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Decorate your Windows XP with Hyperdesk (DownloadExaminer.com)

Decorate your Windows XP with Hyperdesk

Turn your Windows XP into Disney's It's a Magical World.

(Credit: Hyperdesk)

It’s been more than a year since Windows Vista was launched and Windows XP is still going strong. In my opinion, it’s still a great operating system–though, it’s not that hard to look great when compared to Windows Vista. Once thing is undeniable, however: Windows XP is getting old, especially in its aesthetic.

For this reason, on Wednesday, July 30, The Skins Factory launched Hyperdesk, a software package that will spice up your Windows XP, and turn it into a world of exciting themes, skins, and wallpapers. The software even allows you to create widgets for other applications, such as iTunes or Windows Media Player.

Hyperdesk uses Microsoft’s own skinning engine to apply the Windows themes, which means these changes won’t affect the system’s performance very much. The changes are also completely reversible, and you can switch between Windows XP’s default theme and Hyperdesk themes with a single click of the mouse.

These themes are available now but, unfortunately, they are not free. Their prices range from $9.95 to $14.95.

Source: www.download.com

Featured Freeware: 360desktop

The public beta of 360desktop makes some intriguing promises. “Unlimited desktop space” is one, and the capability to save any part of the Web directly to your desktop is another.

Surprisingly, there’s a lot more than screensaver snake-oil here. When you run 360desktop, you get a panoramic desktop with custom widgets. Quit, and you’re back to basic Windows. Switching between the two didn’t cause problems when tested, although quitting 360desktop completely required killing the process a few times.

A persistent “QuickNav” area in the upper-right side of your screen lets you scroll or drag your mouse to move around by push your mouse to the screen edge. The help guide suggests that arrow key navigation works, too, although it didn’t for us. A handy Windows taskbar icon offers a context menu that lets you customize options such as scrolling speed, starting it with Windows, how 360desktop focuses multiwindow applications, and whether the location of running applications and widgets appear in the QuickNav.

Web widgets are simple to install and work well. Click “Add a widget” in the QuickNav and you’ll see a bare-bones dialog with two tabs–Web Widget or Embed Code Widget. The first lets you enter a widget name and a URL, while the second lets you enter a name and a snippet of HTML code. A special 360desktop toolbar appears next a new widget from which you can drag-and-drop the widget, close it, or click the “i” button for more information.

360desktop runs like any of your other Windows programs and doesn’t seem to affect any critical system files, although it does place a shortcut on your regular Windows desktop without asking. It’s not essential software, but if you’ve got the RAM to handle it, 360desktop can be a lot of fun. Be sure to create a System Restore point in case it blows up your Windows installation–it’s not a beta for nothing.

Source: www.download.com

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Lightroom 2 - Adobe’s First 64-Bit Mac App (DownloadExaminer.com)

Lightroom 2 - Adobe’s First 64-Bit Mac App
Following a public beta program that provided Adobe with “valuable feedback,” Lightroom 2 has been released, adding new raw technology, dual-monitor support, enhanced non-destructive localized image correction, and better search features. Adobe Lightroom is a powerful competitor to Apple's own photography software, Aperture. Lightroom 2 is Adobe's first application for Mac OS X 10.5 which boasts full 64-bit support. Tom Hogarty, senior product manager for Lightroom and Camera Raw at…
Source: news.softpedia.com

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Facebook added comments to the mini-feed. Add a new comment? (DownloadExaminer.com)

Facebook added comments to the mini-feed. Add a new comment?

Filed under: News, Social Software, web 2.0

Facebook feed comments

Facebook is at it again, rolling out features in advance of the redesign we’ve been hearing so much about. The latest addition is comments in the mini-feed. Now when you find out that “Ashley changed her profile picture” you can click a little + icon next to that item and add a comment. This doesn’t go for all mini-feed items: it seems to be only for profile and status changes. At least you can’t comment on a mini-feed item about someone’s comment (yet.)

