Thursday, April 30, 2009

X-Men Origins: Wolverine (Game)

From the award-winning studio Raven Software, the video game enlists players to experience the tormented origins of Wolverine, from his escape of the Weapon X facility to the jungles of Africa and beyond. The game is currently in development for the Xbox 360 video game and entertainment system, PLAYSTATION 3 computer entertainment system, Windows PC, Wii home video game system, Nintendo DS, PlayStation 2 computer entertainment system and PSP (PlayStation Portable) system, and is not yet rated by the ESRB. X-Men Origins: Wolverine is an epic action-adventure featuring a true-to-character Wolverine gameplay experience that takes gamers through and beyond the movie's storyline. Set in a variety of vivid real-world locales, the title challenges players to hone their animal instinct as they uncover hidden dangers, hunt and destroy enemies, and take on seemingly insurmountable situations while discovering the truth about Wolverine's tragic past. With razor-sharp adamantium claws unsheathed, the future X-Man enacts lightning-quick combat, evasive maneuvers, in-depth combo attacks, and an array of brutal finishing moves. Wolverine doesn't just deliver massive damage, either - he also takes it, thanks to his mutant regenerative power that heals him in real time right before the player's eyes. The title is in development by Raven Studios and Amaze Entertainment.


Source:Gameinfowire.com

The Sims 3

The freedom of The Sims™ 3 will inspire you with endless creative possibilities and amuse you with unexpected moments of surprise and mischief!

Create over a million unique Sims and control their lives. Customize everything from their appearances, to their personalities and even the home of their dreams. Then, send your Sims out to explore new locations around town and to meet other Sims in the neighborhood.

Go online to download exclusive content and show off your own creations to the world. With all-new quick challenges and rewarding game play, The Sims 3 gives you the freedom to choose whether (or not!) to fulfill your Sims’ destinies and make their wishes come true.

poza The Sims 3


The Sims 3 lets you immerse truly unique Sims in an open, living neighborhood just outside their door! The freedom of The Sims 3 will inspire you with endless possibilities and amuse you with unexpected moments of surprise and mischief.

New Seamless, Open Neighborhood—Explore the neighborhood freely.
Your Sims can roam throughout their neighborhood, visit neighbors’ homes, and explore the surroundings. They can stroll downtown to hang out with friends, meet someone new at the park, or run into colleagues on the street. If your Sims are in the right place at the right time, who knows what might happen?!

New Create A Sim—Create any Sim you can imagine.
New easy-to-use design tools allow for unlimited customization to make truly individual Sims. Determine your Sims’ shape and size, from thin to full-figured to muscular—and everything in between! Choose your Sims’ facial features, their exact skin tone, hair, eye shape and color and select their clothing and accessories.

New Realistic Personalities—Every Sim is a unique person, with a distinct personality.
Create realistic Sims with distinctive personalities. Select from dozens of personality traits and combine them in fun ways. The combination of traits you choose—brave, artistic, loner, perfectionist, klepto, romantic, clumsy, paranoid, and much, much more—help shape the behavior of your Sims and how they interact with other Sims. Your Sims can now rise above their basic set of every day needs. They are complex individuals with unique personalities.

New Unlimited Customization—Everyone can customize everything!
Build your dream house or design the ultimate home. Customize everything from floors to flowers, shirts to sofas, wallpaper to window shades. It’s fun and easy to change colors and patterns giving you endless personalization options. Or you can populate your Sims’ neighborhood with pre-designed buildings and furnishings. Which of your Sims will live in high-end mansions, cool bachelor pads, ultimate dream homes or low-cost cottage.

Sims 3 Facts Print
The Sims 3 is the Next Generation of Sims Games from EA. But with all the news and previews, interviews and information what are the actual facts behind the game which lies hidden amongst all that text. Here is a quick summary of information collected from all those pages of information.

>> Items marked in red, have recently been added.
>> Items marked in blue, have recently been updated..

Sims World, General & Neighbourhood - Get the low down on The Sims 3
  • Seamless Neighbourhood, no longer will there be multiple neighbourhoods such as Down Town, Vacation etc...
  • Load Time when moving around the neighbourhood has been eliminated
  • A whole town to explore, includes Neighbours, Shops and Recreation
  • Play pranks on the neighbour
  • Follow Sims while on their way to work.
  • The Sims Town is now compared to the engine which runs SimCity, but on a much larger scale
  • Close to 90 houses in the town, each with its own family.
  • When released only include 1 neighbourhood, but the developers plan to release a tool at a later stage to add more neighbourhoods.
  • They also have plans to include a neighbourhood editor to allow you to build your own town. But these will only be released after a few weeks of the game being released.
  • Everyone in the town will age together.
  • Confirmed community places are: Pool, Gym, Park, Bistro, Art gallery, Library, Clothing store, City Hall and Bookstore.
  • When the wind blows, you will be able to see the leave move on the trees.
  • Sims can enjoy the beautiful sunsets.
  • Seasons have not been confirmed in the base game, however it is expected that they will be an add-on feature in future expansions.
  • Wind however is a factor which will be available in the base game of The Sims 3.
  • Trees and shrubs sway in the breeze!
  • There is no longer a grid, all objects can be placed at any angle, ie, 360 degrees, this can be performed by holding ALT.
  • The town is fully customizable and allows you to remove and change Lots and Sims.
  • "Map Tags" float over areas of the hood - a quick way to find your way around.
  • Sims also have Map Tags so you can find them easily
  • Sims can move nearer to their place of work, or even find work near home to reduce travelling time.
  • Land values based on more than just size, waterfront/beach etc.
  • The Neighborhood stories and inhabitants will be a prequel to the Sims 1 Neighborhood.
  • You can move your entire house to a new (bigger) lot when your current lot gets too small.
  • You can slide in and our of your game to zoom on the netire neighbourhood or inspect a Sim walking in the street.
  • There are 2 kinds of buildings; Buildings that you can build yourself and look into, and buildings where your sim disapears into and re-appears after some time.
  • These buildings are ploppable; it means that you can just select them from a menu and put it in the Nhood all made and ready.
  • That Neighbourhood will consist of about 90 different lots.
  • Upon registering your game with EA, an additional neighbourhood will be activated on your game.
  • You don’t need to use all five character trait slots.
  • You can buy houses furnished or unfurnished.
  • You can set lifespans to range from 25–1,000 days.
  • Some traits give you special abilities. They can be useful to improve skills (Artistic and Athletic traits, for example) and to get special interactions (childish sims can play with toys. Mooch sims can ask for food…).
  • If you wish to, you can disable neighbourhood aging and events, so that Sims will not progress and marry/divorce etc without you telling the to do so.


