Windows 7
Thumbs Down – Techo Twitter Posts week ending 25 Oct
Welcome to the Tumbs Down Edition of my review of the week in tech – each week I’m picking out the things that I thought were a stupid idea, a bad thing to happen or just payed out on a tech company deservedly that I submitted via Twitter for you all to read. If you haven’t already seen my Twitter feed of tech tips add me @aholesgrove or have a look at http://twitter.com/aholesgrove and subscribe to the RSS feed of my tweets.
I missed out on doing this weekly review on time as it was all hands on deck in Making Life Ezy putting the final touches on HireEzy 2.1 before release that week. We’re all done now and everything is back to normal.
This week in Thumbs Down I actually didn’t find much that surpised me – I mean, there was Apply trying to bag out Windows on the week of the Win7 launch, but that was hardly surprising at all. There was some news of more Australian Government sensorship ideas, as detailed below, and a great article about how Microsoft actually one upped Google with an announcement they made for their Bing search engine. Check it out.
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Hahahaha! – Why Apple Is Gushing Hate On Windows 7 http://bit.ly/41UKmr
This article does a good job of picking out the hypocrisy in Apple’s never-ending bashing of Windows – the fact that Windows 7 is a solid product and works really well. It’s disappointing that Apple can’t market their products on it’s own merits – they have a fantastic operating system, sexy looking computers that are rock solid and a very VERY devoted fanbase that grows leaps and bounds by the day. What this article picks up on is the fact that if Apple really did have good products, they wouldn’t have to resort to bashing the competition if their own stuff truly were worthy of customer attention and I totally agree – especially when their product manager is saying stuff in the press like “At the end of the day, it’s still Windows.” So what? A product with problems has been fixed up and that’s a good thing. It’s the same deal as Mac OS – I’ve mentioned in this space before that the older versions of Mac OS were horribly backward and couldn’t even multi task of all things (which the iPhone still can’t do either). So should we not use Mac OSX because the older versions were terrible? Of course not. OSX is a brilliant operating system and so is Windows 7. Apple got a free ride of Windows defectors over the past three years with frustrated PC users and they deserved to have their market share increase from about 3% to about 9-10% – now all bets are off and it’s an even fight, the two companies need to bring their A-game now and compete on features. It’ll be exciting for the end users.
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Wow…. just wow – Aussie censor wants power to ban iPhone apps http://bit.ly/2OiaPN
This is a really bold move by the Aussie Government but I have to say I actaully like the idea. It’s something that needs to happen considering that the iPhone/iPod Touch is a gaming platform and the Australian Government has their own classifications for console and computer games. There is an uproar in Australia that there is no 18+ classification for gaming which causes excessively violent games to be refused classification (and therefore sale) in Australia and I happen to like this idea because it keeps all the brutal American stuff out of our country (and the subsequent axe-murderers and school gunman they produce). Apple have built an over-arching approval process for applications which lacks transparency and there are a lot of developers that have been writing about how they think it’s unfair – at the end of the day, it’s up to Governments to police content, not companies, so handing off this process to the government in Australia is a lot fairer – Apple won’t like losing their total control over their eco-system for iTunes, but.. well.. tough.
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True, makes good points – Well, What Do You Know: Google Is Actually Nervous About Microsoft Bing http://bit.ly/b8KMp
Competition benefits consumers and finally Google has a legit competitor – so much so that they actually got showed up by Microsoft when they announced their content partnership with Twitter and the first beta of Bing’s Twitter search app which you can find here. As a knee-jerk response from Google a few hours later produced news that they were going to do the same thing (sort of) and that their toold would be available in a few months. Not to be outdone, Microsoft announce later that day that they are also integrating Facebook into their search engine. Google had nothing to say to that – Microsoft owns a small chunk of Facebook and would never allow Google to get access to it (and neither would Facebook themselves). This article makes good points in how Google’s “me too” response to Microsoft’s news of innovation was real proof that there is definately chinks in their armour and a reminder that you have to always compete to stay the best. just ask MySpace all about that.
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- Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer Sits down with CNET (news.cnet.com)
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- Just a Touch Away, the Elusive Tablet PC (nytimes.com)
Thumbs Up – Techo Twitter Posts week ending 1 Nov
Welcome to the Thumbs Up Edition of my review of the week in tech – each week I’m picking out the things that I liked the most that I submitted via Twitter for you all to read. If you haven’t already seen my Twitter feed of tech tips add me @aholesgrove or have a look at http://twitter.com/aholesgrove and subscribe to the RSS feed of my tweets.
This week in Thumbs Up I found myself noticing a whole bunch of really handy and useful applications being announced and written about. I’ve highlighted my favourites of the week below:
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Great tip about Screencasting – From the Tips Box: Windows 7 Screencasting, Quicksilver, and Recipes [From The Tips Box] http://bit.ly/z47ef
This article has a whole bunch of tips in it but it was the first one in the list that I was really interested in (the rest were boring) – Windows 7 has a Screencaster feature in it so that you can record exactly what is happening on the desktop as a movie. This is fantastic for getting help with support and we’ve been recommending it to all of our customers – simply hit record and play out a situation that you experiencing so that you can show the video of the problem to an extremely appreciative support technician. All you need to do is open up the Run window (Window Key + R) and type “PSC” and hit enter. Voila – you have it open and can hit record to start tracking what is happening on your computer. Kudos to Microsoft for including this feature in Windows natively.
