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iTunes update for Windows Vista addresses BSOD (DownloadExaminer.com)

iTunes update for Windows Vista addresses BSOD

Apple on Friday issued an update for iTunes 8 that specifically addresses problems experienced by Windows Vista users, and issued general recommendations for Windows XP and Vista users experiencing sync issues with iPhone and iPod touch devices.

Since its release earlier in the week, iTunes 8 has bedeviled some Windows Vista users with the so-called blue screen of death, or BSOD, and other issues. Speculation has focused on an incompatibility with USB devices, such as Webcams and printers.

In a support post, Apple recommends that Windows Vista users experiencing difficulty should uninstall iTunes 8 and, after rebooting the computer, reinstall the updated application. (You can download the updated iTunes 8 for Windows from CNET’s Download.com.)

Also on Friday, Apple posted recommendations regarding problems experienced by Windows XP and Windows Vista users when syncing the iPhone or iPod Touch devices containing saved photos. Apple says that “while any driver software could be a factor, updating the software drivers for Logitech QuickCam/Webcam products, Lexmark scanners, and some built-in media card reader drivers on the computer may solve this issue in a majority of cases.”

Source: www.download.com

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iTunes update for Windows Vista addresses BSOD (DownloadExaminer.com)

iTunes update for Windows Vista addresses BSOD

Apple on Friday issued an update for iTunes 8 that specifically addresses problems experienced by Windows Vista users, and issued general recommendations for Windows XP and Vista users experiencing sync issues with iPhone and iPod touch devices.

Since its release earlier in the week, iTunes 8 has bedeviled some Windows Vista users with the so-called blue screen of death, or BSOD, and other issues. Speculation has focused on an incompatibility with USB devices, such as Webcams and printers.

In a support post, Apple recommends that Windows Vista users experiencing difficulty should uninstall iTunes 8 and, after rebooting the computer, reinstall the updated application. (You can download the updated iTunes 8 for Windows from CNET’s Download.com.)

Also on Friday, Apple posted recommendations regarding problems experienced by Windows XP and Windows Vista users when syncing the iPhone or iPod Touch devices containing saved photos. Apple says that “while any driver software could be a factor, updating the software drivers for Logitech QuickCam/Webcam products, Lexmark scanners, and some built-in media card reader drivers on the computer may solve this issue in a majority of cases.”

Source: www.download.com

Ticketmaster Now Via BlackBerry Handsets
In a move bound to provide its users with greater freedom when it comes to buying (all kinds of) tickets, RIM has announced that the famous Ticketmaster service is available directly on BlackBerry devices.

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Three (more) educational Web sites to make your kids smarter (DownloadExaminer.com)

Three (more) educational Web sites to make your kids smarter

Filed under: Fun, Games, Internet, Kids, Web services

Flickr: iboy_danielNow that school is officially underway throughout most of the country, help your kids flex their brain muscles with these three terrific educational sites:

NickNews - Yes, that Nick. The folks at Nickelodeon have done a great job putting together a news Web site just for kids. It covers everything from the presidential election to poverty in America in a way that teens and pre-teens can grasp. Have your kids use it as a way to keep up on what’s happening in the world, as well as a place to do research on current events.

Funbrain - This is the ultimate “education-disguised-as-fun” Web site. It helps teach important academic basics in ways that are nearly irresistible to kids: math skill builders are hidden in arcade games, reading enhancers are stashed in Web comics. It’s as clever as it gets. As an nice added touch, there are even blogs targeted at different age groups.

EdHelper - This one’s more for parents and teachers than kids. Use EdHelper to design worksheets, games, and other printables to give kids the extra practice they need in spelling, math, or reading. Total access to the site is available at various pricing levels, but the free area will be more than adequate for most families.