Babies & Toddlers - When is the due date?
  • Clear objectives in life will be modelled by the traits, such as if the Sims wants to attend Tertiary education or if they want to get married.
  • Traits are passed down to the child, also what the mother does during her pregnancy will affect the child selection of traits.
  • Toddlers can now visit the city, but have to be accompanied by an adult, whilst children can roam freely.

Looks (CAS) - Sims have changed in the way they look!
  • Now also includes the Asian Skin Tone
  • Sims no longer have to have shoes that are fixed to the suite, as with The Sims 2. These are now separate and can be chosen individually.
  • Weight & Fitness are controlled by sliders, Sims will also gradually get bigger or muscular with the sliders.
  • Arms & Legs are individually adjustable with sliders.
  • Clothes are customizable using the CAS screen.
  • Hair, Eyes and Skin tone is all controlled through sliders and colour pallets, allowing for a wild choice of customization for your Sims.
  • New facelift feature allows you to completely remodel your Sims face.
  • There is a way to choose 4 different hair colours on one sim. Tips, roots, base colour and hi-lites.
  • You can add shoes, socks, jewellery, gloves necklaces and earrings as categories on CAS.
  • Sims now also have socks.
  • Adult now considered more 'middle age' and includes wrinkles.
  • Facial detail (now includes moles).
  • Foot shape changes with show style (high heels, flat sandals etc.)
  • Voices will be selected from a set of 4 male & 4 female pitches, these will be determined by factors such as mouth size, gender and age. Other factors may also influence how the voice sounds.
  • Able to model the families to TV shows, live out the lives of Desperate Housewives or maybe a bit of Sopranos.
  • Sims can now also walk around barefoot
  • Shirts and jackets are separate, and can be chosen to hang our or be tucked into pants.
  • Clothing can change color using a pallet in the CAS
  • Male Sims can wear makeup.
  • You can customize facial paint. Imagine giving the tiger pattern green strips.
  • Most of the catalog items and clothes were created in-game using the “Create-a-Style” tool.
  • There’s a “Create-a-Twin” tool in CAS that lets you make an identical twin of whatever Sim you apply it to.
  • Hairstyles can be independently set for each outfit.
  • Accessories (gloves, socks, glasses, bracelets, earrings, shoes ...) can be customized with the tool "Create a Style."
  • The elderly have gray hair by default, but if we can choose a color.

Work, Home & School - Things that you can do at work or as a family...
  • All new improved vegetable patches, to grow what ever food you like.
  • Confirmed careers are Athletic, Journalism, Medical, Music, Military, Business, Law Enforcement, Criminal, Politics, Entertainment, Cooking, Education and Science.
  • Each career will have its own building.
  • Sims will not be intractable while at work or school.
  • Any objects you want to move you can drag and drop from one lot to another . You can also, if you start to build a lot and then decide it's not big enough, move the house to another lot!
  • Job aspects that you can do at home called 'opportunities'.
  • Careers have more gameplay - No longer just sent to work - Can now decide how hard to work - You can choose a less stressful day but will gain less skill - You could sacrifice hard work for doing more socializing at the workplace
  • Specific homework tasks for kids, like read a certain book or catch a certain fish.
  • Can move around quarter tiles, so can centre a 3 tile couch to a 1 or 2 tile TV.
  • Table and chairs link and can move as 1 object (same with beds and end tables)
  • Can move the house to a bigger Lot (upgrade as funds allow)
  • Upper wall cabinets in kitchens.
  • Sims have certain skills like cooking or fishing.
  • Work buildings can be re-located if you wish

Emotions, Expressions & Looks - A new look at the happy and sad in life!
  • There will no longer be "happy" or "sad", or even "furious", Sims will now have a new range of Emotions which they will follow allowing them to express themselves even more. The concept of a mood bar in the game has been thrown out and replaced with a set of icons which will show how your Sims feel, these are known as moodlets.
  • Events such as Teenagers First Kiss will make the Happy and Dreamy for a several days
  • Event such as being fired will make the Sim Gloomy for several days, or until they get a new job.
  • Special moods such as embarrassed and depressed are also part of the "moodlets" system.
  • Instead of fixed interaction (like Talk or Joke), the options are filtered on your current Mood or your Traits.
  • Sims can acquire Dreams. Like if your Sim sees that a Neighbour has a big tv, your Sim can get a Dream to want one too.
  • There are 7 confirmed age groups which include: Baby, Toddler, Child, Teenager, Young Adult, Adult & Senior. The gradual ageing of Sims has not been included.
  • Sims now have shadows which will follow them as they move.
  • Wishes replace wants.
  • New socials like "Change topic of conversation".
  • Needs will be the same as in The Sims 2 - Hunger, Sleep, Bladder, Fun, Environment and Hygiene.
  • Sims no longer require persistent attention, instead they will attend to their needs themselves.
  • Fulfilling wishes of a Sim (like the wish to get a big screen tv, getting married,etc), gives you Lifetime Happiness points to buy Lifetime Rewards for your Sims. An example is Steel bladder (never pee again) and Haggler (All your shopping is cheaper).
  • There are about 30 different Rewards.
  • Traits could be passed down, and actions a Sim does during her pregnancy will affect the traits of her offspring.
  • You can fulfill needs by simply clicking on an icon.
  • Instead of fixed interaction (like Talk or Joke), the options are filtered on your current Mood and Traits.
  • Certain traits have unique interactions.
  • Athletic skills can help Sims stay fitter and even live longer.
  • You can not drive a car in first person; You can only order a sim to go somewhere in its car and then follow it around town.
  • Paintings that a Sim makes, will be unique to each Sim. It's based on its personality and mood.
  • You may control how much time a Sim spends on certain tasks like sleeping, fishing etc.
  • Game will include 60 traits.