Well, ok. It’s one more way of communicating on Facebook, but what does it imply about the future of the wall? What used to be the main point of communication is now one of many, with photo comments, mini-feed comments and messages all in the mix. Will more places to comment make things easier for users? On the plus side for Facebook, users will stay on the site a few seconds longer to check one more place for comments, but is it a plus for you? Weigh in with your comments about comments.

Read

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Open your jukebox: Open-source alternatives for music management (DownloadExaminer.com)

Open your jukebox: Open-source alternatives for music management

Not mere freeware, but open-source alternatives are well-known for nearly every major category of software. Firefox and Linux are probably the most famous, but OpenOffice, GIMP, Thunderbird, Pidgin, Miro, and others have made themselves known in practically every genre. Heck, there’s even an open-source firmware for your portable MP3 player–Rockbox.

One area that’s been notably lacking some open-source love has been music jukeboxes. Competing with iTunes takes serious chops, even for programs that haven’t opened their code like Winamp and MediaMonkey. However, there are a growing number of iTunes competitors that are gloriously open. Two that are definitely worthy of more attention are aTunes and Songbird.

aTunes surfaces both primary and secondary info about your music on its main page.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Right off the bat, aTunes was not instilling confidence. After a fast installation, the tree navigation that opens up when you run the program for the first time, to scan your media library, was shockingly sluggish. Then it scanned in my 7,500 music tracks in just a shade over 10 minutes, flawlessly. Quite the turnaround.

There are some nifty features in aTunes. First off, despite having a lot of options in the main window, the tabs keep the interface from getting too cluttered while keeping useful secondary features a click away. Second, although it may not appear to be modular, the icons just below the Menubar let users hide the AudioScrobbler, the navigator, or the song properties. Built-in links make it possible to discover similar songs and related videos on YouTube.

The AudioScrobbler pane is exceptionally useful. Unlike other jukeboxes that hide secondary information behind context-menu navigation, aTunes surfaces all of it–but keeps it behind tabs. This kind of one-click access makes it much easier to discover biographical details of the artist you’re listening to, while the Album tab shows track listings, and the Song tab surfaces song lyrics automatically.

aTunes uses tabs to keep a multitude of information and options one click away.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

In addition to the unique layout and presentation of information, aTunes comes with 27 skins, has built-in Last.fm and various other Internet radio station support, and has decent podcast-catching abilities. Through the Preferences, users can set the unified window to appear as multiple and separate panes. You can also determine how long the tooltips show up for, if at all, if Smart Sorting gets used, and whether the tabs are visible. Metatag editing and autotagging work well, and I liked the “favorites” feature which creates an automatic playlist of your songs tagged as such.

There are some big problems, though. At the top of the list is the unimpressive MP3 player support. It will work on portable devices if they behave like external hard drives, but once they start utilizing fancy firmware–like the iPod–aTunes just ignores it. According to an aTunes help forum post, there are no immediate plans to address this. Thankfully, aTunes didn’t freeze or crash when I connected the iPod. Linux and Mac users might find the installation to be too much work, with various components not bundled into the executable. aTunes would benefit from search-as-you-type, as well.

Even with those problems, though, aTunes makes a compelling case for giving it a spin.

Songbird should feel the more familiar to iTunes users, and it stands a better chance of getting attention because of origin. Like Flock, it’s based on Firefox, and attempts to merge a browser and a jukebox into a simple, elegant interface. I’ve written about Songbird before, and have been impressed with its features, if not its stability problems.

Songbird mashes up Firefox and iTunes.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The latest big update pushed Songbird a bit closer to the edge of its nest. It’s still in beta and is still buggy. It has problems adding music files with non-English characters. Specifically, the import process hung repeatedly on various Japanese-, Chinese-, and Hebrew-labeled tracks in my collection. Still, Songbird now can handle Thankgiving turkey-sized music collections greater than 10,000 songs, something earlier versions couldn’t do. The developers have also improved memory management, a big concern with such a massive mashup. There’s a metadata editor, support for SHOUTcast, and improved portable player syncing including the iPod.