There are activities for every age and grade level from pre-k to high school. In one area of the site, you can enter your child’s spelling list for the week and up pops a crossword puzzle using all the words. Another section offers SAT vocabulary word lessons for 9 - 12 graders, and yet another section contains writing prompts and critical thinking exercises. What the site lacks in visual pizzaz, it more than makes up for in educational value.

Stay tuned later this week when we explore ways to find educational software that you can download right to your computer. For even more educational Web site ideas, see this post.

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TuneUp recharges tracks and art in iTunes (DownloadExaminer.com)

TuneUp recharges tracks and art in iTunes

I’m not a big fan of iTunes for Windows. Even though I have an iPod, I haven’t used its software sibling in nine months. (That’d be enough time for Apple to gestate a better version, you’d think.) However, iTunes addicts who just can’t break away might want to take a look at TuneUp Companion, a neat little plug-in recently out of beta. It does a much better job of album art downloading, track tag repair and discovery, and tracking down concerts by your favorite bands.

In terms of user interface, TuneUp Companion is a bit awkward.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

First thing to note with the program is that it installs as a sidebar on iTunes. If you’re using the mothership in full screen mode, or near enough to it, you’re going to have to pull in the right edge of your jukebox before you can see what’s going on. From there, TuneUp lets you register from within the add-on’s sidebar.

The registration is boilerplate for Web sites these days. You don’t have to contribute a credit card number, though, and that makes this an interesting replacement for the iTunes store. The new Genius bar is basically a repackaging of the old Apple hard-sell for the iTunes Store, whereas TuneUp Companion offers links to DRM-free Amazon under the now playing tab.

The program can clean song tags and discover new tracks, among other things.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Links in TuneUp include more than music purchasing, though. There’s also a YouTube discovery feature, automatically pulling in links to related YouTube videos. It’s too bad they’re not embedded, though. Concert notifications are courtesy StubHub, news comes from Google, and there’s a bunch of eBay links, as well. These can be swapped around or minimized, but not completely hidden.

Other features include Clean, which fixes track metatag data that has been improperly maintained. This feature has been buggy in the past, although I didn’t experience any crashes when testing it this time around. It doesn’t come close to MediaMonkey’s or Winamp’s built-in tag repair, but it will make sure that your “RaDIOhed” tunes are spelled correctly and capitalized in the right spots. The album art locater worked well, having no problems with either popular or obscure albums.

Despite being fairly responsive, the plug-in’s interface feels cramped and hectic, although that might be because it sits next to Apple’s famously austere iTunes design. TuneUp Companion makes a good choice for people who want more out of iTunes, and it costs $20.00. The program comes with a 30-day trial that limits you to 500 songs repairs and 50 album art downloads.

Source: www.download.com

ACDSee Photo Manager update improves workflow, makes you a better person

Click for larger view

(Credit: ACDSee)

Face it, you know your digital assets are all over the place. You can never find what you’re looking for because you’re terrible at getting and staying organized, yet you continue to download new bits of software to do everything from import images to processing raw files to editing and archiving photos. The latest update to ACDSee’s Pro Photo Manager could help you put an end to that and improve your workflow thanks to a handful of new features.

Version 2.5 announced yesterday (a free upgrade for 2.0 users; $129.99 for everyone else) adds things like the ability to build and save complex searches, embed custom metadata (not just modify IPTC and EXIF fields, though you can do that, too), and organize images on import by creating folder structures, setting categories, and modifying metadata before it hits your computer.

And while this hot, hot update should have you organized in ways you’ve only dreamed of, it also adds an auto-slide-show feature, presentation options, and worry-free, pixel-level editing because copies of the originals are always saved.

Finally, if you’re dealing with raw files, 2.5 continues the product’s awesome raw-processing support.