Build/Buy - Make the house of your dreams!
  • You can use your own patterns/colours and then apply it to anything through a drag-and-drop interface.
  • Each item has between one and four customizable regions that can be modified
  • The game will have modding tools built into it.
  • You can move objects 360 degrees.
  • You can build 5 stories high.
  • You can buy an empty bookcase and then buy and place books in it.
  • Table and chairs link and can move as 1 object (same with beds and end tables).
  • You can make a certain stair wider (up to 4 tiles wide) with a slider.
  • You can position stuff on counters as long as the objects aren't overlapping.
  • Gridsize is 4 times smaller. Can also choose no grid at all.
  • The walls can be dragged and enlarged at will. All that is attached to the wall itself (beds, furniture, wallpaper) will be moved with the wall - perfect for expanding a room when you run out of space!
  • There’s a roof height slider.
  • There’s a button that paints / carpets the entire room (instead of holding Shift).
  • You can set the stair width.
  • You can set light colors and brightness levels (both indoor and out).
  • You can place objects against diagonal walls.
  • You can rotate floor tiles.
  • There is now a square terrain paint brush. Imagine using it to paint a sidewalk.
  • Plants spawn with different sizes.
  • Sims don’t need ladders to get in or out of the pool.
  • You can change the floor / walls of a pool.
  • With the "Automatic Roof" active, the roofs are generated automatically when we create the walls. We can also choose the height of the roofs.
  • The maximum size of the lots is 64x64.

Technical - Whats the workings of the game?
  • The game has been made so that will also run smoothly on older PC's.
  • There's no online multiplayer
  • The game requires a 1-time online activation
  • You can choose 3 dificulty levels on each household.
  • You can save your game in different slots
  • System requirements will be similar as Spore.
  • Your lots and Sims can not be exported from The Sims 2 to The Sims 3

Other - Cool things you didn't know!
  • The inventory of your Sims has been improved, and will now play a much bigger role in comparison to The Sims 2 - such as storing the personal items for your sims.
  • Sims will now focus on many new skills, skills will not be static as in The Sims 2.
  • Custom content will play a very big role, this will allow you to expand your game with out always needing to purchase expansions.
  • Improved AI allows for better autonomy for your Sims.
  • Sims have likes and dislikes to certain foods, colours, music and much more.
  • Clothes and Furniture are now customizable using a range of patterns, you can even add your own patterns!
  • Fishing plays a big role, and will be included as a skill.
  • A very diverse selection of editors will allow players to edit everything from walls to furniture and even hair and clothes.
  • Paintings that a Sim makes, will be unique to each Sim. It's based on its personality and mood.
  • Sims are now able to hold protests and demonstration to show their anger to the government of SimCity.
  • Sims still spin around to change clothes.
  • Garbage bags still appear from the great unknown?!
  • There is more gameplay cantered around pregnant sims.
  • Toddlers will have 2 traits, children 3, teen 4, and all others 5.
  • Traits effect how well a sim does in certain things...
  • Another cool feature is the ability to select by dragging a square over a whole area and then deleting.
  • There are waterfront lots, allowing you to build on the waters edge. You can also build on cliffs as well!
  • Houses are still limited to 8.
  • No specific info yet, but there will be lots of new NPC's and creatures.
  • Most of the current Sims 2 cheats will be ported over to TS3, and a few new ones added.
    • While most of the cheats will be Ported Over to Sims 3, they might change names. So typing in 'kaching' might not get you any money, but something like 'mullah' would. (Please note this is only an example, no cheats have been confirmed)
  • There are now 3 difficulty levels, Easy, Medium and Hard.
  • Quick click icons on Sims face in UI to go quickly send them to work or home.
  • Can buy an empty bookcase and buy books in the game. There are lots of books!
  • New bonus bar, possibly replacement of Aspiration bar?!
  • New timeline dragbar which is specific to a few interactions. This lets you control how long a Sim spends on certain tasks like sleeping, fishing etc…
  • High level logic allows a Sim to tutor other Sims - Cooking unlocks recipes (Moodlets like divine food) - Fishing unlocks bigger fish (Caught fish can be put in an aquarium at home, and even given a name)
  • Brushing of teeth is now back!
  • Cell phone notification system to noify you of opportunities and can be used for contacts etc
  • Funds and worth as 2 separate values now (worth includes property and object values)
  • Athletic skills can help Sims stay fitter and even live longer.
  • 'Auto Roof' now fixes the shape when you add/change walls.
  • You can also move families between save files, so you can develop one family to a specific point and then merge them with another save file.
  • The Sims 3 community is completely new and there are some incredible tools, including a web-based video editing tool so that players can make movies from the videos they capture in the game.
  • Sims can do things that they couldn’t do before, like ride bikes, work out at the gym, go to the beach, grab a snack at the bistro and more!
  • A Lifetime Wish is a really big achievement like becoming a rock star, raising a huge family, getting rich or becoming an astronaut. Along the way to achieving your lifetime wish, you’ll fulfill smaller wishes. As you fulfill a Sim’s wishes, you earn points that can be used to purchase special Traits and reward objects that are generally hilarious and awesome.
  • All new party types have now been included, such as Afternoon BBQ.

Did it get in? YES - Things you've wanted in the game are now there!
  • All new modding tools built into the game
  • You can pick up items in your game, this is called “live dragging”. In simple terms, you can manipulate some objects directly with your mouse.
  • Medium of transport include Taxis, Cars and walking - Sims can now walk to and from work & school.
  • The mailbox can now be moved.
  • There will be interesting characters, such as vampires and zombies - these have not been confirmed, so may not be exactly as in The Sims 2 Expansions.
  • Many of the previous families from The Sims 2 and Sims will be included in The Sims 3. So be sure to check out the latest gossip from the Goths!
  • There are over 70 personality traits that players can choose from. When you choose traits they are represented as a simple word that you might use to describe someone you know so it’s easy to understand what they will do in the game.

