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Adobe Lightroom 2.2 supports 5D Mark II (DownloadExaminer.com)

Adobe Lightroom 2.2 supports 5D Mark II

Adobe Systems released Lightroom 2.2 on Monday night, catching up the photography software’s support for the Canon EOS 5D Mark II and several other newer cameras, building in the camera profiles feature, and mashing a number of bugs.

The update (downloads available for Mac OS X and Windows) is the second half of Adobe’s one-two punch for supporting the “raw” image files produced by several higher-end cameras. The first half came in late November when Adobe updated Photoshop’s raw-conversion software.

Canon's 5D Mark II SLR

Canon's 5D Mark II full-frame SLR

(Credit: Canon)

Raw files provide more editing flexibility than camera-produced JPEGs, but they also require manual processing. Software such as Lightroom and Apple’s Aperture can handle this processing, along with cataloging, labeling, and printing. With the constant parade of new cameras, the software must be frequently updated.

Another change in version 2.2 is built-in camera profiles, which give photographers various options for tone and color for their images. I’ve been strongly recommending them since their release on Adobe Labs; I apply the “camera faithful” profile when importing my images to give what I feel is a more natural look. However, Lightroom profiles aren’t available for all cameras.

Since Canon started shipping the 5D Mark II in late November, photographers have been avidly blogging about the arrival of their new $2,700, 21-megapixel, full-frame SLRs–or not-so-avidly about them being backordered. One refrain notes the absence of Lightroom support; Adobe and Apple write their own raw conversion software, which must be updated for each new camera’s proprietary raw file format.

Adobe’s updates have largely been in sync since the Photoshop CS4 and Lightroom 2.x releases, with latter arriving earlier. Hot-to-trot Lightroom users along with those with earlier versions of Photoshop have the option of using Adobe’s DNG Converter software, which converts raw files into Adobe’s Adobe Digital Negative (DNG) format, to bridge the gap.

Lightroom 2.2 also supports the Canon PowerShot G10, Panasonic DMC-G1, Panasonic DMC-FX150, Panasonic DMC-FZ28, Panasonic DMC-LX3, and Leica D-LUX 4, Adobe said.

Here’s Adobe’s list of the bugs fixed in version 2.2:

• Images rendered from the Slideshow export process produced a jagged effect on hard edges relative to the quality of normal JPEG export.

• Increased the number of characters allowed in Web gallery labels beyond 150 characters.

• Catalogs with hundreds of root (top level) folders caused very slow launch times.

• Drag and drop to move a subfolder to a different folder showed the incorrect photos in the grid.

• Print sharpening produced edge artifacts in certain conditions.

• Density defaulted to 100 percent for initial stroke regardless of position of slider.

• The Adjustment brush created blocky, straight edges to brush strokes under certain conditions.

• Lightroom could become unresponsive when using the graduated filter under certain conditions.

• It was possible to lose the ability to edit an adjustment brush setting after applying a graduated filter with hidden pins.

• Turning auto-mask on produced a lag in Lightroom performance in when applying the adjustment brush.

• Print to JPEG functionality produced a low-resolution image when printing photos with panorama aspect ratios.

• Extended characters in a folder name caused Edit in Photoshop functionality to fail.

• Smart collection did not respond to changes in custom metadata.

• Enabling auto-mask produced a lag in performance when applying the local adjustment brush.

Source: www.download.com

Ad-Aware gets an antivirus cousin

Updated December 17 at 9:00 a.m. PST with a comment from Lavasoft.

Lavasoft on Monday unveiled a new antivirus application it hopes will do as well as its runaway hit Ad-Aware.

The encore, Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix, is Lavasoft’s first full-fledged antivirus application. The problem is, it’s nearly identical to one that already exists: Avira AntiVir.

A Lavasoft vice president told CNET in an e-mail:

Yes, we do have a technology partnership with Avira for the anti-virus engine technology, as our company expertise is in anti-spyware. We have customers who have been asking us for years to release a stand-alone anti-virus, because they do not want to be forced into using other security applications built into a suite that may not meet the standards they require…Lavasoft’s contribution to the stand-alone anti-virus is a trusted brand in security software, particularly as we were the first to ever launch a commercial anti-spyware product.

