Filed under: iphone

Apple Announces new features for Iphone and Mac

Apple's Epic 117-Minute Keynote in Just 8 Minutes

Click the link to see the highlights of Apple's keynote speech about their new release of the Mac OS X codenamed Lion and iOS 5 for Iphones and iPods. The actual speeches were 2 hours but this video is 7 minutes of highlights

Some of these ideas will filter through to other systems and devices so even if you don't have a Mac or iPhone this is the kind of stuff you can expect to see real soon.
lots of web/cloud based apps and the like

3 thoughts I have:

  1. Some of these services don't work so well in Australia due to erratic mobile/3G coverage
    And with the current price of mobile data who would want to pay for it anyway
  2. Twitter is going to be huge
    It's currently only used by the tech-minded but with Twitter support integrated into iPhones I think the use will grow
  3. Steve Jobs needs to eat a sandwich :)
    he is famously vegatarian etc but I think he looks unhealthy

Adobe tops security risks

First off a BIG REMINDER - Mullies monthly meeting is on this Thursday 26-05-11
7pm at the Ulladulla CRC (St Vincent St) as usual
The topic this month is FREE - Free things you can do with your computer, like

  • Games,
  • Communication (email, chat, video),
  • Publications - magazines, newspapers, books,
  • Groups

And lots more - see you there

Below are a couple of items worth reading

Adobe tops security risk list - News - PC & Tech Authority

Article above lists the top 10 programs that pose a security risk on people's PCs. many of the vulnerabilities are for the same programs, especially Adobe Reader and Adobe Flash.

For the average user I have 2 suggestions:

  1. Don't use Adobe Reader. Try Foxit PDF Reader or even better PDF-X change Viewer instead
    FoxIt will look a little more familiar to users of Adobe but I highly recommend PDF-Xchange viewer for all the extra features. Both are free and much smaller and faster than Adobe
  2. Use Secunia PSI on your computer to make sure your programs and add-ons such as Flash player are kept up to date. Secunia PSI is also free

Sleep and hibernation: frequently asked questions

Many of us are moving to using laptop computers and away from desktops for the first time. With the relative prices these days it is not surprising.
New users might not understand what all the different 'shut down' settings mean so this Microsoft site will give you a quick guide

Four Ways to Make Your iPhone Battery Last Longer - NYTimes.com

For those of us blessed/cursed with an iPhone these tips will likely be of great assistance

 

The Ins and Outs of Using Gadgetry

Great article about the simple tricks you can do with technology
We have all moved on from not being able to program the clock on the VCR or microwave but how many of us know all these simple tricks about phones, cameras and computers?
All of us have a friend who is clueless about their PC or phone - please pass this on to them

Every time a reader asks me a basic question, struggles with a computer or lets a cellphone keep ringing at a performance, I have the same thought: There ought to be a license to use technology.

I’m not trying to insult America’s clueless; exactly the opposite, in fact. How is the average person supposed to know the essentials of their phones, cameras and computers? There’s no government leaflet, no mandatory middle-school class, no state agency that teaches you some core curriculum. Instead, we muddle along, picking up scattershot techniques as we go. We wind up with enormous holes in our knowledge.

This week, for example, a reader asked me about those weird, square, pixelated black-and-white bar codes that are cropping up on billboards, movie posters, signs, magazine ads and business cards. Nobody ever bothered to explain them. (They’re QR codes — quick response bar codes. You can scan them with your iPhone’s or Android phone’s camera, using a special app that translates it into an ad or takes you to a related Web page.)

That interaction made me realize that it’s time to publish the first installment of what should be the Big Book of Basic Technology Knowledge — the prerequisite for using electronics in today’s society. Some may seem basic, but you’ll probably find at least a couple of “I didn’t know thats!” among them.

Cellphones

¶ Searching for a signal scarfs up battery juice appallingly quickly. Turn your phone off, or put it into Airplane Mode, before you travel out of cellphone range — for example, on a plane or, for AT&T users, Manhattan and San Francisco.

¶ When you need the phone number, address or directions for any commercial establishment, call 800-BING-411 for an amazingly good voice-activated agent. (Thank you, Microsoft.)

