Real’s new Rhapsody

So Real is supposedly the leader in the streaming services and today marks a major update so I figured I would check it out.

The new Rhapsody lets anyone* listen to and legally share songs, of their choosing, every month. Consumers simply download the Rhapsody jukebox software from www.rhapsody.com. Once downloaded, they can listen to 25 full tracks from Rhapsody’s library of over one million songs each month, and enjoy unlimited access to the jukebox’s other features at no additional cost. In addition, Real also announced significant enhancements to its critically-acclaimed Rhapsody Unlimited service, and added a new tier called Rhapsody To Go, designed to provide customers the ultimate experience in portable digital music. [RealNetworks]

Interestingly there is literally no way to even view a screenshot of the service thanks to some handy user-agent redirection on the Real site which takes all Mac users to the New RealPlayer 10 for Mac OS X page that has existed for quite a bit longer than just today. There is no mention within the PR that this is Windows only, though I did admittedly know that the previous version was as well.

By now you may have noticed that asterisk next to anyone from the release… it refers to US only customers… no mention of platform dependance anywhere.

The only subscription music service I current utilize is Sirius radio. I don’t want to be renting my music, though I would be interested in more complete samples pre-purchase…. paying a flat rate for the privilege does not cut it.

Server Based Filtering with Fastmail

Something I’ve wanted for a long time was an easy way to filter my mail at the server level. I converted to IMAP some time ago and had wanted to be able to fully take advantage of the server so regardless of where I checked mail (web, wireless or desktop) I always had the same rules applying without having to recreate things in each instance.

I’ve long known about Procmail, but have not had enough inner geek (or patience) to really dig in enough to figure out how to create my own scripts. My web host, Pair only offers (as do most) procmail as an option for server based filtering and as you might expect it’s completely DIY, though with some newsgroup support. I’ve searched and the only thing close to a simple UI to Procmail is Procbuilder, though yet again it was nothing something I was truly comfortable dealing with.

So what to do?? Enter Fastmail.fm.

Fastmail offers a terrific array of email account levels, which should suit most anyone. The most basic (and free) account, lets you get full IMAP (not POP) and advanced webmail access, but you will have to pay the one time fee of $14.95 in order to get access to the SMTP server which is extremely handy if you use a mobile device. I found that what I wanted was the Enhanced Account, which meant I needed to transfer the MX record for atmasphere.net (my main domain) in order to retain my identity while taking advantage of the service.

What do you get?

The main thing I wanted was server based filtering, though Fastmail also offers a significantly more robust spam filtering system (no need to adjust Spam Assassin manually, unless you want) as well as ClamAV virus checking. (About 12 hours after I made the move Pair announced they were upgrading both the Spam Assassin code to 3.0 and also adding ClamAV… though no easy server side filtering.)

If you use any account beyond the free one, you get access to the filtering. The more advanced tiers offer domain management, aliases and more storage. The filtering is very easy to use. Utilizing a simple web form you can pick bits from the headers of email and what action you’d like to have take place – from delete or bounce to filtering to folders of your choosing.

Fastmail made the switchover painless. They have a migration utility (point and click) on the site that allows you to create your new account based totally on the previous one. I imported my email and full folder structure within a few minutes and when I activated my domain transfer was good to go with almost everything in place. From within my mail client (Apple’s Mail) I simply dragged the messages that had come through after the import, but before the transfer and they conveniently copied to my new mailboxes.

Problems Resolved!

I’ve been using client side filtering for a long time and been very frustrated with the amount of mail I don’t want to read (including spam) that arrives on my Treo. Fastmail’s system has allowed my to quickly fix this issue. The Spam filtering is awesome as well. I can’t recall a time when I’ve seen so few spam messages coming through to my account. I am used to seeing anywhere from 800 to 2000 spam messages waiting for me each morning. Today, there was 1 message which got through the Fastmail filter and there were 11 messages pre-sorted to my Junk Mail folder for my review. There was one message incorrectly waiting there, but I easily adjusted that through the Web UI and don’t expect it to be there tomorrow am. Everything else was nicely killed. I love it!

I mainly use email on my PowerBook and via Treo while on the go. ChatterEmail is by far the most robust IMAP Treo mail client, allowing me to create accounts and then mailboxes within each IMAP account to sync or keep connected. Because of the way it works, I get notifications as mail gets filtered to each mailbox of my choosing as it happens which is quite nice.

Before server side filtering, I was receiving all mail in my inbox and having to sort through quite a bit, plus having to kill a ridiculous volume of spam. No more. My mailboxes are clean and I am only tracking what I want while on the go. When I return to me desk, mail is pre-sorted to the appropriate place, leaving my inbox pretty clear with messages more likely to need my attention.