Furthermore, Lavasoft admits to being opaque about their “partnership” except “when asked directly.”

This is disingenuous, especially for a respected company that claims to deliver on a customer promise. It would be one thing if Lavasoft borrowed Avira’s antivirus engine to complement its own antispyware program. It is another to thinly veil a recognized, proprietary product under a new color scheme and stamp it your own.

Performance

Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix shares Avira AntiVir’s interface, down to malware blockers, on-the-fly detection, a scanner, malware removal, and protection from e-mail viruses and Web threats. It offers full system scanning and, in addition, lets you pick from preset scans or create a profile to scan a smaller portion of your PC, for instance, just your “C” drive.

Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix

Like Avira AntiVir, Anti-Virus Helix scans fairly quickly and lets you get hands-on with the results.

(Credit: CNET)

Just like Avira AntiVir, Lavasoft’s new antivirus app performed well in our tests. It beeped when encountering a suspicious file and wouldn’t budge until we ignored, deleted, or quarantined it. While a good practice, the need to babysit the scan could undo the benefit of any overnight scans you schedule.

Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix lets you do any number of things with the data, including print, save, and send reports. However, it could use an internal browser to look up information online about discovered threats.

Other extras can be found in the app’s configuration menu. When you elect to enter expert mode, you’ll be able to turn on rootkit scanning, scan outgoing e-mail messages, and specify MIME types to block (simplistically, any area of an e-mail where malware can hitch a ride). We appreciate being able to add suspicious files from the quarantine interface.

The fact that you have to manually discover and add STMP e-mail and specific MIME details points to one of the app’s biggest problems. Compared to Ad-Aware and others in Lavasoft’s family, the dowdy Anti-Virus Helix is much less user-friendly in visual appeal, navigation, and organization. In fact, it bucks the trend most publishers embrace to favor icons over text lines in order to configure and start protections.

That’s little concern for intermediate and advanced users who thrive on file trees and won’t mind consulting the program’s thorough help file when the tool tips aren’t quite explanatory enough. Casual users who prefer to set it and forget it may wonder why Ad-Aware is so simple to schedule and run but Anti-Virus Helix takes more effort. They may also wonder why this application bundle was marketed under a new name in the first place.

Source: www.download.com

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Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer (DownloadExaminer.com)

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer

Gmail’s integrated software-free PDF viewer has received a nice upgrade courtesy of Google Docs. Now opening up a PDF in Gmail won’t fire up your native PDF viewer (like the slow-to-load Adobe Acrobat), and instead will send you to the document reader built into Google Docs.

There are two other benefits to this, the first being the updated page view which lets you hop around the document a whole lot faster. The other is the built-in zoom, which scales the text to fit your monitor with a higher degree of detail than the text resizer found in your browser.

Gone with the transition is the option to open up PDFs as HTML pages straight from the message, which still remains as a viewing option once you’re in the new PDF view and in search results from Google.com. Presumably Google.com results will get the updated viewer next. This would be a huge benefit to Google Search users without access to a PDF viewer (like on public or shared computers) as Google’s current HTML conversion wipes out much of the formatting that can keep fonts and image placement intact, which can make things like brochures and newsletters unreadable.

The updated PDF viewer in Gmail is now powered by Google Docs.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Source: www.download.com

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Hackers Complete iPhone 3G Unlock (DownloadExaminer.com)

Hackers Complete iPhone 3G Unlock
The iPhone Dev Team, best known for its PwnageTool and QuickPwn hack software, has confirmed the completion of the iPhone 3G unlock. Those interested in jailbreaking their devices are advised not to upgrade to OS 2.2 using iTunes alone. “Over the Christmas break some of our members will be talking at the Chaos Computer C… The iPhone Dev Team, best known for its PwnageTool and QuickPwn hack software, has confirmed the completion of the iPhone 3G unlock. Those interested in jailbreaking their devices are advised not to upgrade to OS 2.2 using iTunes alone.

