft software as well as a good range of hardware drivers but (logically) it stops there. You must also check Adobe’s web site for new versions of their PDF reader, it’s prudent to check your hardware vendors for their new drivers, and so on, for everything.

With Linux updating is simple. When you check for updates this includes everything – the operating system, your applications, support libraries, hardware drivers. It’s all checked for new versions and updated in the one go.

What’s more, Linux actively records the version of every one of these items installed meaning the check for updates is blisteringly fast compared to that of Microsoft Update which instead appears to scan through your hard drive and check what you have installed that way – or whatever it does, it’s certainly far less efficient.

So that’s one. Let me give you four more reasons to upgrade.

It’s the safest operating system ever
Vista is taglined by Microsoft as being the safest version of Windows ever. Maybe it is, but nevertheless Linux is safer. Under Linux you don’t have to cripple your system by running anti-virus tools which intercept every single program startup and file download. You also don’t have to suffer your screen turning black and asking for permission to perform certain tasks. You don’t have to fear malicious software being able to corrupt the system.

 

 

Microsoft brought in user access control (UAC) in Vista to provide a safer experience, but it has proven to be intrusive due to the vast number of computer programs which insist on elevated access whether it is genuinely required or not.

To be honest, this is a problem of Microsoft’s own doing. From the very beginning Windows was flawed because it encouraged users to log in with full administrative rights. This invited trouble because rogue programs (or user mishaps) had no restrictions on the damage they could cause.

Yet, Linux had a different philosophy. It encouraged users to work under a regular user account which had no special rights or access. A user could temporarily elevate their privileges if required or log in as the super-user account temporarily, when performing systems administrative tasks like loading on new software.

As a result, Linux never experienced the same problems that Windows did. It was secure by design from the beginning while Microsoft has a battle to undo the bad habits their operating system has instilled in its users and developers.

Your PC can look after itself
There’s none of this defragmenting business to worry about under Linux. With Windows you can’t just sit back and enjoy your computer, you must exert effort to maintain it too. Any guide to Windows will instruct about the importance to routinely defragment the file system. Yet for Linux it is simply not an issue.

The reason for this is that Windows tries to locate files as close to the start of the hard drive as it can. When you remove or edit files you create small gaps. Newer files must then attempt to fit within the gaps. If they cannot fit completely they will become fragmented with portions stored in different locations. Over time as this goes on many files are located all over the disk and performance is degraded.

By contrast, Linux was designed from the beginning as a multi-user system and thus it was mindful that many people would be editing files at the same time. So, it approached this problem by, in essence, scattering files all over the disk. This means there’s generally plenty of empty space to save large files or to move files around if need be. Fragmentation only really becomes an issue when the disk is so full that there simply are no gaps sufficient enough to store a large file in completely.

Run an entire computer for free, without breaking the law
You expect to pay money for a computer; you’re receiving something you can touch and which physically depletes the stock of the vendor. 

Software is different. It can be mass-produced, it can be digitally duplicated, it could be installed on computer after computer from the one disk – or even no disk. And without software, your computer doesn’t really do anything.

Yet, most all proprietary software costs money. This isn’t an unreasonable thing; the developers deserve compensation for their efforts. Yet, let’s face it, people want computer programs and games to use and aren’t always willing to pay for it. Without an actual physical item being removed from stock there are many arguments that attempt to legitimise software piracy.

Under Linux this isn’t the case. You can make as many copies of Linux as you like. You can install it on as many computers as you want. Your friends can all take a copy and at no time are you violating the licensing agreement. It is expressly permitted to be free for use for whoever wishes to use it.

The same is true for the bulk of Linux software. Nearly all applications are licensed under a similar permissive license. You can download all the games and productivity applications you like without at any time being a software pirate. No matter if you cannot afford it, you can still work on spreadsheets and word processing documents using OpenOffice, you can layout complex publications with Scribus, you can manipulate images and photographs using The GIMP. You do not have to sacrifice on quality (by compromising using a less appropriate program) or resort to using the program without purchasing it.

Take all your settings with you wherever you go
If you buy a new computer or you have more than one computer (a desktop and a laptop, say) it’s not easy to set up things exactly the way they were, under Microsoft Windows.

First you have to reinstall all your programs, that’s to be expected, and is true for any operating system. However, all your preferences and customisations are lost, things are back to the default. Again, this is true for any operating system.

Under Windows there is no consistent way of storing settings. Some programs save them in configuration files within the application directory and some within the Windows directory. Other settings are saved into the Windows registry which is not easily duplicated.

By contrast, because the Linux tradition is always for users to log in to ordinary everyday unprivileged accounts there is no such thing as saving settings to the directory where a program is installed, or to a central operating system folder, or even to a single central registry.

Instead, programs invariably save all their settings into your private directory, under /home, in files or folders with names beginning with the full stop symbol, like .VirtualBox or .gimp-2.4, or .elmrc. Linux prohibits these files from being shown when calling up a directory listing (unless explicitly requested) but they allow your entire workplace and environment to be duplicated by simply copying your private /home folder.

So that’s but five reasons why you ought to upgrade from Windows Vista to a version of Linux. What do you think? The choice and freedom is yours.

http://www.itwire.com/content/view/20488/1141/1/0/