Source: www.download.com

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iPhone 2.1 Available – Free Download (DownloadExaminer.com)

iPhone 2.1 Available – Free Download
As promised, Apple has released iPhone software update 2.1 for iPhone users. While iPod touch owners have been granted the update three days ago ($9.95 for upgrading from V. 1.x), owners of an iPhone can upgrade for free, no matter the firmware they’re currently running.Upon launching its second-generation iPh… As promised, Apple has released iPhone software update 2.1 for iPhone users. While iPod touch owners have been granted the update three days ago ($9.95 for upgrading from V. 1.x), owners of an iPhone can upgrade for free, no matter the firmware they’re currently running.

Upon launching its second-generation iPh… (read more)
Source: news.softpedia.com

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Dell Extends Lineup of PowerEdge Servers (DownloadExaminer.com)

Dell Extends Lineup of PowerEdge Servers
Virtualization is becoming increasingly important in today’s server systems market, which is why we are seeing a number of hardware manufacturers and software developers announcing new products, specifically designed to meet the increasing demand for better and more powerful virtualization systems. Just recently, Round Rock, Texas-based Dell has announced the availability of several new products, management tools and infrastructure consul…

Virtualization is becoming increasingly important in today’s server systems market, which is why we are seeing a number of hardware manufacturers and software developers announcing new products, specifically designed to meet the increasing demand for better and more powerful virtualization systems. Just recently, Round Rock, Texas-based Dell has announced the availability of several new products, management tools and infrastructure consul… (read more)
Source: news.softpedia.com

300 Top Software Developers Worldwide in New Microsoft Development Center
Even as early as July 5, 2007, Microsoft announced that it was extending north of Redmond and into Canada. At that time S. Somasegar, corporate vice president of the Developer Division at Microsoft, indicated that the new Microsoft Canada Development Centre would be a nucleus of top talent, and that it

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Atmosphir blends Lego, ‘Super Mario’ for DIY platforming (DownloadExaminer.com)

Atmosphir blends Lego, ‘Super Mario’ for DIY platforming

Atmosphir is a software-based game building tool for PC and Mac users that lets users put together their own gaming levels. Like many consumer-facing game creators you’re only limited by the tools that have been given to you. In this case the tools provided are split up into packages of “blocks” that are both interchangeable and feature simple gameplay devices like moving platforms, and various themed texture elements that let you build worlds with grass, dirt, and sand.

The builder actually reminders me a lot of Cubescape, a product I looked at back in May. In Atmosphir’s case, it’s simply a matter of stacking pixels together on top of one another in a 3D grid. The big difference is that you can jump into your creation and play test it. Depending on what game play goals you set up, it changes what’s needed to successfully get through what you’ve created.

The game builder is entirely in 3D. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: Rafe Needleman/CBS Interactive)

The only thing I’m concerned about with this product is that the demo did not make playing the game look like as much fun as building the levels. I’m willing to withhold judgment until I get my hands on it, but it seemed to be lacking a decent physics engine and the graphics looked akin to Super Mario 64–a console title that came out 12 years ago. That said, look at something like Line Rider; if you give people simple tools and a platform they’re going to go nuts.

To aid in that discovery process users can submit their creations to a central pool where others can jump in and play their creations, with some of the best items rising to the top. Also neat is the option to grab someone else’s level and pull it back in the editor to make tweaks.

The service is a TechCrunch50 finalist, and is currently open for sign-ups, with plans to release a public client later this year. I’ve embedded a video of it in action below.

Update: I got some hands-on time with this after the presentation. Judging from the time I played with it, it’s fun but frustrating. Like I said, if you’ve played Super Mario 64 before you’ll feel right at home. It borrows the same camera controls and kill screen, something you’ll probably see a lot if you’re playing a badly designed level.

What’s interesting here is that the creators, the guys from Minor Studios, could have launched this a few weeks ago at the gamer-centric Penny Arcade Expo (PAX) but chose to do it here. When I asked creative director Dave Werner why he’d pass up the chance to show this in front of more than 58,000 gamers and industry analysts, he told me he thought he’d get more leverage by launching it at this show.