“Over the Christmas break some of our members will be talking at the Chaos Computer C… (read more)
Source: news.softpedia.com

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Google Chrome breaks out of beta (DownloadExaminer.com)

Google Chrome breaks out of beta

Google’s browser, Chrome, is officially leaving beta today.

Yesterday at the Le Web 08 conference in Paris, Google VP Marissa Mayer told TechCrunch’s Mike Arrington that the move would be happening, but she did not say when. Google representatives have confirmed the Thursday change of status for Chrome.

How to get it
The first people to get the non-beta version will be new users who download the browser directly from Google. Also Thursday, a small proportion of existing Chrome users will automatically get the update. On Friday, all the remaining Chrome users (10 million, according to Google) will get the download. (You can also download it from CNET here.)

If you want to know whether you have the update, check Chrome’s About page. If you don’t have the current version, you can force the update from the dialog box. Normally, Chrome checks for updates every fifth hour of use.

The update system has been used for 14 updates of the beta product so far. This 15th update will be the first non-beta release.

Chrome's privacy options are now in one place.

What’s included
Sundar Pichai, vice president of product development, told me that this release of Chrome will have “tons and tons of bug fixes,” especially around audio and video playback, which should now be “more stable.” Chrome will also be faster. Pichai said Google’s browser is 1.4 to 1.5 times faster (depending on which benchmarks you use) than it was at launch.

There are new features, as well. The bookmark manager is being revised to do a better job for people who have lots of bookmarks, and for those who want to import or export bookmark lists. Privacy options have all been consolidated into one dialog box. And there are improvements in the security features of the browser.

Features that the team is still working on include autofill for forms, native support for RSS feeds, “and so on.” But the top three features that Pichai says he and his team are working on are extension support and Mac and Linux versions.

“All the developement is in the open,” Pichai said. Curious users can monitor Chrome’s progress at Chromium.org, or download the Google Chrome Channel Chooser, which will tell their installation of Chrome to download either the betas between major updates of Chrome, or even the nightly (and often buggy) builds of the browser as it is developed. Pichai recommends that last option for those dying of curiosity about Chrome’s upcoming extension support.

What’s in a Google beta?
For a Google product, Chrome is leaving beta very quickly — 100 days after public launch. Pichai said that Chrome now meets Google’s “internal standards for stability and performance” and that its heavy use inside Google before its public release has contributed to its rapid graduation to released product status.

But clearly there’s more at play here than that. For comparison’s sake, only recently did Google remove the beta tag from Picasa, and it was years old and in its third major version. Gmail is still in beta, despite being relied on by tens of millions of users.

Google has big plans and goals for Chrome. Truly widespread adoption of the product won’t happen in businesses or on the pre-installed software suites of new computers until the product is not just known to be stable by users but vouched for as production-ready by Google — and that means taking it out of beta, even if the word itself means less than it used to.

Rate Google Chrome on Download.com.

Source: www.download.com

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Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer (DownloadExaminer.com)

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer

Gmail’s integrated software-free PDF viewer has received a nice upgrade courtesy of Google Docs. Now opening up a PDF in Gmail won’t fire up your native PDF viewer (like the slow-to-load Adobe Acrobat), and instead will send you to the document reader built into Google Docs.

There are two other benefits to this, the first being the updated page view which lets you hop around the document a whole lot faster. The other is the built-in zoom, which scales the text to fit your monitor with a higher degree of detail than the text resizer found in your browser.

Gone with the transition is the option to open up PDFs as HTML pages straight from the message, which still remains as a viewing option once you’re in the new PDF view and in search results from Google.com. Presumably Google.com results will get the updated viewer next. This would be a huge benefit to Google Search users without access to a PDF viewer (like on public or shared computers) as Google’s current HTML conversion wipes out much of the formatting that can keep fonts and image placement intact, which can make things like brochures and newsletters unreadable.

The updated PDF viewer in Gmail is now powered by Google Docs.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Source: www.download.com

Tags: , , , ,

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer (DownloadExaminer.com)

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer

Gmail’s integrated software-free PDF viewer has received a nice upgrade courtesy of Google Docs. Now opening up a PDF in Gmail won’t fire up your native PDF viewer (like the slow-to-load Adobe Acrobat), and instead will send you to the document reader built into Google Docs.