Did it get in? NO - Unfortunately it never got in...
  • No Multi-player
  • You can't watch your Sims work, or in school, although you can see them going to work. Once they arrive at work they will disappear into the building, and you will only be able to interact with them again once their working hours are finished.
  • The MAC version will only be made after the game has been released for PC, so MAC users will have to wait a while...
Quirks - Funny and weird things from the BETA version of TS3!
  • Ducks drive the taxis.
  • Cars occasionally take off and fly away.
  • The shower occasionally breaks, and completely floods the bathroom - in turn not allowing you to fix it.

Source:infinitesims.com

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Apple plots course for middle of mobile

It's become quite clear over the last several months that Apple is ready to bridge the mobile computing gap, with plans to develop a device that fits somewhere in between the iPhone and the MacBook. A recent Wall Street Journal article proclaimed that during his medical leave, CEO Steve Jobs has been working on that midsized mobile device, bigger than an iPhone but smaller than a MacBook.

And just this week, BusinessWeek reported that Apple is developing a "media pad" that would let users watch videos on a larger screen than an iPod Touch or Amazon Kindle, but on a device that's more portable than notebooks and lacks a keyboard.

The personal computer industry has long tried to make such a device a reality, but apart from some early success for the Kindle, no one has managed to convince the public that the attempts released to date--such as the Ultra Mobile PC--are worth buying. Instead, PC companies looking for increased mobility are finding ways to shrink the notebook PC as opposed to a finding a new way to use computers.

As far back as 2000, Microsoft founder Bill Gates was evangelizing Tablet PCs, but a combination of price and uninspired software doomed that category to niche status. Intel and Microsoft then turned the hype machine to the UMPC (later rebranded MID, or Mobile Internet Device), which several years later aren't exactly flying off store shelves.

More recently, PC companies have embraced Netbooks, small inexpensive mininotebook computers that are designed for basic Web surfing and e-mail. Netbooks, however, are further depressing the PC industry's gross margins and attempt to cram a full-fledged notebook user interface into a small package, and it doesn't seem that Apple is all that crazy about this category.

But Apple has developed a few unique ideas for mobile computing over the past two years that have resonated with designers, developers and users; namely, the iPhone OS and the App Store. So, is the timing finally right for the tweener computer?

BusinessWeek reported that the iPad (name stolen from Silicon Alley Insider for its brevity) would be about the size of the Amazon Kindle, but with a screen that covers a greater portion of the surface. The Kindle is 7.5-inches long, but the screen is just 6 inches; by comparison, the iPhone sports a 3.5-inch display, while the smallest MacBook uses a 13.3-inch display.

Previous attempts at making keyboard-less devices with 7-inch or 8-inch screens--such as UMPCs and MIDs--haven't captured the public's imagination. Microsoft and Intel had high hopes for the concept in 2006, which was also known as Project Origami inside Microsoft. Samsung made perhaps the best-received UMPC, but that wasn't saying much, and interest in the category quickly faded after the launch of the iPhone.

The main issue with UMPCs was a lack of compelling software. They were designed to run Windows XP, which itself wasn't designed to run on a device with such a small screen and limited methods of input. And at launch, Windows Vista was actually a step backward in terms of its suitability for mobile devices.

Samsung's Q1 was perhaps one of the best UMPCs/MIDs, but it never amounted to much in the market.
(Credit: CNET)

Intel tried to shift MIDs to Linux to get around the resource problems of Windows Vista, but its partners have yet to gain any traction. And neither attempt was able to galvanize third-party developers into creating applications designed specifically for a mobile platform.

Apple's iPhone OS, however, was designed for a small-screen mobile environment. Installing the iPhone OS 3.0 on the iPad would allow Apple to preserve the user interface from the iPhone and iPod Touch and keep the device simple: a more complicated (and power-hungry) operating system isn't needed for a computer like this.

This would also allow Apple to take advantage of the App Store, giving the iPad thousands of applications at its disposal right from launch. One potential problem with that approach is that developers will have to rewrite their iPhone applications to adapt to the larger-size screen on this new device, said Craig Hockenberry of Iconfactory, creators of Twitterific.

Hockenberry, who is very confident that Apple has such a device in the works, doesn't think this will be a huge obstacle, but developers will have to gauge whether the extra development effort is worth their time. One thing Apple could do is set aside a separate section of the App Store for iPad-optimized applications, while finding a way to run older iPhone applications in some sort of compatibility mode.

"It wouldn't be hard for Apple to have a "Classic" environment on a tablet that provided a 320x480 window for running one or more iPhone applications," Hockenberry said in an e-mail. "It would be a smart thing for them to do: there are instantly tens of thousands of apps and users are presented with a familiar interface (something that looks a lot like Dashboard in Mac OS X.)"

The iPad could also be the first Apple product to surface with a chip designed by P.A. Semi, which Apple didn't buy on a lark. A custom chip could solve two problems for Apple--the need to keep software compatibility with the ARM-based chips used to run the iPhone while delivering more performance for HD video playback or more robust games that competitors might not be able to immediately match.

What might such a device cost? There are two schools of thought on price.

UMPCs, at around $700, were considered too expensive but because they didn't offer any value, not because of the sticker price itself. It would not be hard for Apple to argue that an iPad with an HD screen, thousands of applications, and a superior mobile browser is worth just slightly more than what people were willing to pay for the original iPhone.

A $699 iPad would slot nicely between the iPod Touch and MacBook in Apple's product lineup and preserve Apple's profit margins, while allowing the company to reduce the price over time if needed similar to the original iPhone.

But Apple could also hook up with a wireless carrier--we'll save the AT&T versus Verizon debate for another day--to subsidize the iPad. The company has reportedly been in talks about distributing MacBooks through wireless carrier friends like AT&T, which already sells 3G-equipped Netbooks with a data plan subscription.

