StumbleUpon

Flock continues to make me very happy in hours I’ve had a chance to deal.  The Windows version is super fast!  I love that I have the same sets of things on both sides of my browsing experience – well almost.  I think Sync can be improved quite a bit, but it’s only .5 for now.

One of the nicer things you can do with Firefox, Flock, Mozilla etc, is add in Extensions and Flock has provided a nice list of recommendations for people to try out.  One I had only heard of in passing, but just gave a shot is StumbleUpon.  This is totally cool.  It’s like a WebRing meets Hot or Not.Once installed, you say what kind of sites you like and while browsing simpy say what you like and don’t like so much.  StumbleUpon delivers things of interest.

My first hit – Jumping Cats!  Hilarious…

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Flock has landed!

Flock has landed here in blogland….  I am posting this with the built in blog editor which is a very cool thing.  I can see using this all the time.

Flock integrates with much of what you might already be dealing with which what really drives my interest.  It’s fast – seems stable and uses standard courtesy of the Mozilla team (some of who I believe now work on this).  Integrated del.icio.us, flickr and as mentioned blog editing all in the same place.  I love it.

Much more to play with – I’ve installed on both my PowerBook and work Dell craptop, so I’ll be testing and living on both platforms for comparison and consistency which is always nice.  With del.icio.us built in, I’ll be using it MUCH more as my bookmark engine (also posts my links on the sidebar of the blog and in my feed) which will keep things consistent. 

More to come… nice way to play online tonight.

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Mossberg on DRM

Walt Mossberg on DRM. Amen brother!

For some activists, the very idea of Digital Rights Management is anathema. They believe that once a consumer legally buys a song or a video clip, the companies that sold them have no right to limit how the consumer uses them, any more than a car company should be able to limit what you can do with a car you’ve bought.

But DRM is seen as a lifesaver by the music, television and movie industries. The companies believe they need DRM technology to block the possibility that a song or video can be copied in large quantities and distributed over the Internet, thus robbing them of legitimate sales.

In my view, both sides have a point, but the real issue isn’t DRM itself — it’s the manner in which DRM is used by copyright holders. Companies have a right to protect their property, and DRM is one means to do so. But treating all consumers as potential criminals by using DRM to overly limit their activities is just plain wrong.

Let’s be clear: The theft of intellectual property on the Internet is a real problem. Millions of copies of songs, TV shows and movies are being distributed over the Internet by people who have no legal right to do so, robbing media companies and artists of rightful compensation for their work.

Even if you think the record labels and movie studios are stupid and greedy, as many do, that doesn’t entitle you to steal their products. If your local supermarket were run by people you didn’t like, and charged more than you thought was fair, you wouldn’t be entitled to shoplift Cheerios from its shelves.

On the other hand, I believe that consumers should have broad leeway to use legally purchased music and video for personal, noncommercial purposes in any way they want — as long as they don’t engage in mass distribution. They should be able to copy it to as many personal digital devices as they own, convert it to any format those devices require, and play it in whatever locations, at whatever times, they choose.

The beauty of digital media is the flexibility, and that flexibility shouldn’t be destroyed for honest consumers just because the companies that sell them have a theft problem caused by a minority of people.

Instead of using DRM to stop some individual from copying a song to give to her brother, the industry should be focusing on ways to use DRM to stop the serious pirates — people who upload massive quantities of music and videos to so-called file-sharing sites, or factories in China that churn out millions of pirate CDs and DVDs.

I believe Congress should rewrite the copyright laws to carve out a broad exemption for personal, noncommercial use by consumers, including sharing small numbers of copies among families.

Until then, I suggest that consumers avoid stealing music and videos, but also boycott products like copy-protected CDs that overly limit usage and treat everyone like a criminal. That would send the industry a message to use DRM more judiciously. [WSJ.com]

Perhaps a blog maintaining a list of all the DRM enabled content would be good… that way consumers could more easily steer clear from frustration and of course help stick it to the man. 😉

Outlook Tasks from Email

One of my least favorite functions in Outlook in Tasks. Not only is it generally hidden from view, but there is very little you can do to integrate a task into your email work flow … at least so I thought. Through the 43 Folders mailing list I learned of a trick which is definitely helpful. You can drag an email to the task icon / bar (depending on how minimal you keep things) and a new task will be generated with the contents of the message.