The code improvements have allowed for smoother scrolling, faster filtering, and just overall better management of music collections of any size. Songbird is well on its way to being a serious jukebox. Other fixes include the previously nonfunctional edit menu joining the land of the living and the introduction of in-page text searching.

One of its biggest draws might also be its biggest drawback. Songbird is shockingly similar to iTunes. Most other jukeboxes, whether open-source or not, have shied away from the tripartite top window and music library in the central pane. Songbird embraces them, and further pushes its homage to iTunes by copying player control default positioning, a rounded view screen, and a Mac-style tree.

Songbird also makes it easy to discover and download any music files embedded on a Web site.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The benefit, of course, of having your jukebox mashed into your Web browser is that music discover can potentially get a lot easier. Songbird does just that, by opening a pane at the bottom of the browser when you visit a site with music embedded. From there, you can either download the tracks, if the site supports that, or at the very least add them on the fly to your current playlist. The pane surfaces the track name, artist, blog links, and multiple purchase links, including Amazon, eMusic, and without a hint of irony, iTunes.

There are more than just two open-source music jukeboxes, of course. SnackAmp has been around since the beginning of the century, and there’s Jukes, JlGui, and JaJuk. Banshee looks promising as a cross-platform jukebox, but is only available for Linux users so far. If you’ve got a favorite open-source jukebox, tell me about it in the comments below.

Source: www.download.com

Featured Freeware: 360desktop

The public beta of 360desktop makes some intriguing promises. “Unlimited desktop space” is one, and the capability to save any part of the Web directly to your desktop is another.

Surprisingly, there’s a lot more than screensaver snake-oil here. When you run 360desktop, you get a panoramic desktop with custom widgets. Quit, and you’re back to basic Windows. Switching between the two didn’t cause problems when tested, although quitting 360desktop completely required killing the process a few times.

A persistent “QuickNav” area in the upper-right side of your screen lets you scroll or drag your mouse to move around by push your mouse to the screen edge. The help guide suggests that arrow key navigation works, too, although it didn’t for us. A handy Windows taskbar icon offers a context menu that lets you customize options such as scrolling speed, starting it with Windows, how 360desktop focuses multiwindow applications, and whether the location of running applications and widgets appear in the QuickNav.

Web widgets are simple to install and work well. Click “Add a widget” in the QuickNav and you’ll see a bare-bones dialog with two tabs–Web Widget or Embed Code Widget. The first lets you enter a widget name and a URL, while the second lets you enter a name and a snippet of HTML code. A special 360desktop toolbar appears next a new widget from which you can drag-and-drop the widget, close it, or click the “i” button for more information.

360desktop runs like any of your other Windows programs and doesn’t seem to affect any critical system files, although it does place a shortcut on your regular Windows desktop without asking. It’s not essential software, but if you’ve got the RAM to handle it, 360desktop can be a lot of fun. Be sure to create a System Restore point in case it blows up your Windows installation–it’s not a beta for nothing.

Source: www.download.com

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Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app (DownloadExaminer.com)

Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app

Lee Lorenzen, the man behind the Altura Facebook-focused venture fund, was at the F8 conference Wednesday pitching a non-Facebook project: Kallout. It’s a software utility and Web service that lets you kick off a Web search from any word in almost any app. Lorenzen calls it, “a new way to search using only your mouse.” All you have to do is select some text and wait half a second, and an icon appears on your screen that lets you pop up a Kallout search menu. Similar utilities are built into some browsers, but Kallout works across all apps.

Kallout will pop a search menu up over a selection in almost any app.

The app lets you select from multiple search systems, including Google, Wikipedia, Amazon, and various other commerce sites, databases, and news sources. And it is somewhat context aware. If you highlight an address, its first search option will be a map; likewise, a movie title will likely display options from YouTube and Amazon.