A device such as this would be infinitely more attractive with wide-area wireless networking, as opposed to just Wi-Fi--especially if carrier subsidies bring the price down to around $499, just above the largest iPod Touch. It's hard to see something this big replacing a mobile phone--you're not going to hold one of these up to the side of your head--but there are certainly plenty of headsets available in the world.

This is the last frontier of the promised convergence between computers and communication devices: the midsized device. That shift has already happened to the smartphone, but it seems very reasonable that for many people, smartphone screens are too small for serious computing.

If Apple is indeed working on such a product, it will have to get the implementation right to avoid duplicating the failures of so many other mobile computing aspirants. But by having awakened the public to the promise of basic mobile computing, Apple could be best positioned to capitalize on the need for something more.

Source:CNET

Microsoft wraps up Vista update

Microsoft has wrapped up work on the second service pack update to Windows Vista, the company announced late Tuesday.

The update provides, among other things support for Bluetooth 2.1, an updated Windows search technology and the ability to natively record data to Blu-ray discs.

In a blog posting, the company said the update should be publicly available later this quarter. Microsoft is also ending a blocker tool that prevented computers from downloading Vista Service Pack 1, so those customers who had been using the tool will now see Vista SP1 offered via Windows Update.

The update has been in broad testing since late last year. A near-final release candidate version was issued in February.

Microsoft said earlier in the day that it was releasing the second service pack update to Office 2007. Windows Vista and Office 2007 had their mainstream launch on the same day in January 2007.

Source:CNET

Microsoft names Windows 7 RC1 dates

Stable and completed code for Windows 7 will be released to early adopters during the coming week, with mass availability planned for the following Tuesday.

The eagerly awaited Windows 7 Release Candidate 1 will be posted to members of Microsoft's Developer Network and TechNet for download on April 30. RC1 will be made generally available on May 5, Microsoft said late Friday.

Microsoft confirmed the dates after the RC leaked to four torrent sites, causing excitement and frustration that Microsoft didn't appear to be offering a date for release.

This is expected to be the last code cut before Windows 7 is delivered as final product, unless major bugs or faults are uncovered. Microsoft pointedly did not give a date for Windows 7's release to manufacturing when it announced the RC and has been clinging to a 2010 time frame.

The smart money, though, is on release to manufacturing and OEMs this year, as early as this summer. Consumers are expected to get Windows 7 on new PCs and as boxed product in time for the back-to-school shopping window starting in September and October or the holiday shopping season a little later.

Businesses on Microsoft's enterprise accounts are likely to get a slightly earlier lead-time on the new operating system.

Windows XP, the predecessor to Windows Vista, officially launched in October 2001 - in good time for the holiday shopping season - while Windows Vista was delivered to consumers in the fallow, post-holiday shopping period of a February - a fact that meant a disappointing start to sales.

Windows 7 has been pretty much completed from a usability perspective for a while, with people already using the operating system at work.

Windows Experience blogger Brandon LeBlanc said changes since January's beta included bug fixes and improvements to the overall "experience," He pointed to refinements in the new taskbar, the behavior of Aero Peek, Touch, and Windows Media Player.

Source:TheRegister.co.uk

General Electric Develop CD 500GB

General Electric developed compact disc (CD) with new technology to be able to store data for 500GB. This product will be aimed for storage digital data archives, but not impossible will be thrown to the consumer's market. Size of this disk was same as DVD disc or standard CD. His capacity kept the data that was bigger than DVD and Blu-Ray because of micro technology holographic. With this technology, digital information was kept in three dimensions not the surface of disc like in CD technology, VCD, or DVD. "Hardware and his format really resembled storage technology" of "available optics as player the micro disk holographic could be used to play CD, DVD, and Blu-Ray,.GE this time corporate with hardware producer to produce CD micro holographic. The user target for this optic disc including television station, film studio, health clinic, and hospital. However, the disc capacity also needed by individual user. Moreover the expansion of HD video(high definition) in fact 3D films need more storage.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Sims 3 Meets Web 2.0: Introducing the Movie Mash Up Tool Set

US, April 16, 2009 - EA likes to say that The Sims is about telling stories, and what better way to tell stories than to make a movie? That's the gist behind the new movie mash up tool that the company revealed today. The mash up tool is designed so that you can record video clips in The Sims 3, and then export them to the official web site where you can edit the clips together to make a movie. That might sound daunting, but we had a chance to test out the tool in action at EA, and it's incredibly easy to use.

The Sims franchise is no stranger to video, of course. The Sims 2 let you record videos in-game, but after that you had to have a third-party video editing program in order to make a movie with them. And in those pre-YouTube days, there wasn't any thought about how to actually share them with the world. But now we live in the YouTube and blog era, and people are used to streaming video.


Check out the movie mash up tools in action.


Now, The Sims 3 doesn't have a direct-to-YouTube button like Spore does. That sort of thing wouldn't work as well for The Sims, where the idea is that you'd need to edit together different clips in order to tell a story. To do this, you utilize the game's movie mash up functionality, which consists of two parts.

The first part is the game itself. Just like its immediate predecessor, The Sims 3 has video recording tools. In fact, the controls are almost identical. There's a little video recording icon in the bottom left corner of the interface, and you just click it to record. There are settings that let you adjust the video quality of each recording (beware of the uncompressed option; it eats up gigabytes of hard drive space), as well as video size and length. As a default, the game records clips of 60 seconds.

Next you just have to record a bunch of clips. You move the camera around, just like the director. It's important to think as a director, as you'll want different angles of the action. Once you have an assortment of clips ready, then quit and restart the game in order to get The Sims 3 Game Launcher. The Game Launcher lets you do several things. First, you can launch the game, but it also keeps you up to date on the latest news, lets you download and install game updates, and lets you download and manage user-generated content (stuff like custom sims, houses, and items). And, lastly, it lets you manage your uploads. These can be everything from stuff like sims that you create and want to share with other to your video clips. You can choose your best clips and then upload them into the Create-A-Movie tool.