Also worth noting is LittleBigPlanet, a PlayStation 3 title that lets you build your own 2D platforming games and share them with others. It’s launching next month (thanks MoRic123)

See also: Mytopia: Yet another casual-gaming start-up goes live


Source: www.download.com

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Three (more) educational Web sites to make your kids smarter (DownloadExaminer.com)

Three (more) educational Web sites to make your kids smarter

Filed under: Fun, Games, Internet, Kids, Web services

Flickr: iboy_danielNow that school is officially underway throughout most of the country, help your kids flex their brain muscles with these three terrific educational sites:

NickNews - Yes, that Nick. The folks at Nickelodeon have done a great job putting together a news Web site just for kids. It covers everything from the presidential election to poverty in America in a way that teens and pre-teens can grasp. Have your kids use it as a way to keep up on what’s happening in the world, as well as a place to do research on current events.

Funbrain - This is the ultimate “education-disguised-as-fun” Web site. It helps teach important academic basics in ways that are nearly irresistible to kids: math skill builders are hidden in arcade games, reading enhancers are stashed in Web comics. It’s as clever as it gets. As an nice added touch, there are even blogs targeted at different age groups.

EdHelper - This one’s more for parents and teachers than kids. Use EdHelper to design worksheets, games, and other printables to give kids the extra practice they need in spelling, math, or reading. Total access to the site is available at various pricing levels, but the free area will be more than adequate for most families.

There are activities for every age and grade level from pre-k to high school. In one area of the site, you can enter your child’s spelling list for the week and up pops a crossword puzzle using all the words. Another section offers SAT vocabulary word lessons for 9 - 12 graders, and yet another section contains writing prompts and critical thinking exercises. What the site lacks in visual pizzaz, it more than makes up for in educational value.

Stay tuned later this week when we explore ways to find educational software that you can download right to your computer. For even more educational Web site ideas, see this post.

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iPhone apps a major trend at DemoFall (DownloadExaminer.com)

iPhone apps a major trend at DemoFall

At DemoFall, Mapflow demonstrated its iPhone application, designed to automate carpooling. The product was just one of many shown built around the iPhone at the event.

(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET News)

SAN DIEGO–At Demo and DemoFall, there are always easily identifiable trends among the dozens of companies chosen to present their products.

In previous iterations of the events that I’ve attended, those trends have been photo-sharing services, online video hosting, Web 2.0, and the like.

This week, the trend–at least as I’ve seen it–has been the number of companies here with iPhone applications. Not every one of them is talking prominently about the applications they have, but Demo lead organizer Chris Shipley told me informally that she thinks that there must be at least a couple dozen companies with iPhone applications here out of the 72 total presenters.

I’ll be the first to admit that I was slow to understand the value of iPhone apps, and I suppose that’s because it took me awhile to buy one of the devices, and even longer after I did before I started trolling the Apple App Store looking for the best and brightest of what was out there.

My major introduction to the applications was a day I spent last month in Seattle, basically letting a series of them control my life for a day. And more recently, I have found myself blown away by some of the most simple applications imaginable. For example, Showtimes determines where you are and then comes up with a list of movie theaters–sorted by proximity to you–and shows the films showing at each and the times for each film.

As I said, it’s totally simple, and pure genius.

Ultimately, while other mobile phones have many of the features of the iPhone, I don’t think that there will be any others in the near future that combine GPS, a great interface, the power of an operating system like OS X, and a network of developers eager to reach out to an audience of users as devoted to their devices as iPhone owners.

Back here at DemoFall, there is definitely no shortage of companies that have developed applications for the device, and some of them seem very promising to me, even though most have yet to appear in the App Store.

I have my own ideas, as I stated above, why I think iPhone apps are the future of software, but I thought these developers would have opinions even more valuable than mine, since they’re building businesses around the platform.

WebDiet built an iPhone application designed to help people find restaurants that serve the kind of healthy food they want to eat.

(Credit: WebDiet)

Among the companies incorporating the iPhone into their Demo products are WebDiet, Telnic, SkyData, The Echo Nest, and Rudder.