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BEST IPHONE APP EVER – PicTranslator Turns Your iPhone‘s Camera into a Language Translator [Downloads] http://bit.ly/47wnnJ
This is an idea that I was just talking about last when when I was talking about the possibilities of Augmented Reality – This iPhone app lets you use the iPhone camera to hover over something written in a foreign language and it’ll show you what that means in English written over top in what the camera sees – super handy when travelling overseas or when your computer manual is only written in Korean. I was slightly disappointed that Japanese wasn’t supported at this stage (I’ve been learning it lately) and it’s a tad inconvenient that you have to download each language supported seperately, but once you’re set up you’re setup and it’s extremely convenient. They are charging people $1 a language – $1 to buy the app and then you buy all the languages you want support for. They say that more languages will be supported soon and Asian languages are the obvious ones missing from it but it’s got ALL the European languages covered which is pretty good. Highly recommended.
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This would be the ultimate way to work each day – VMware Fusion Updates with Excellent Windows 7 Support http://bit.ly/gVCRV
This is a pretty exciting development – There are a number of applications available that allow you to run Windows on a Mac but this one is my favourite – Not only can you install Windows 7 as a program within Mac OSX and get full support for the aero interface and enjoy all the fun things that comes with Windows 7, but you can actually install programs within Windows 7 and then run them outside of Windows – so much so that you can attach them to the dock at the bottom of OSX and it runs like it is a native application. This effectively allows you to be a Mac user and then run any Windows program just like a Mac program and it’ll work every time. This is quite exciting and I’ll be looking to create this exact setup for myself when I upgrade a little later in the year (I hear the new Macs are lemons and have problems that need to be fixed – see this week’s Thumbs Down article for more details).
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Good on ‘em for doing this – Microsoft’s Official USB/DVD Download Tool Helps you Upgrade Netbooks to Windows 7 http://bit.ly/Ozh1M
This is great – people who own netbooks will know that there is no DVD drive in it, so if you want to upgrade Windows you don’t have a disk drive to put the installation CD in – fortunately, Microsoft have released a free tool which allows you to move the Windows 7 installer onto a thumb drive and you can use that to upgrade Windows to 7. I have two netbooks at home and am doing that this week – Windows XP is too crappy and freezes a lot to not want to upgrade to a stable operating system.
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FANTASTIC idea Microsoft should copy it (like everything else) – Aerofoil Keeps Your Laptop’s Battery Alive http://bit.ly/1maRls
Windows 7 already has a whole bunch of stuff built into it which helps preserve battery life in laptops significantly, and using this application will better your battery life even further. The concept here is that Aero Glass, which is the Windows feature which animates your windows shrinking down and up and go 3D when ALT-Tabbing and all that jazz, is quite the battery sucker so this program will automatically turn Aero Glass off when you unplug the power charger to your laptop and only run it on battery. You don’t have to do anything at all, this program will just auotmatically switch that Windows feature on and off as needed when you plug the power in and out. Simple, easy and a brilliant idea. If you have Windows 7 then you will definately want to install this program – check out the link for download details – OH and did I mention the program is FREE?? Very cool.
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Thumbs Up – Techo Twitter Posts week ending 11 Oct
1Welcome to the Thumbs Up Edition of my review of the week in tech – each week I’m picking out the things that I liked the most that I submitted via Twitter for you all to read. If you haven’t already seen my Twitter feed of tech tips add me @aholesgrove or have a look at http://twitter.com/aholesgrove and subscribe to the RSS feed of my tweets.
Over the past few weeks my blog posts have grown quite large so I’ve split my review into two, labelled the Thumbs Up and Thumbs Down editions to highlight the best and worst of technology news to hit the streets over the past week.
This week in Thumbs Up Microsoft has dominated again as there continues to be a flood of news about Windows 7 in addition to more details emerging details about the next version of Office, MS Office 2010. Check out below the five tidbits I tweeted that I thought were most newsworthy.
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WOW WOW all Windows users should install this – Fences Desktop Icon Organizer Updates to Version 1.0, Still Awesome http://bit.ly/1RxH7X
I installed this program myself and it is THE best free Windows app I have seen in a long time. Quite simply, this application lets you categorise your desktop icons which you can then collectively move around to wherever you want. Best of all, you can then double click an open area of the desktop to hide or bring back your desktop icons to get them temporarily out of the way, whilst leaving behind the icons you absolutely can’t live without, such as My Computer, Launch Browser, etc. Now, the reason I think this is so awesome is because it addresses an issue that no one likes to admit – people often throw everything onto the desktop and it turns into a maintenance nightmare and I know the executives around here often do that too. I took the liberty of installing this program on everyone’s desktops and the results have been pretty hilarious – all the guys were finding things on their desktop that they didn’t even know was there and the fact that you can hide things away until you want to actually have a look at them is leaving everyone feeling that little bit more cleaner and organised. Case in point – I wanted one of our guys to fire up a PDF instruction sheet on my desktop for me whilst my hands were full and the fact that I was able to say “It’s in the Instructions window” made it super easy to find on my gigantic monitor. Brilliant!