Create-a-Movie, video editing in your browser.
Create-A-Movie is a video editor not unlike Windows Movie Maker or iMovie. The only difference is that it's entirely Web-based and lives on the official Sims site. It's also designed to be easy-to-use; for instance, different objects such as transitions are associated with different shapes (square, circles). That way, when you make a movie and need a transition between two scenes (which may be associated with squares) is select a square object and drag it into the square slot.

When you get to Create-a-Movie, you'll see all of the clips that you've uploaded. At that point, it's just a matter of arranging your clips in order, editing which parts you want to use. Then you add transitions and effects, such as fades, blurs, and sepia tones. You can also add captions and a soundtrack, choosing from more than 200-plus musical tracks made for all The Sims games to date. However, you won't' be able to upload your own music, probably for copyright reasons.

At any time during this process, you can preview your work-in-progress and the Create-a-Movie tool renders together a video to watch in a few seconds. Once you're done, the idea is that you can share this in various ways. You can post it to your player page, get embed links that you can stick in a blog or any other Web page or you can take your video and upload it to YouTube or any other video site.

That's it. It's a pretty simple process, but one capable of creating some pretty sophisticated movies if you invest enough time into it. The tool worked smoothly when we tried it last month, and the good news is that the game in general looks very polished and is almost good to go. However, there's about six weeks still before it releases on June 2.

Source:IGN

Mozilla releases Firefox 3.5 beta

Mozilla on Monday released beta 3.5 of Firefox, a revamp of the open-source Web browser designed to include better performance, several new Web programming features, and a private browsing mode.

The earlier betas had been numbered 3.1, but Mozilla switched to the version 3.5 name after concluding the changes were more significant than it envisioned earlier. Mozilla has said earlier the fourth beta will the last, with more polished release candidates expected before the final version of Firefox 3.5 is released.

The software emerges amid what's become a fiercely competitive browser market. Microsoft has released a significant new version, Internet Explorer 8, while Google has entered the market with Chrome and Apple is trying to secure a Windows foothold for its Safari browser. Firefox holds second place in market share to IE.

Among the changes compared with the current Firefox 3.0.x versions are the faster TraceMonkey engine for running Web sites' JavaScript programs; built-in JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) technology for exchanging data between servers and browsers; support for tags to describe audio and video content the way images have been available for years; the private browsing mode for leaving no traces on your computer while surfing; support for technology to let permitted applications know the user's location; and support for the Web workers standard for letting a browser perform processing in the background without holding back a Web application's user interface.

There are a number of known problems with Gmail and with AVG SafeSearch v8.0 on Windows, and as usual, many of those extensions that are so popular on Firefox could break. For details, check the release notes.
Source:CNET

McAfee launches free online cyber crime help center

Is your computer acting funny? Are you worried that you may have visited a malicious Web site or opened an e-mail attachment with malware?

Instead of worrying about it you can now go to a new Web site McAfee is launching on Tuesday that is designed to help computer users figure out if they have legitimate reason to be concerned.

The new Cybercrime Response Unit offers a forensic scanning tool that checks for malware on the computer and cookies left by suspicious Web sites to help determine if the machine has been compromised. A toll-free number is available for people whose scan results are worrisome.

I gave it a test run and decided to have my mother try it out too. The home page is full of information and links related to McAfee's cybercrime strategy and it's not immediately clear where to go. There is a link to "Cybercrime Response Unit" at the top, along with other links and at the bottom, but if you don't know the name of the help center it wouldn't be readily apparent that that is what you are looking for. It would be nice to have a special box prominently placed that says something like "To find out if your machine is at risk, click here."

The prompts thereafter are straightforward. The main Cybercrime Response Unit page explains that the site will help determine the likelihood that the computer or a user's habits may be linked to fraudulent activities, guide victims to the financial institutions and creditors to clear up any fraudulent activity, and report any crime to law enforcement. There's also a five-minute video explaining what the site is about.

If visitors feel they may have been victimized by cybercrime, they can click through to a page that contains a series of questions that will be used to determine the level of risk. They are asked whether there are unexplained charges or suspicious activity on any financial accounts or other indications of identity fraud and whether the computer is running more slowly than usual, displaying pop ads, or having difficulty shutting down or starting up.

There are also questions about user behavior, including whether the visitor responded to an e-mail or Web site request for personal information that may have been a scam, whether an e-mail attachment was opened that could have been malicious, and whether the computer was lost or stolen.

The visitor is then prompted to run the McAfee Cybercrime Scanner. However, the tool does not run on Firefox so my mother and I both had to open Internet Explorer and start the process over. (McAfee says the Firefox version is coming but could not provide a time frame.) The scanner looks for unwanted processes or unauthorized programs running on the computer, visits to known malicious Web sites, unauthorized connections to the computer, unauthorized modifications to the computer protections, security sessions or browser and other unauthorized activity.

Results from my scan revealed that I had cookies on my system from visiting a malicious Web site.
(Credit: McAfee)

It took less than five minutes to scan my mother's home PC and close to 15 minutes to scan my office PC. The outcomes were similar. My machine was found to have cookies from one suspicious domain, which it listed and recognized as high risk. I did not recognize the site and couldn't find it in Google either. My mother's machine had cookies from two other suspicious domains, one of which was deemed high risk and the other medium risk.

The site said we were both at high risk of being victims of cybercrime or fraud and recommended that we place fraud alerts with credit reporting agencies and report signs of potential fraud. It also suggested that we install McAfee's SiteAdvisor, a free antiphishing toolbar.

That is all good advice, although I wasn't ready to place a fraud alert based just on the fact that I had visited one potentially malicious site when my machine is loaded with up-to-date antivirus and other security software.

"Many of these sites that trigger red flags host malicious software and you could have downloaded a keylogger or other malicious software on the PC," McAfee cybercrime strategist Pamela Warren said in an interview.

"If you have the latest virus definitions, 9 times out of 10 you're going to be safe," she said. "I'd rather be proactive in terms of seeking a fraud alert now versus rebuilding six month of my life and getting my credit history back in check."