“Right now, (the iPhone is) the platform with the most immediacy,” said Richard Bryce, CEO of Mapflow, a company here with a product centered around an iPhone app. “Especially for the consumer market.”

It’s easy to see why Bryce would think so.

Mapflow is a very interesting product designed around the idea of helping drivers offset the high costs of gas by finding people who need rides to pay to fill empty seats in their cars.

“Most of our lives are ad hoc,” Bryce said. “We’re trying to apply the iPhone’s smart technology to give that ad hoc, on-demand capability to carpooling.”

The Mapflow system works by letting drivers define routes–either one-time, or repeat–they’re following and the number of seats they have available to fill. The iPhone makes it simple to do this through lists that can be easily displayed and because the phone’s GPS chip quickly determines where the driver is in proximity to anyone looking for a ride.

It might sound weird to pick up strangers in this manner, but Mapflow requires that all users register with their name, a photo, and a credit card, and that means that drivers can feel confident that whomever they pick up is probably going to be safe. And when they arrive to pick up the rider, the iPhone displays the rider’s picture so the driver can be sure the person is who he or she is supposed to be.

In addition, drivers and riders alike can choose preferences for the type of person with whom they want to travel. This means, for example, that women can choose to ride only with other women.

Further, the service has a quick and easy rating system–again, enabled by the iPhone’s elegant interface–that allows everyone to weigh in on the people with whom they’ve traveled.

Riders pay about 30 cents a mile to use the system, and Mapflow makes its money from a 15 percent commission on the transactions. Drivers pocket the rest.

Clearly, there are many questions the company must answer before the product becomes profitable–and of course, it must first release the application, which it plans to do in about four weeks. But this seems to me to be a very good use of the device, especially given the growing emphasis on getting people to stop driving one to a car.

Another company relying on the iPhone for a product unveiled at DemoFall is Dial Directions.

Say Where, an iPhone application from Dial Directions, aims to give iPhone users the ability to employ speech recognition to get information from services like Yelp and MapQuest.

(Credit: Dial Directions)

This company’s Say Where app is designed to give iPhone users a way to get geographic information from several services–Yelp, YellowPages.com, and Ask.com among them–by simply saying into the device’s microphone where they want to go.

The Say Where software is based on voice recognition technology, and in this case, it relies on the quality of the iPhone microphone, suggested Dial Directions co-founder Amit Desai.

Even more important, given the geographical nature of the application, is the iPhone’s ability to know where it is at any given time, either through the GPS chip in the 3G model or its triangulation ability on the earlier model.

Another company, Blue Lava Technologies, is incorporating the iPhone into the I Love Photos product, which it unveiled at DemoFall on Monday.

That product is a photo-sharing and -tagging service designed to help people automatically build more contextual meaning into the thousands of digital photos they take.

This works in part by having people tag photos of people, especially those in their address books, with their names. Then, the software is able to append those tags to other pictures of the same people, a la photos added to Facebook.

Cory Shaw, Blue Lava’s director of user experience, said the iPhone was a natural device for which to develop, in part because, for now, I Love Photos is available only on the Mac.

The iPhone is “the perfect tool for what we’ve…built,” Shaw said. “Just because the Mac and the iPhone (are) so well integrated with your address book. And just (because the iPhone has the) ability to snap photos. It’s just a natural progression because of what we’ve already built.”

Source: www.download.com

Tingz offers up cross-platform widgets that share data

Tingz is a new widget engine whose big feature is cross platform data sharing. At the TechCrunch50 conference it was shown off on a Mac, iPhone and Windows Media Center PC, with various widgets pulling together the same data set.

The example given was a recipe widget on your computer that tells you how to make something, and if you don’t have one of the ingredients you can bookmark it. This information gets ported over to a shopping list widget, which you can then access on-the-go via the iPhone application.