There are two other benefits to this, the first being the updated page view which lets you hop around the document a whole lot faster. The other is the built-in zoom, which scales the text to fit your monitor with a higher degree of detail than the text resizer found in your browser.

Gone with the transition is the option to open up PDFs as HTML pages straight from the message, which still remains as a viewing option once you’re in the new PDF view and in search results from Google.com. Presumably Google.com results will get the updated viewer next. This would be a huge benefit to Google Search users without access to a PDF viewer (like on public or shared computers) as Google’s current HTML conversion wipes out much of the formatting that can keep fonts and image placement intact, which can make things like brochures and newsletters unreadable.

The updated PDF viewer in Gmail is now powered by Google Docs.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Source: www.download.com

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Screenium - Create Your Own Video Tutorials in No Time (DownloadExaminer.com)

Screenium - Create Your Own Video Tutorials in No Time
Lately, most of those long, explanatory written materials have been replaced by the How To videos,

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EPA Considers Letting Oil Refineries Pollute Some More (DownloadExaminer.com)

EPA Considers Letting Oil Refineries Pollute Some More
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced on Friday that it was seeking to revise regulations set in place last June, which forced refineries to be very careful about the amounts of emissions they pumped into the atmosphere. Following the lobby of several major oil associations, EPA seeks to give companies another 18 months to install anti-pollution software, as well as to eliminate the flow rate limit, that the industry opposed.

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Google Chrome breaks out of beta (DownloadExaminer.com)

Google Chrome breaks out of beta

Google’s browser, Chrome, is officially leaving beta today.

Yesterday at the Le Web 08 conference in Paris, Google VP Marissa Mayer told TechCrunch’s Mike Arrington that the move would be happening, but she did not say when. Google representatives have confirmed the Thursday change of status for Chrome.

How to get it
The first people to get the non-beta version will be new users who download the browser directly from Google. Also Thursday, a small proportion of existing Chrome users will automatically get the update. On Friday, all the remaining Chrome users (10 million, according to Google) will get the download. (You can also download it from CNET here.)

If you want to know whether you have the update, check Chrome’s About page. If you don’t have the current version, you can force the update from the dialog box. Normally, Chrome checks for updates every fifth hour of use.

The update system has been used for 14 updates of the beta product so far. This 15th update will be the first non-beta release.

Chrome's privacy options are now in one place.

What’s included
Sundar Pichai, vice president of product development, told me that this release of Chrome will have “tons and tons of bug fixes,” especially around audio and video playback, which should now be “more stable.” Chrome will also be faster. Pichai said Google’s browser is 1.4 to 1.5 times faster (depending on which benchmarks you use) than it was at launch.

There are new features, as well. The bookmark manager is being revised to do a better job for people who have lots of bookmarks, and for those who want to import or export bookmark lists. Privacy options have all been consolidated into one dialog box. And there are improvements in the security features of the browser.

Features that the team is still working on include autofill for forms, native support for RSS feeds, “and so on.” But the top three features that Pichai says he and his team are working on are extension support and Mac and Linux versions.

“All the developement is in the open,” Pichai said. Curious users can monitor Chrome’s progress at Chromium.org, or download the Google Chrome Channel Chooser, which will tell their installation of Chrome to download either the betas between major updates of Chrome, or even the nightly (and often buggy) builds of the browser as it is developed. Pichai recommends that last option for those dying of curiosity about Chrome’s upcoming extension support.

What’s in a Google beta?
For a Google product, Chrome is leaving beta very quickly — 100 days after public launch. Pichai said that Chrome now meets Google’s “internal standards for stability and performance” and that its heavy use inside Google before its public release has contributed to its rapid graduation to released product status.

But clearly there’s more at play here than that. For comparison’s sake, only recently did Google remove the beta tag from Picasa, and it was years old and in its third major version. Gmail is still in beta, despite being relied on by tens of millions of users.