One final note

There’s a bug / feature in Mail.app that does not allow you to continuously check your server folders as you might like – even with the advanced preference set on your account to automatically synchronize changed mailboxes. I was only seeing Mail officially check and show changes when I either manually clicked on a folder (which causes it to make a live network connection) or choosing to manually synchronize my account. The fix for this is pretty simple thanks to the magic of AppleScript and the ever helpful MacOSXHints. Using the later script in the just linked post I now have an applescript force the sync on login every 5 minutes which is the same interval I have mail set to check for new messages.

Yahoo! News Beta

Yahoo! News unveiled their new beta and I really like it quite a bit. You can easily see the topics and from within a topic the main subtopics available. There’s heavy RSS and My Yahoo integration and you can do quite a bit of customization on the whole thing – even adding your own sources.

There’s a tour if you’d like to learn more…

The more Yahoo and Google compete, the better for all of us.

Adobe to buy Macromedia in $3.4 billion stock deal

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Adobe Systems on Monday, seeking to expand in interactive graphics applications for Web site developers and advertisers, announced an agreement to buy Macromedia in a stock-based deal valued at $3.4 billion. [CBS Marketwatch]

This completely changes the graphics world… at least from a competitive perspective! I wonder which overlapping products (GoLive vs Dreamweaver for example…) will continue to be developed following the acquisition. Adobe will now have the most complete software system to manage the creation, management and delivery of creative materials.

Profiles for Palm OS

Profiles is a very cool app for your Treo (or any other Palm device) which lets you define settings and the appropriate options you might like to control. You can set sound levels, screen brightness, your radio and even the color scheme. I’ve just gone through and defined an indoor, outdoor, nighttime reading and meeting mode for my Treo. It’s free and very small. You’ll find it in your preferences after you install which is actually the only bummer as you can’t easily launch it in order to quickly switch modes. Though you can actually utilize your datebook or a simple time mode to switch profiles which is very cool.

Fatal Errors and Fatal Alerts

Fatal Error or Fatal Alert: these terms both sound worse than they really are. A more friendly interpretation is: “Your device has encountered an error running the current program and needs to be reset to get it back to normal.” Learn how to spot Fatal Errors, and the best ways to deal with them. [palmOne]

Why not simply call them something less um… Fatal??

The Core Pocket Media Player

Tcmp-1

Treonauts gave an exciting review to the open source The Core Pocket Media Player (tcmp) for Palm OS today and I just gave it a quick whirl. It’s VERY cool. The UI is a touch rough and does not support the 5-way for browsing but it does work just fine during playback for volume and stop / play. That’s minor though… the video playback quality is excellent!!

The best part as noted by Andrew is that you don’t have to convert anything to MP4 or use Kinoma to convert for use on your device. You can use pretty much whatever file you happen to have ready to watch which is enormously helpful considering conversion time is a killer on ease of use. The screen shot above is a 131.4MB DIVX AVI file encoded at 512 x384 with MP3 sound. I noticed a few skips, but sound is in sync which can be the trickiest bit to nail down.

tmcp is up to v. 0.63, but it’s very solid. If you have 1MB to spare on your Palm OS device and want to be able to watch video while on the go, this is a great option and it seems to just be the beginning…

10.3.9 – No Acid Search just yet

I totally love AcidSearch, which is a very handy search extension for Safari allowing me to use A9, or switch quickly to Froogle among many other searches all within the main search bar. Seems though that 10.3.9, which was released tonight is not supported and neither will Tiger when it arrives shortly. Have to say I hate when that happens.

I was unable to even launch Safari after the update which was starting to freak me out since webkit was working in NetNewsWire. I thought of anything I had installed recently and disabled or deleted, but no dice. A quick trip to the console (always forget that handy tool) led me right to AcidSearch. Find… delete… Safari is back.

Amazon acquires Mobipocket

According to BizJournals, Amazon has just acquired Mobipocket:

Franklin Electronic Publishers Inc. sold its shares in a French software company to Amazon.com Inc. and retired 29 percent of its outstanding preferred stock.

The Burlington City, N.J., publisher of electronic books sold its 16,765 ordinary shares in MobiPocket.com SA to Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) in connection with Amazon’s purchase of all MobiPocket’s outstanding shares.

I’ve read much more through eReader on my Palms, but I suppose those days are numbered with Amazon in the game.

Participatory Culture Foundation

This sounds awesome and basically what I was talking about earlier today except it will be done by the consumer… not the broadcast networks. That said, if Downhill Battle is successful at getting this software distributed on release, it would make a great platform for an existing content creator (networks and cable) to begin narrowcasting right to the end watcher. Sounds highly disruptive, and easy to use. I can’t wait. Hat Tip Boing Boing

Announcing a new platform for internet television and video. Anyone can broadcast full-screen video to thousands of people at virtually no cost, using BitTorrent technology. Viewers get intuitive, elegant software to subscribe to channels, watch video, and organize their video library. The project is non-profit, open source, and built on open standards. Today we’re announcing the project and releasing our current sourcecode. The software is launching in June. [Participatory Culture Foundation]

Google Maps +Craigslist Housing

This is one of those must see things. Paul Rademacher hooked up Craigs housing listings to Google Maps so you can browse visually by quite a few major metros. Just awesome!