Presumably users would have it installed on both platforms to make the most use of it. When added on your desktop computer it adds contextual options on a system level so you can clip text, links, or other items and send them to your widget sandbox. Like Shifd, a cross-platform notes tool I use, this is handy way to port it around.

The Windows Media Center app might have been the most out of place, as it was advertised as being large and eye friendly but the text still looked incredibly small. It runs as an application within Media Center, which could make it useful for getting some Web video widgets to run right on your TV.

There are already a ton of services that have this cross platform data sharing, and panelist Digg.com’s Kevin Rose pointed out these tools are invariably at odds with the built-in widget platforms found on OS X and Windows Vista. The one thing I think it has going for it is the built-in payment platform where you give Tingz your credit card credentials and and developers can let you pay for services via their widgets. This was shown off for something like buying movie tickets.

The service is currently in private beta and requires a software installation on all three platforms.

Tings has widgets that share data across multiple platforms, starting with three popular ones.

(Credit: Tingz.net)

Source: www.download.com

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McAfee brings nearly instant malware updates (DownloadExaminer.com)

McAfee brings nearly instant malware updates

What if your desktop security application could detect and remove a new threat that was only minutes old? That’s the impetus behind McAfee Artemis Technology, announced on Monday.

Artemis, which McAfee plans to market within its 2009 consumer products as “Active Protection,” is not focused on hourly updates, or even 15-minute updates, as rival Symantec has. It means instant detection, said Dave Marcus, director of security research and communications for McAfee Avert Labs.

McAfee’s use of Artemis is similar to Trend Micro’s use of cloud-based computing to analyze and produce new signature files within 15 minutes in that software on the desktop, then pass suspicious files to a larger, remote database. McAfee’s Marcus told CNET News that the difference is that McAfee plans to use a desktop communication channel already built into the product, so existing users won’t need to download new software.

The file database maintained at McAfee Avert is much larger than what’s possible on the desktop. Marcus said it’s responsive to minute-by-minute changes in the threat landscape. The new technology opens a doorway to the larger database.

When asked if Artemis is a listening agent, one that reports desktop activity back to McAfee, Marcus dismissed the idea. He said that whenever the McAfee software finds something suspicious and not in its signature database, it’ll ping the larger database back at McAfee Avert Labs to get the signature needed. The files sent back and forth are minuscule, he added.

Marcus confirmed that McAfee would continue to send down daily signature files, but, in the heat of the moment, if a new malware sample is received by a McAfee-protected computer, it’ll have instant protection from the vast database back at the company headquarters.

Source: www.download.com

Office Live Workspace to be out by year-end

Filed under: Internet, News, Productivity, Microsoft, Social Software

According to ZDNet, Microsoft plans to release the final version of Office Live Workspace by the end of 2008. The Google Docs competitor, which was launched as a beta in December of 2007, has been downloaded by over a million users.

Office Live Workspace is NOT a web-based version of Office. Instead, it is something of an Office-add-on (though you can use it on a computer that does not have Office installed). You can upload Office documents (Word, Excel and Powerpoint files) to Office Live Workspace and then access them from another computer (so it is a virtual flash drive of sorts) or grant permission for other users to access your documents. They can then edit and upload versions and share new documents with you.

Live documents cannot be edited directly in OLW, though you can create “web notes” which are similar to Google Docs documents and spreadsheets or “web lists” — that as of right now don’t do calculations. You can also comment on an Office file, so even if you don’t have access to Word to immediately edit a document, you can comment on what changes need to be made.

I have an Office Live Workspace account, but I have to admit, it has received little use. It isn’t so much that Google Docs is that much better — the spreadsheet and forms options are, the word processing is about the same — it is just more ubiquitous and has become a more streamlined part of my workflow.

If you have a Windows Live ID (nee Passport), you can use that to sign-up or sing into the Office Live Workspace beta. It is aimed at Windows users, but works fine on a Mac running Safari (and works with Mac formatted Office documents).

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