¶ You can skip the inane 15-second voice-mail instructions when leaving a message (“To page this person, press 5”) — if you know your friend’s cellphone carrier. If it’s Verizon, press * to cut directly to the beep. AT&T or Sprint, press 1. T-Mobile, press #. (Better yet: Do the world a favor and add this trick to your own greeting: “To cut to the beep, press 1.”)

¶ If you travel overseas, you may return to a smartphone bill for $5,000 or more, thanks to the staggering international Internet fees. (You might not even know your phone is online — if it checks e-mail every 15 minutes, for example.) Despite many well-publicized horror stories, some people still don’t realize they should call the cellphone company before traveling to buy a special temporary overseas plan.

Cameras

¶ The half-press trick eliminates the frustrating delay when you press a pocket camera’s shutter button. Frame your shot, then half-press the shutter button. The camera beeps when it has locked focus — and that’s the time-consuming part. When pushed the rest of the way down, you snap the picture instantly. No lag.

¶ Your flash is useless if the subject is more than about eight feet away. Turn it off. (This means you, concertgoers and football fans.)

¶ If you erase photos from your memory card accidentally, you can still recover them if you haven’t used the card since. For about $30, you can download memory-card recovery programs; Google “memory card recovery” to find them.

App Phones

¶ On the iPhone, the camera doesn’t snap the photo until you release the on-screen shutter button. That’s good to know if you want a steady, blur-free shot. Frame the shot with your finger on the button, then snap the photo by lifting off the screen instead of tapping it.

¶ On iPhone, Android, BlackBerry and Palm/H.P. phones, tap the Space bar twice at the end of a sentence. You get a period, a space and a capitalized next letter, without hunting for punctuation keys.

¶ Also on those phones, you can type dont, wont, youre, didnt and so on. The phone adds the apostrophe to those automatically. (But you’ll have to learn the difference between it’s and its.)

¶ On a BlackBerry, hold a letter key down to capitalize it.

The Web

¶ You can press Alt+D to highlight the Address bar at the top of your Web browser. Without touching the mouse, type the site name you want.

¶ You don’t have to type “http://www” into your Web browser. Just type “nytimes.com” or “dilbert.com,” for example. In Safari or Firefox, you can even omit the “.com.” In Internet Explorer, you can press Ctrl+Enter to add “.com,” or Ctrl+Shift+Enter for “.org.”

¶ You can tap the Space bar to scroll down by one screenful. Add the Shift key to scroll back up again. (You can also hit the Page Up/Page Down keys, if you have them.)

¶ When you’re filling an order form, you don’t have to slide six miles down the pop-up menu to choose your state. Instead, type the first letter to select it without the mouse. (If you get the wrong state, press the same key again. For example, press C once for California, again for Colorado and a third time for Connecticut.)

¶ When you get an error message — in a program, on your smartphone, on your tablet — search it on Google. You’ll find out what it means instantly.

¶ If you’re trying to paste some ridiculously long Web address where it would be confusing to read (or impossible to fit, as on Twitter), visit a site like Tinyurl.com or Bit.ly. These free sites convert long addresses into very compact ones.

Editing Text

¶ You can double-click a word to highlight it. (You don’t have to drag the mouse across it, in other words.) You can triple-click a word to select the entire paragraph.

¶ When you see highlighted text — in your word processor, for example, or in a Web browser address bar — you don’t have to delete it first. Just start typing.

¶ Sick of how Word automatically creates clickable links, boldface words, indented bulleted or numbered lists and other formatting as you type?

The on/off switches for these features exist, but they’re well hidden. In Word 2010 (Windows), open the File menu; click Options, Proofing, AutoCorrect Options, then AutoFormat Options. On the Mac (Word 2011), open the Tools menu; click AutoCorrect, then AutoFormat As You Type.

Mac Specials

¶ When you buy something online, don’t waste paper by printing the confirmation page. Instead, choose Print, and from the PDF pop-up menu, choose “Save PDF to Web Receipts Folder.” You get a beautiful PDF copy stashed in Documents, in a folder called Web Receipts.