Check this out. A truly amazing combination of Craig’s List housing ads with Google Maps. This is exactly why databases should be opened up. If this was handled at the corporate level, a) it would never get done and b) it would take forever. Instead, since both are accessible, some clever person can just…do it. [Gary Stein]

Firefox 1.0.2

Firefox was just updated… Having been using Safari recently as my main browser I have to say it feels incredibly peppy! They have also finally added the one damn feature that was a killer for me previously…

Ff Tabpref

Chatter Goes POP!

Today marks a serious achievement for Treo email as ChatterEmail now supports POP3! While actually still in beta, it’s running very well for me currently with 3 POP3 accounts and 2 IMAP accounts. I have Yahoo and GMail both running in POP and yes that means SSL is fully supported as well since that is required for GMail.

Attachment support is pending so don’t expect to go to crazy just yet. That said you can nicely control both the number of messages downloaded, the amount of those messages delivered (in lines) and also control deletion status. The key feature POP3 clients have been missing is the core strength of Chatter and that is the asynchronous nature of how it works. Running asynchronously means your email can be delivered while in the background of other apps and even with the screen fully off. You can sync your accounts on a set interval (30 min by default, but whatever you like) and know your mail will simply be waiting for you to read it. IMAP accounts can stay connected if you like for the full always on experience.

If you’ve been looking or waiting on features from other POP email clients, Chatter delivers today.

Synfonic – mobile info via SMS

Synfonic is a cool service I’ve just stumbled on which enables some handy info via SMS. After you configure your free account and setup your preferences you can easily get 411, Movies, Weather, Sports, Traffic (Bay Area only for now) and Stock info all with a simple SMS message. A great feature is the ability to define shortcuts which let you either shorten the text for a key word or even a location. The web site (easily viewable via mobile as well) maintains a list of recent queries which might be handy when you get back to your computer or if you accidentally delete an return SMS you wanted to save.

The service is free and only adds a brand plug (for them not an external ad) to cite the source of your returned info. The only issue I’ve had is with the weather service which has yet to recognize my zip code for either weather or forecast commands.

Here’s a helpful tip for Treo users…. Because the Messaging client threads your discussions like a chat, you don’t have to initiate a fresh request if you save your previous messages. Simply hit reply and type in your next request. It saves a few seconds, which might not be critical for you but certainly is nice regardless.

Go Behind the scenes on ChatterEmail

mytreo.net has a great interview with Marc Blank, the author of ChatterEmail. As I’ve mentioned quite a few times Chatter is simply the best email client for the Treo assuming you use IMAP and if your server supported the IDLE command to enable the push effect. Everything is about the change with a pending update. POP3 support is about the be added for everyone still living in mobile dark ages. Unlike other email clients Chatter will continue to support asynchronous functionality with POP just as it does not with IMAP which is a great and significant detail. This means your Treo can manage your mail fully in the background and with the screen off so mail is simply there for when you decide to check.

The new beta with POP3 is coming soon – hopefully within a few days, but probably within a week at the latest.

iPhotoWebShare

iPhotoWebShare is a cool way to share your iPhoto albums or full library via browser on a local or wide (internet) network. I was playing with it a bit today and while slow to load larger (over 2000 images in a particular) albums it totally works as you would expect and lets you view both thumbnails and fuller sized images. It’s free… though a donation is suggested.

Missing the Mac Opportunity

Om Malik’s latest in Business 2.0:

But I think these companies are focusing too much on the numbers and missing the more promising opportunity. Why? Because rolling out a product for the Mac platform ensures a certain buzz and élan, which begets more buzz, which begets sales. Let me explain. By some estimates there are 5 million active Mac users. Not a lot, that’s for sure. But among them are most of the influencers — high-profile bloggers, most (if not all) technology journalists, and, of course, the hipsters.

I tend to agree with Om, and not just because I am a Mac user. While the market share is grossly disproportionate, PC users are by no means guaranteed to pay. Mac users on the other hand are seriously loyal to quality products that enable a positive experience.

I think the main issue though with some of the startups Om reflects on is DRM. Windows Media has it, Quicktime does not and the Mac WMP is not as capable in handling DRM – no version 10 yet. Without that safety net it’s going to be tough to push the convergence products like Sling or Orb without the nasty cease and desist or worse lawsuit from the MPAA or RIAA.