Search results are displayed in an on-screen window, or you can click through to go to the originating Web source for the info.

Lorenzen thinks Kallout can be a powerful advertising service. As he says, Kallout gives “Google the ability to sell ads over Microsoft Office.” Kallout does indeed work with Office, although since Office also has menus that pop up when you hover over a selection, it can ugly up your workspace a little bit.

Results also arrive in a pop-up window, but you can jump to the full browser display in a click.

The real challenge is getting Kallout adopted, and that’s not to be discounted. Getting the utility requires a download and an installation, a pretty big barrier when you’re hoping to run an ad-supported business.

I have seen other products like this, but I still like Kallout. It’s completely unobtrusive yet there when you need it. If you do a lot of Web searches based on things you read while surfing, or need reference works while you’re writing, I recommend it. It’s a good tool.

See also: Hyperwords.

Source: www.download.com

Open your jukebox: Open-source alternatives for music management

Not mere freeware, but open-source alternatives are well-known for nearly every major category of software. Firefox and Linux are probably the most famous, but OpenOffice, GIMP, Thunderbird, Pidgin, Miro, and others have made themselves known in practically every genre. Heck, there’s even an open-source firmware for your portable MP3 player–Rockbox.

One area that’s been notably lacking some open-source love has been music jukeboxes. Competing with iTunes takes serious chops, even for programs that haven’t opened their code like Winamp and MediaMonkey. However, there are a growing number of iTunes competitors that are gloriously open. Two that are definitely worthy of more attention are aTunes and Songbird.

aTunes surfaces both primary and secondary info about your music on its main page.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Right off the bat, aTunes was not instilling confidence. After a fast installation, the tree navigation that opens up when you run the program for the first time, to scan your media library, was shockingly sluggish. Then it scanned in my 7,500 music tracks in just a shade over 10 minutes, flawlessly. Quite the turnaround.

There are some nifty features in aTunes. First off, despite having a lot of options in the main window, the tabs keep the interface from getting too cluttered while keeping useful secondary features a click away. Second, although it may not appear to be modular, the icons just below the Menubar let users hide the AudioScrobbler, the navigator, or the song properties. Built-in links make it possible to discover similar songs and related videos on YouTube.

The AudioScrobbler pane is exceptionally useful. Unlike other jukeboxes that hide secondary information behind context-menu navigation, aTunes surfaces all of it–but keeps it behind tabs. This kind of one-click access makes it much easier to discover biographical details of the artist you’re listening to, while the Album tab shows track listings, and the Song tab surfaces song lyrics automatically.

aTunes uses tabs to keep a multitude of information and options one click away.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

In addition to the unique layout and presentation of information, aTunes comes with 27 skins, has built-in Last.fm and various other Internet radio station support, and has decent podcast-catching abilities. Through the Preferences, users can set the unified window to appear as multiple and separate panes. You can also determine how long the tooltips show up for, if at all, if Smart Sorting gets used, and whether the tabs are visible. Metatag editing and autotagging work well, and I liked the “favorites” feature which creates an automatic playlist of your songs tagged as such.

There are some big problems, though. At the top of the list is the unimpressive MP3 player support. It will work on portable devices if they behave like external hard drives, but once they start utilizing fancy firmware–like the iPod–aTunes just ignores it. According to an aTunes help forum post, there are no immediate plans to address this. Thankfully, aTunes didn’t freeze or crash when I connected the iPod. Linux and Mac users might find the installation to be too much work, with various components not bundled into the executable. aTunes would benefit from search-as-you-type, as well.

Even with those problems, though, aTunes makes a compelling case for giving it a spin.

Songbird should feel the more familiar to iTunes users, and it stands a better chance of getting attention because of origin. Like Flock, it’s based on Firefox, and attempts to merge a browser and a jukebox into a simple, elegant interface. I’ve written about Songbird before, and have been impressed with its features, if not its stability problems.