Google has big plans and goals for Chrome. Truly widespread adoption of the product won’t happen in businesses or on the pre-installed software suites of new computers until the product is not just known to be stable by users but vouched for as production-ready by Google — and that means taking it out of beta, even if the word itself means less than it used to.

Rate Google Chrome on Download.com.

Source: www.download.com

Tags: , , , ,

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer (DownloadExaminer.com)

Gmail gets a proper PDF viewer

Gmail’s integrated software-free PDF viewer has received a nice upgrade courtesy of Google Docs. Now opening up a PDF in Gmail won’t fire up your native PDF viewer (like the slow-to-load Adobe Acrobat), and instead will send you to the document reader built into Google Docs.

There are two other benefits to this, the first being the updated page view which lets you hop around the document a whole lot faster. The other is the built-in zoom, which scales the text to fit your monitor with a higher degree of detail than the text resizer found in your browser.

Gone with the transition is the option to open up PDFs as HTML pages straight from the message, which still remains as a viewing option once you’re in the new PDF view and in search results from Google.com. Presumably Google.com results will get the updated viewer next. This would be a huge benefit to Google Search users without access to a PDF viewer (like on public or shared computers) as Google’s current HTML conversion wipes out much of the formatting that can keep fonts and image placement intact, which can make things like brochures and newsletters unreadable.

The updated PDF viewer in Gmail is now powered by Google Docs.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Source: www.download.com

Google Chrome breaks out of beta

Google’s browser, Chrome, is officially leaving beta today.

Yesterday at the Le Web 08 conference in Paris, Google VP Marissa Mayer told TechCrunch’s Mike Arrington that the move would be happening, but she did not say when. Google representatives have confirmed the Thursday change of status for Chrome.

How to get it
The first people to get the non-beta version will be new users who download the browser directly from Google. Also Thursday, a small proportion of existing Chrome users will automatically get the update. On Friday, all the remaining Chrome users (10 million, according to Google) will get the download. (You can also download it from CNET here.)

If you want to know whether you have the update, check Chrome’s About page. If you don’t have the current version, you can force the update from the dialog box. Normally, Chrome checks for updates every fifth hour of use.

The update system has been used for 14 updates of the beta product so far. This 15th update will be the first non-beta release.

Chrome's privacy options are now in one place.

What’s included
Sundar Pichai, vice president of product development, told me that this release of Chrome will have “tons and tons of bug fixes,” especially around audio and video playback, which should now be “more stable.” Chrome will also be faster. Pichai said Google’s browser is 1.4 to 1.5 times faster (depending on which benchmarks you use) than it was at launch.

There are new features, as well. The bookmark manager is being revised to do a better job for people who have lots of bookmarks, and for those who want to import or export bookmark lists. Privacy options have all been consolidated into one dialog box. And there are improvements in the security features of the browser.

Features that the team is still working on include autofill for forms, native support for RSS feeds, “and so on.” But the top three features that Pichai says he and his team are working on are extension support and Mac and Linux versions.

“All the developement is in the open,” Pichai said. Curious users can monitor Chrome’s progress at Chromium.org, or download the Google Chrome Channel Chooser, which will tell their installation of Chrome to download either the betas between major updates of Chrome, or even the nightly (and often buggy) builds of the browser as it is developed. Pichai recommends that last option for those dying of curiosity about Chrome’s upcoming extension support.

What’s in a Google beta?
For a Google product, Chrome is leaving beta very quickly — 100 days after public launch. Pichai said that Chrome now meets Google’s “internal standards for stability and performance” and that its heavy use inside Google before its public release has contributed to its rapid graduation to released product status.

But clearly there’s more at play here than that. For comparison’s sake, only recently did Google remove the beta tag from Picasa, and it was years old and in its third major version. Gmail is still in beta, despite being relied on by tens of millions of users.

Google has big plans and goals for Chrome. Truly widespread adoption of the product won’t happen in businesses or on the pre-installed software suites of new computers until the product is not just known to be stable by users but vouched for as production-ready by Google — and that means taking it out of beta, even if the word itself means less than it used to.

Rate Google Chrome on Download.com.

Source: www.download.com

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