I called the toll-free number to see what they would say. A gentleman with a Spanish name but speaking excellent English answered and asked for my session ID so he could see the results of my scan. Then he explained that I may have been exposed to a malicious Web site from surfing. He said the results don't mean my machine is infected or has been compromised, but said I should use SiteAdvisor to help protect the computer from malicious sites in the future.

Neither my mother nor I were alarmed but I urged her to go ahead and install SiteAdvisor and place a fraud alert, just in case.

Given how many people still get hit with worms and other malware and tricked into providing sensitive information on phishing site, it's clear that the best way to change this is through education. The McAfee Cybercrime Response Unit provides the electronic equivalent of hand holding for consumers as they try to figure out whether they have been victimized and what to do if they have been.

After using the site, my mother has a better handle on the different types of risky behavior. As for the site design, she said she liked the fact that there were no ads or blatant marketing on the site and that it had a lot of useful information, such as links to other resources and detailed steps to take to report financial fraud or a crime and tips on best practices for things like protecting your computer and using social networking sites.

"If I had taken the time to read more (of the information on the site) I would have learned more," she said.

McAfee's Cybercrime Scanner makes recommendations based on a light scan of a computer.
(Credit: McAfee)

Source:CNET

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Windows 7 to have an 'XP mode'

Microsoft is trying to make it easier to sway users of Windows XP onto the latest version of its operating system.

For some time now, the company has been quietly building a "Windows XP mode" that uses virtualization to allow Windows 7 to easily run applications designed for Windows XP. According to sources familiar with the product, the application compatibility mode is built on the Virtual PC technology that Microsoft acquired in 2003, when it scooped up the assets of Connectix.

By adding the compatibility mode, Microsoft is aiming to address one of the key shortcomings of Windows Vista: its compatibility issues with software designed for Windows XP and earlier versions of the operating system.

Details of the Windows XP mode, previously known as Virtual Windows XP, were first published earlier Friday by the Windows SuperSite blog.

The technology has not been part of the beta version of Windows 7 or previously disclosed by Microsoft, but is expected to be released alongside the upcoming release candidate version. Microsoft said on Friday that it will release it to developers next week and publicly starting May 5.

According to the SuperSite report, written by bloggers Paul Thurrott and Rafael Rivera, the XP mode won't come in the box with Windows 7, but will be made available as a free download for those who buy the professional, enterprise, or "ultimate" versions of Windows 7. The site also has some screenshots of the mode in action.

There had been rumors of a secret user interface, but until Friday, no mention of the XP mode.

Update: Late on Friday, Microsoft confirmed XP Mode in a blog posting.

"Windows XP Mode is specifically designed to help small businesses move to Windows 7," Microsoft's Scott Woodgate said in the blog. "Windows XP Mode provides you with the flexibility to run many older productivity applications on a Windows 7 based PC."

According to the post, "all you need to do is to install suitable applications directly in Windows XP Mode which is a virtual Windows XP environment running under Windows Virtual PC. The applications will be published to the Windows 7 desktop and then you can run them directly from Windows 7."

Microsoft said it "will be soon releasing the beta of Windows XP Mode and Windows Virtual PC for Windows 7 Professional and Windows 7 Ultimate."

Facebook to open up to developers

Facebook plans to announce at a developer event Monday that it will open up user-contributed information to third-party developers, according to a report Sunday in The Wall Street Journal.

The move would allow developers to build applications and services that--with users' permission--access user videos, photos, notes, and comments. The move would be a significant change for the social-networking site, which had previously retained tight control over the site and how developers interact with it.

To allow developers to take advantage of the free feature, Facebook users would have to give the companies access to their data, and users' privacy settings would extend to new services built, according to the report.

Allowing developers to track shared data would be another salvo in its assault on micro-blogging site Twitter, which allows third-party developers to build applications and services on top of its service.

The move seems a continuation of APIs (application programming interfaces) Facebook launched in February that let developers access content and methods for sharing in Facebook apps including Status, Notes, Links, and Video.

Of course, all this hinges on persuading Facebook's 200 million users to share their personal data, a topic that ruffled some feathers in February. Facebook users threatened to revolt after the company announced changes to its terms of service that had meant that its license on user content--a longstanding but little-publicized claim to an "irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license" for promotional efforts--would no longer expire if a member deleted his or her Facebook account.

But facing a rebellion from thousands of users and a possible federal complaint from the Electronic Privacy Information Center, the social-networking service returned to its previous terms.

Source:CNET

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Running the Windows 7 beta, and want to bend it to your will? No problem. We've got plenty of tips, hacks and secrets to keep you busy for a long time, including automatically opening Windows Explorer to a folder of your choice, bringing back the Quick Launch toolbar, forcing User Account Control to act the way you'd like, keeping your Explorer searches secret from others, and more.

So check out these tips. If you like them, we'll keep more coming.

Note: A few of these tips involve editing the Windows Registry. If you don't feel comfortable creating a Restore Point, finding your way around the Registry or performing tasks such as creating a DWORD value, see "The tweaker's guide to the Windows Registry."

General tips

We'll start with a few nifty tips that can make it easier to get around and increase your computer's power efficiency.

Shake your desktop free of clutter

If you frequently run multiple programs simultaneously, your desktop can get extremely cluttered. This can get annoying if you're working on one program and want to minimize all the other windows -- you'll have to minimize them individually.

With Windows 7's new "shake" feature, though, you can minimize every window except the one in which you're currently working in a single step. Click and hold the title bar of the window you want to remain on the desktop; while still holding the title bar, shake it quickly back and forth until all of the other windows minimize to the taskbar. Then let go. To make them return, shake the title bar again.

You can accomplish the same thing by pressing the Window key-Home key combination -- although doing that is not nearly as much fun.

Kill the Send Feedback link

The beta of Windows 7 includes a "Send Feedback" link at various places throughout Windows 7, including at the top of Internet Explorer and on top of dialog boxes. Don't like the link? You can easily get rid of it, using a Registry hack.

(Important: Always create a Restore Point before editing the Windows Registry.)