Songbird mashes up Firefox and iTunes.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The latest big update pushed Songbird a bit closer to the edge of its nest. It’s still in beta and is still buggy. It has problems adding music files with non-English characters. Specifically, the import process hung repeatedly on various Japanese-, Chinese-, and Hebrew-labeled tracks in my collection. Still, Songbird now can handle Thankgiving turkey-sized music collections greater than 10,000 songs, something earlier versions couldn’t do. The developers have also improved memory management, a big concern with such a massive mashup. There’s a metadata editor, support for SHOUTcast, and improved portable player syncing including the iPod.

The code improvements have allowed for smoother scrolling, faster filtering, and just overall better management of music collections of any size. Songbird is well on its way to being a serious jukebox. Other fixes include the previously nonfunctional edit menu joining the land of the living and the introduction of in-page text searching.

One of its biggest draws might also be its biggest drawback. Songbird is shockingly similar to iTunes. Most other jukeboxes, whether open-source or not, have shied away from the tripartite top window and music library in the central pane. Songbird embraces them, and further pushes its homage to iTunes by copying player control default positioning, a rounded view screen, and a Mac-style tree.

Songbird also makes it easy to discover and download any music files embedded on a Web site.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The benefit, of course, of having your jukebox mashed into your Web browser is that music discover can potentially get a lot easier. Songbird does just that, by opening a pane at the bottom of the browser when you visit a site with music embedded. From there, you can either download the tracks, if the site supports that, or at the very least add them on the fly to your current playlist. The pane surfaces the track name, artist, blog links, and multiple purchase links, including Amazon, eMusic, and without a hint of irony, iTunes.

There are more than just two open-source music jukeboxes, of course. SnackAmp has been around since the beginning of the century, and there’s Jukes, JlGui, and JaJuk. Banshee looks promising as a cross-platform jukebox, but is only available for Linux users so far. If you’ve got a favorite open-source jukebox, tell me about it in the comments below.

Source: www.download.com

Tags: , , , ,

Open your jukebox: Open-source alternatives for music management (DownloadExaminer.com)

Open your jukebox: Open-source alternatives for music management

Not mere freeware, but open-source alternatives are well-known for nearly every major category of software. Firefox and Linux are probably the most famous, but OpenOffice, GIMP, Thunderbird, Pidgin, Miro, and others have made themselves known in practically every genre. Heck, there’s even an open-source firmware for your portable MP3 player–Rockbox.

One area that’s been notably lacking some open-source love has been music jukeboxes. Competing with iTunes takes serious chops, even for programs that haven’t opened their code like Winamp and MediaMonkey. However, there are a growing number of iTunes competitors that are gloriously open. Two that are definitely worthy of more attention are aTunes and Songbird.

aTunes surfaces both primary and secondary info about your music on its main page.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Right off the bat, aTunes was not instilling confidence. After a fast installation, the tree navigation that opens up when you run the program for the first time, to scan your media library, was shockingly sluggish. Then it scanned in my 7,500 music tracks in just a shade over 10 minutes, flawlessly. Quite the turnaround.

There are some nifty features in aTunes. First off, despite having a lot of options in the main window, the tabs keep the interface from getting too cluttered while keeping useful secondary features a click away. Second, although it may not appear to be modular, the icons just below the Menubar let users hide the AudioScrobbler, the navigator, or the song properties. Built-in links make it possible to discover similar songs and related videos on YouTube.

The AudioScrobbler pane is exceptionally useful. Unlike other jukeboxes that hide secondary information behind context-menu navigation, aTunes surfaces all of it–but keeps it behind tabs. This kind of one-click access makes it much easier to discover biographical details of the artist you’re listening to, while the Album tab shows track listings, and the Song tab surfaces song lyrics automatically.

aTunes uses tabs to keep a multitude of information and options one click away.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

In addition to the unique layout and presentation of information, aTunes comes with 27 skins, has built-in Last.fm and various other Internet radio station support, and has decent podcast-catching abilities. Through the Preferences, users can set the unified window to appear as multiple and separate panes. You can also determine how long the tooltips show up for, if at all, if Smart Sorting gets used, and whether the tabs are visible. Metatag editing and autotagging work well, and I liked the “favorites” feature which creates an automatic playlist of your songs tagged as such.