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This will be GREAT for Win7 upgraders, keep old Win install – Disk2vhd Turns Your PC Into a Virtual Machine [Downloads] http://bit.ly/XsRoC
With a lot of the technology blogs sarcastically saying unflattering things about upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7, such as the best way to “upgrade” is to buy a new PC, creating a whole bunch of Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt (FUD), the rhetoric is being combated by the plethora of handy tools that WILL make make the migration path easier. Case in point with this application, which scans the contents of your existing Windows installation and packages it up into a Virtual PC file. What that means of course, is that once you make a Virtual PC file of your Windows XP installation, for example, you can format and reinstall with Windows 7 and then run your old XP installation inside a window within Windows 7, using Microsoft’s Virtual PC application. This is really handy for situations where you backup and reinstall, then afterwards think of something that you forgot to backup (such as browser favourites) or can only remember where you had something stored in your old installation (such as a file in your old My Documents folder). With this tool, you can just fire up your old Windows installation, have a look at it and do what you need to do with it – no need for your old installation to be lost forever. Another example of handiness is in situations where you suspect virus damage, for example, and are forced to do a sudden format and reinstall and are prone to forget to backup stuff. This can even be a good tool to use to backup your entire computer on a somewhat regular basis if you have the time, where your entire Windows installation can be copied to an external device such as a thumbdrive. I’ve started using this on my desktop and it works well – in the workplace we’re finding we have customers who are downgrading from Vista to XP and using this tool allows them to keep their old Vista installation and run it from inside XP just in case they forgot to back up something. Fantastic tool, highly recommended.
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WOW this is fantastic news for financially challenged people – Microsoft to put free Office Starter 2010 on new PCs http://bit.ly/NeK4c
This article comments on how from a financial aspect this is a risk for Microsoft, but realistically it is a brilliant idea to give everyone with any sort of financially restricting situation the ability to use Word and Excel spreadsheets one way or another – and to be able to use the latest version. The biggest issue with Office files at the moment is the fact that a lot of organisations aren’t upgrading Office from editions such as 2003 and therefore can’t open the new docx and xlsx extension files created by default from Office 2007 onwards. Everybody wins because of this and kudos to Microsoft for acknowledging the little guys, who very well take their Word and Excel knowledge into the workplace to work with the paid versions.
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Great for non-tech ppl – Belkin’s refreshed Easy Transfer Cable makes Windows 7 migration a little too easy http://tinyurl.com/y88d2fy
Another Windows 7 related post – this cable is designed for people who are planning on buying a new PC with Windows 7 on it and giving up on their old computer. Simply put, this cable has a USB connection at each end of it and all the user has to do is use this cable to connect the old computer to the new one and a new migration feature built into Windows 7 auto detects the old computer and automatically takes all of the information from the old computer and moves it to the new computer. That’s it – you then jump on your new computer and all your stuff from the old computer has been moved over with all your folders and settings intact. This cable will probably sell for about $50 or so in Australia when released, which seems a bit expensive, but for general users who know don’t know much about computers and will likely spend in excess of $50 to have a technician to do this for them, this becomes a really good option. I’m interested to have a play with it myself to see how effective it is, but at this stage I am definitely sold on the concept.
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So awesome and about time someone did this – Charge Your Gadgets Wirelessly! http://bit.ly/bdjmm
Say goodbye to your old phone charger that you plug into a wall and have to re-buy over and over again when you lose it, because this is the first of many devices of this type that you’ll see hit the market over the next twelve months. Basically, with this charger mat all you do is lay down your phone or iPod device on this charging mat and the battery will charge up. Simple! The talk is about seeing these little guys in places like coffee shops and the like so you can charge your phone whilst stopping in for a top up, but the real beauty of course is the fact that all different phones have different connector types so it’s hard to charge up your phone when you’re not at home. This eliminates this problem whilst also presenting the next wave of innovation in the technology space where power cables become a thing of the past and the walls and beams of your building emit power charging waves to your devices to power them. Sony have been innovating in this space, and there are TV such as this one that they are working on already that doesn’t have a power cable and instead relies of a technology similar to the one used in this mat (to charge a built in battery), in addition to wirelessly receiving picture signals from your DVD player or Playstation 3 and the like. Pretty cool stuff.
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- Belkin’s refreshed Easy Transfer Cable makes Windows 7 migration a little too easy (engadget.com)
- Windows 7 boots 42% slower than Vista, says study (infoworld.com)
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