This is great – too bad it can’t be accomplished with a keystroke in the same simple manner as Entourage, Outlook’s Mac cousin.

Last night I had reached my limit in trying to manage tasks while on the go on my laptop and brought my Palm T3 out of retirement. That’s right I am back to two-pieces. Blackberry for email (and calendar which it does nicely) and Palm for Tasks, Calendar and other pocketable info – SplashID returns!

Not sure why both Blackberry and Outlook limit the ease of use and access to Tasks — BB is actually a few menus deep, but Palm keeps it all right there easy to access.

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MCE – My DVDs

Via Addicted to Digital Media comes an easy way for MCE users to manage and play archived DVDs. This is a very nice feature to have since you’ll get the same familiar UI but access to all your DVD content without the need for a DVD changer.

Certainly my Mac HTPC Brethren already know all about this type of function through Matinee . If Apple added support for .vob and Video_TS folder playing you could do the same thing through the nice UI in FrontRow. Guess we’ll have to wait to see if this gets released for additional machines to really play…

Apple to Release Photoshop Rival

This would be a great addition to Photoshop noobs like myself. I’d love more powerful editing with Apple’s ease of use! A great addition to my home workflow for my new digital cam.

According to an unconfirmed report, Apple is planning to announce a professional photo retouching application, during the special press event scheduled for October 19th…

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3ivX your existing movies, compatible for iPod Video (No recompression!)

Gotta love this… an “easy” way to convert those larger higher res files you might find through certain non-ITMS channels for use on the iPod.

Convert your existing movies(Divx, Xvid) into iPod video format without having to re-encode the file. DivX Doctor II updates DivX .avi videos to 3ivx QuickTime (.mov) videos. After the conversion you will be able to play the video smoothly, and the audio glitches inherent in the AVI format will be fixed. The conversion is fast.

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Mac mini needs a Front Row seat

This piece in MacWorld pretty much sums up my question on the FrontRow application… When can I install it on other machines??

Love the idea and want it very badly, but I dont want a new computer… I’d like to do this on a kitchen Mac Mini and via a mini in my home theater. This would be the more ideal way to share content around the home. The simplified UI looks solid and very easy for my Wife and Daughter to use with the remote…

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Yahoo and MSN chat nicely

I received an update from both Cnet and the WSJ tonight on my blackberry that Yahoo and MSN reached an agreement to get their IM services to work together. This is great news for interoperability. Andy notes VOIP will work between platforms as well since they both use SIP. That would be very cool.

AOL … where are you? I’d love to use a single IM service / app and get it all in one. It’s silly to have to use a multi-IM app just because people have signed up with different services. Email plays nicely… IM and enhanced services should as well – especially since these things are free. Perhaps a new leaf with the Yahoo / MSN deal? AOL is pushing more free stuff now anyway…

Plaxo swings and misses

I like the idea of keeping things in sync. I use a variety of machines and handhelds and being able to use the network to my advantage is cool. When I recently installed the new AIM on my work PC, I got Plaxo inluded as you can link your contacts through Plaxo with your AIM screen name and thought this was a good thing.

I updated my contact info since I have moved since I last used the service and got an email back telling me that Jonathan Greene had moved! Um, Plaxo, I am Jonathan Greene and outside of a bad George Constanza impression, I don’t often refer to myself in the third person. The whole premise of Plaxo is keeping all your information up to date — the first step should be knowing who you are.

I only have a single contact card for myself in my files so it’s a bit lame for such a message to get sent…

Missed your show, no problem!

It’s amazing that there truly is an on-demand IP system through the magic and universal goodness of netizens who continue to enable it. Just about a year ago, I had missed a few recordings due to a DVR glitch and in the past two weeks I’ve missed a few more due to having new DVRs in the new house… No problem, thanks to some shared bandwidth and a bit of time (though not that much actually) I was able to recover the shows I wanted to watch.