There are some big problems, though. At the top of the list is the unimpressive MP3 player support. It will work on portable devices if they behave like external hard drives, but once they start utilizing fancy firmware–like the iPod–aTunes just ignores it. According to an aTunes help forum post, there are no immediate plans to address this. Thankfully, aTunes didn’t freeze or crash when I connected the iPod. Linux and Mac users might find the installation to be too much work, with various components not bundled into the executable. aTunes would benefit from search-as-you-type, as well.

Even with those problems, though, aTunes makes a compelling case for giving it a spin.

Songbird should feel the more familiar to iTunes users, and it stands a better chance of getting attention because of origin. Like Flock, it’s based on Firefox, and attempts to merge a browser and a jukebox into a simple, elegant interface. I’ve written about Songbird before, and have been impressed with its features, if not its stability problems.

Songbird mashes up Firefox and iTunes.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The latest big update pushed Songbird a bit closer to the edge of its nest. It’s still in beta and is still buggy. It has problems adding music files with non-English characters. Specifically, the import process hung repeatedly on various Japanese-, Chinese-, and Hebrew-labeled tracks in my collection. Still, Songbird now can handle Thankgiving turkey-sized music collections greater than 10,000 songs, something earlier versions couldn’t do. The developers have also improved memory management, a big concern with such a massive mashup. There’s a metadata editor, support for SHOUTcast, and improved portable player syncing including the iPod.

The code improvements have allowed for smoother scrolling, faster filtering, and just overall better management of music collections of any size. Songbird is well on its way to being a serious jukebox. Other fixes include the previously nonfunctional edit menu joining the land of the living and the introduction of in-page text searching.

One of its biggest draws might also be its biggest drawback. Songbird is shockingly similar to iTunes. Most other jukeboxes, whether open-source or not, have shied away from the tripartite top window and music library in the central pane. Songbird embraces them, and further pushes its homage to iTunes by copying player control default positioning, a rounded view screen, and a Mac-style tree.

Songbird also makes it easy to discover and download any music files embedded on a Web site.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The benefit, of course, of having your jukebox mashed into your Web browser is that music discover can potentially get a lot easier. Songbird does just that, by opening a pane at the bottom of the browser when you visit a site with music embedded. From there, you can either download the tracks, if the site supports that, or at the very least add them on the fly to your current playlist. The pane surfaces the track name, artist, blog links, and multiple purchase links, including Amazon, eMusic, and without a hint of irony, iTunes.

There are more than just two open-source music jukeboxes, of course. SnackAmp has been around since the beginning of the century, and there’s Jukes, JlGui, and JaJuk. Banshee looks promising as a cross-platform jukebox, but is only available for Linux users so far. If you’ve got a favorite open-source jukebox, tell me about it in the comments below.

Source: www.download.com

Tags: , , , ,

Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app (DownloadExaminer.com)

Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app

Lee Lorenzen, the man behind the Altura Facebook-focused venture fund, was at the F8 conference Wednesday pitching a non-Facebook project: Kallout. It’s a software utility and Web service that lets you kick off a Web search from any word in almost any app. Lorenzen calls it, “a new way to search using only your mouse.” All you have to do is select some text and wait half a second, and an icon appears on your screen that lets you pop up a Kallout search menu. Similar utilities are built into some browsers, but Kallout works across all apps.

Kallout will pop a search menu up over a selection in almost any app.

The app lets you select from multiple search systems, including Google, Wikipedia, Amazon, and various other commerce sites, databases, and news sources. And it is somewhat context aware. If you highlight an address, its first search option will be a map; likewise, a movie title will likely display options from YouTube and Amazon.