¶ You can view most documents without opening a program to do it. At the desktop, highlight the icon and then tap the Space bar — a fantastic way to preview photos, but also great for Office documents, PDF files, movies, sounds and so on.

¶ Press Command-Delete to put a highlighted icon into the Trash.

Windows Specials

¶ When you want to send a file to someone, right-click its icon; from the shortcut menu, choose Send to Mail Recipient. Windows thoughtfully creates an outgoing e-mail message with the file attached. (If it’s a photo, Windows even offers to let you shrink them down to reasonable e-mailable size.)

¶ Ever wonder about the Windows-logo key? It sets off a host of useful functions: press it with F for Find, with D to see the desktop with all windows hidden, with L to lock the screen while you wander off to get coffee, and so on.

¶ You don’t have to pay for antivirus and anti-spyware software, year after year. Microsoft offers a perfectly good free security program.

All right, there’s a start. There are more waiting for you at nytimes.com/pogue.

Here’s hoping that your tech knowledge is just a little less sketchy.

 

Media Coders – Movies to other formats

Grant asked me a question a few weeks ago and I thought I would share the answer

Do you know of any good free apps that can convert DVD video to Xvid or DivX? I have a Media player (think it only supports DivX) that is filling up and I need to convert to smaller formats

I have tried a few different programs and I am not totally happy with any of them. Among the ones I have tried are

WinFF and MediaCoder and both are open source and thus free

WinFF is a simple program to change file types. A couple of clicks and you are done. It doesn’t really support whole DVDs or FLV video from websites (like YouTube). But it’s handy if you want a simple program to change say an Apple QuickTime MOV file to DivX or similar

Media_httpbiggmattcom_chcjd

MediaCoder is a much more sophisticated program with many, many options. For the casual or new user it can therefore be very complicated. However it is powerful and offers lots of options.

Both WinFF and MediaCoder use the FFmpeg engine for decoding and are free and open source.

For ripping DVD’s to alternative files like DivX I use DVDFab with the mobile option. It has lots of settings for converting DVDs to formats for your phone, iPod or portable device. It is also my program of choice for DVD copying and back-up. Unfortunately this program is not free. You should also be careful when dealing with copyrighted materials.

Media_httplh4ggphtcom_bymct

To back up my opinions and provide a few alternatives here's a link to a newsletter I read a while ago
http://www.windowssecrets.com/2008/09/25/04-Converters-maximize-your-video-file-options

Windows Secrets newsletter is pretty good. There's a free version or you can get the paid version for $1 US (or however much you want to pay). Highly recommended reading!

When you are converting files for a specific device or purpose be careful what codec you select for the conversion. Grant will probably find his media centre can play at least some version of Xvid and/or DivX codec but it may be an older version. I have 2 different brand DVD players that play DivX and they play Xvid too. You just need to experiment a bit with what version of the codec you rip/compress to so for best results convert to the format that the player supports. Read the manual for the media centre and download the DivX codec version it specifies for maximum compatibility.

Being able to play the compressed files directly is great as you can fit lots of files on a single disc and still watch them in good quality. I have whole seasons of a TV show on a single DVD. Obviously you need a special kind of DVD player for this but they are pretty common these days.

The next question arises – what if I have a pile of compressed video, maybe from your camcorder or TV shows you have recorded, and you want to watch them or share with friends who don’t have a special DVD player?

You need to turn them back into a DVD of course and I will give you a list of programs to try for this too in a separate post.

Audiko is cool – especially if you have an iPhone

Confession time – I just bought a new iPhone. One of the Aussie 3G models which is much sleeker than the hacked 2G US model I tried once before.

So far I am very happy with it. Not only is it a good phone with some unique features it is of course geek to the extreme!

One of the Apple tricks is to try to get you to pay for ringtones – you can download them from the iTunes store. But us crafty geeks know better. A quick search revealed Audiko.net

At Audiko you can download ringtones for old phones or for the new iPhone – completely free! You don’t even need the songs/sound on your PC. Just do a search and they will have it for you. Just find the ringtone you want and hit download for iPhone. When the download option comes up click “open with iTunes” and you are done. Awesome and so easy. Thanks Audiko.

Here’s my new ringtone:

by audiko.net — ringtones.