P2P networks are amazingly powerful and in particular Bit Torrent can be a seriously disruptive technology. I think the right publisher or content creator can really enable a vast content network. Imagine if Bit Torrent was enabled through your set-top box connected to your TV and your playlist was simply a seed request and completed uploads that were being shared back. Given how the credit system works, you could easily be sharing with a vast viewing public in a more high end way to your TV, rather than to you PC. Certainly those of us with HTPC configurations can take advantage of a set-up like this today.

The shows I’ve been finding are the HDTV versions, stripped of ads and ready to watch. How do you like to watch? Even with a DVR, you have to fast forward… this is a straight pass. Last night I was able to pull down something I had missed from Thursday which I would not have been able to have watched that day anyway. It’s quite likely that this one hour show was available sooner, I just did not have the chance to download what I needed any earlier. Regardless when I did it only took about an hour to download to my desktop, which is pretty amazing considering the file is about 350MB.

Bit Torrent recently received a nice round of venture financing which could certainly make this a more accessible system… peerhaps for the IPTV crowd as a shared DVR of sorts against the cable cos. Who knows…

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Google Reader

Google Reader is a web-based newsreader which takes some of the solid simplicity of Google plus the AJAX goodness of Gmail and rolls things together for an almost good thing.

If you read a few feeds, I can see really liking this. I was able to import my full OPML file (which I use through Newsgator, NNW and Bloglines) and while it imported smoothly (even over GPRS on the train) I am not too psyched with how my feeds are displayed. I’m used to folders by topic with feeds rolled up within. Google Reader took my folders and applied their names as tags to the feeds listed. I frankly don’t like this at all given the numbeer of subscriptions I manage.

I really like how easy it is to navigate about and think they’ve nailed that piece. I’d like to see things go further actually and get more sophisticated.

Feedlounge – which I still can’t get access to – seems to offer desktop parity in browser which would be nice. I’m torn between wanting NNW and not being able to use it on a PC so instead I am making sacrifices to maintain sync compatibility through the Web UI.

The Sun-Google partnership

So Sun and Google is pretty straight forward for now… all about MS their collective believe in Open Source.

Of particular note:

Solaris, OpenOffice, Java, open-source software–is there anything in the partnership that isn’t aimed directly at Microsoft?

Not really. Java competes with Microsoft’s .Net and Windows, OpenOffice competes with Microsoft Office, Solaris competes with Windows, and the Google Toolbar provides access to Google online services that compete with Microsoft’s MSN. [ZDNet]

Newsgator buying NetNewsWire?

Om Malik is reporting that Newsgator is acquiring Ranchero, makers of NetNewsWire and the ultimate Mac Newsreader.

Congratulations to Brent if this is true (he has yet to confirm on the mailing list) and if so I would love to see NNW on the PC as well as the sync through the Newsgator API which would be the obvious piece to be added through the acquisition.

Confirmed! I guess I’ll be switching my windows RSS reading to Newsgator Online soon since paid users get a 2 year subscription.

Google and Sun?

PaidContent.org reports on a deal pending between Google and Sun and there’s certainly a few interesting options to consider from the slightly boring to the very interesting!

InternetNews: They’re expected to announce a collaboration to bring StarOffice productivity applications to Google users.
eWeek: For months now rumors have swirled around the release of a possible desktop operating system from Google as it moves to build a comprehensive platform by turning computing into a utility.
AP: Investors suspect that the announcement will concern a sale of Sun’s recently launched Galaxy servers, the technology company’s first foray into commodity servers.
Marketwatch: One possibility is that Google could be buying Sun servers to run the Wi-Fi network. Software could also on the table, based on Schmidt’s background and ties to Sun.

I’m hoping for the GoogleOS – OpenOffice news… server sales are hardly worthy of a joint press announcement.

Flickr Backup

Thomas Hawk through eHomeUpgrade shares how to backup Your Flicker Photos Seems like a very cool way to to not only backup your flickr account, but also to move images between machines as I just did from a Mac to a PC.