Search results are displayed in an on-screen window, or you can click through to go to the originating Web source for the info.

Lorenzen thinks Kallout can be a powerful advertising service. As he says, Kallout gives “Google the ability to sell ads over Microsoft Office.” Kallout does indeed work with Office, although since Office also has menus that pop up when you hover over a selection, it can ugly up your workspace a little bit.

Results also arrive in a pop-up window, but you can jump to the full browser display in a click.

The real challenge is getting Kallout adopted, and that’s not to be discounted. Getting the utility requires a download and an installation, a pretty big barrier when you’re hoping to run an ad-supported business.

I have seen other products like this, but I still like Kallout. It’s completely unobtrusive yet there when you need it. If you do a lot of Web searches based on things you read while surfing, or need reference works while you’re writing, I recommend it. It’s a good tool.

See also: Hyperwords.

Source: www.download.com

Tags: , , , ,

Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app (DownloadExaminer.com)

Kallout adds context-sensitive search to any Windows app

Lee Lorenzen, the man behind the Altura Facebook-focused venture fund, was at the F8 conference Wednesday pitching a non-Facebook project: Kallout. It’s a software utility and Web service that lets you kick off a Web search from any word in almost any app. Lorenzen calls it, “a new way to search using only your mouse.” All you have to do is select some text and wait half a second, and an icon appears on your screen that lets you pop up a Kallout search menu. Similar utilities are built into some browsers, but Kallout works across all apps.

Kallout will pop a search menu up over a selection in almost any app.

The app lets you select from multiple search systems, including Google, Wikipedia, Amazon, and various other commerce sites, databases, and news sources. And it is somewhat context aware. If you highlight an address, its first search option will be a map; likewise, a movie title will likely display options from YouTube and Amazon.

Search results are displayed in an on-screen window, or you can click through to go to the originating Web source for the info.

Lorenzen thinks Kallout can be a powerful advertising service. As he says, Kallout gives “Google the ability to sell ads over Microsoft Office.” Kallout does indeed work with Office, although since Office also has menus that pop up when you hover over a selection, it can ugly up your workspace a little bit.

Results also arrive in a pop-up window, but you can jump to the full browser display in a click.

The real challenge is getting Kallout adopted, and that’s not to be discounted. Getting the utility requires a download and an installation, a pretty big barrier when you’re hoping to run an ad-supported business.

I have seen other products like this, but I still like Kallout. It’s completely unobtrusive yet there when you need it. If you do a lot of Web searches based on things you read while surfing, or need reference works while you’re writing, I recommend it. It’s a good tool.

See also: Hyperwords.

Source: www.download.com

‘WinPwn’

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Softpedia Recommended Mac Apps of the Week

Softpedia Recommended Mac Apps of the Week

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Fav.or.it RSS aggregator launches. Will it change the game? (DownloadExaminer.com)

Fav.or.it RSS aggregator launches. Will it change the game?

Filed under: News, Blogging, Social Software

Fav.or.it is a new kind of RSS aggregator, somewhere in between a pre-set collection of feeds like Alltop and a full-on Google Reader-style service. It had been in closed beta, but now’s it’s opening to everyone. It includes a set of 2000 of the most popular and interesting feeds, and provides recommended stories based on what you’re reading, how long you spend on it, and how you rate it. Basically, Fav.or.it tries to pay attention to what you’re paying attention to. Also, as we reported earlier, your comments show up in Fav.or.it and on the original story.

It’s no reason to abandon Google Reader, but if you’re not already reading RSS feeds, this is a good introduction to managing them. With it’s Top-Story-focused, categorized startpage, it reminds us more of Google News than Google Reader in some ways. Whether Fav.or.it gets a good user base is going to be depend on how happy people are with its recommendation algorithm. Even if you just think of it as site that exposes newbies to a couple thousand top blogs, it’s doing a useful service for the Internet.

Read

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