1. Launch the Registry Editor by typing regedit in the Search box and pressing Enter.

2. Go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\Desktop, and double-click the FeedbackToolEnabled entry.

3. Change the value to 0, exit the Registry and restart your PC. The feedback link will now be gone. To turn the link back on again, change FeedbackToolEnabled to 3 and restart.

Get a power efficiency report

power efficiency report
A laptop's power efficiency report.

Have a laptop and want to get more battery life out of it? Windows 7 includes a hidden, built-in tool that will examine your laptop's energy use and make recommendations on how to improve it. To do it:

1. First, run a command prompt as an administrator. To do this, type cmd in the search box, and when the cmd icon appears, right-click it and choose "Run as administrator."

2. At the command line, type in the following:

powercfg -energy -output \Folder\En Energy_Report.html

where \Folder represents the folder where you want the report to be placed.

3. For the next minute, Windows 7 will examine the behavior of your laptop, and will then analyze it and create a report in HTML format in the folder you specified. Double-click the file, and you'll get a report -- follow its recommendations for ways to improve power performance.


Windows Explorer tips

Windows Explorer is the heart and soul of the Windows interface, and overall it works quite well. But you can make it better.

Set a new Windows Explorer launch folder

When you run Windows Explorer, it always opens to the Libraries folder. That's fine if you use Microsoft's default file organization, which designates Libraries as the overall container for your folders. But what if you don't? You might prefer to have Windows Explorer open to Computer or any other folder you choose. Here's how to do it:

1. Right-click the Windows Explorer icon on the taskbar (it's the one that looks like a folder), and then right-click the Windows Explorer icon from the context menu that appears and select Properties. The Windows Explorer Properties dialog box appears.

Changing the default Explorer location
Changing the default Explorer location.

2. You'll have to edit the Target field on the Shortcut tab of this dialog box in order to change the default location at which Explorer opens. If you want Explorer to open to a specific folder, simply enter the name of the folder, substituting your folder name for Folder, below, like this:

%windir%\explorer.exe c:\Folder

So to open Explorer to the folder named Budget, you would type this in the Target field:

%windir%\explorer.exe c:\Budget

If you want Explorer to open to special, pre-set locations, such as Computer, you'll need to enter special syntax in the Target field. Following is a list of three common locations and the syntax to use, followed by the syntax for the Libraries folder in case you ever want to revert to the default.

  • Computer: %windir%\explorer.exe ::{20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D}
  • Documents: %windir%\explorer.exe ::{450D8FBA-AD25-11D0-98A8-0800361B1103}
  • Network: %windir%\explorer.exe ::{208D2C60-3AEA-1069-A2D7-08002B30309D}
  • Libraries: %SystemRoot%\explorer.exe

3. After you've changed the Target field, click OK. Next time you launch Windows Explorer, it will open in the new location you've designated.

Show all your drives in Windows Explorer

Depending on your system settings, when you go to Computer in Windows Explorer, you may be in for a shock -- you may not see all your drives such as memory card readers if those drives are empty. If this disconcerts you, there's a simple way for you to see them even if there's nothing there:

Showing empty drives
Having Explorer show empty drives.

1. Launch Windows Explorer and press the Alt button to reveal the top menu.

2. Select Tools --> Folder Options and click the View tab.

3. Under "Advanced settings," uncheck the box next to "Hide empty drives in the Computer folder." Click OK. The drives will now always be visible.

Protect the privacy of your Explorer searches

When you search through your PC from Windows Explorer, you can see the most recent searches that have been performed. If you share a PC and don't want others to see what you've searched for, you can turn off the recent searches feature:

Protecting search privacy
Protecting search privacy.

1. In Explorer's Search box, type GPEDIT.MSC and press Enter to launch the Group Policy Editor.

2. Go to User Configuration --> Administrative Templates --> Windows Components --> Windows Explorer.

3. Double-click "Turn off display of recent search entries in the Windows Explorer search box" and select Enabled from the screen that appears. Then click OK. The recent searches feature will now be turned off.


Build your own Internet Search Connector

Windows 7 has a very useful new feature called a Search Connector that lets you search through a Web site from right inside Windows Explorer. With it, you type in a search term and select the Search Connector for the site you want to search; Explorer searches the Web site without having to open Internet Explorer, and the results appear inside Windows Explorer. Click any of the results to head there using your default Web browser.

Normally, you'll need to get each Search Connector from the Web site through which you want to search, and very few Connectors are available. Sites normally need to adhere to OpenSearch standards in order for their Connectors to work.

However, there's a work-around that will let you easily build your own Search Connector for any site, using Windows Live Search as a kind of go-between. Don't worry, you don't need to know any code to write a Connector. Just follow these steps:

1. Copy the following text and paste it into Notepad. The text you'll need to change is in bold, all-caps text:

NAME YOUR SEARCH

DESCRIPTION OF SEARCH

SITENAME.COM&count=50&format=rss">

2. In place of NAME YOUR SEARCH, type in the name of the search as you want it to appear. In our case, we're going to build a Search Connector for Computerworld, so we'll just type in Computerworld.

3. In place of DESCRIPTION OF SEARCH, type in a longer description of the search. In our instance, it will be Search through Computerworld.

4. In the first SITENAME.COM entry, enter the Web site's domain. Don't use the http:// or www -- just the domain name. In our instance it will be computerworld.com.

5. To the right of "count=", type in the number or results you want to appear. In our instance, we'll keep it at 50.

6. In our example, here's what the code should look like (no bold necessary):

Computerworld

Search through Computerworld

computerworld.com&count=50&format=rss">

7. Save the file in Notepad, choose UTF-8 from the Encoding drop-down box near the bottom of the Save As screen, and give it an .osdx extension. In our instance, we'll call the file Computerworld.osdx.

Search Connector installed
Congratulations! You've successfully installed a Search Connector.

8. In Windows Explorer, right-click the .osdx file and select Create Search Connector. The Search Connector will be created, and you'll see a screen like that shown to the right.

9. You can now use the Search Connector. To get to it, in Windows Explorer go to YourName --> Searchers --> Connector, where YourName is your account name, and Connector is the name of the Connector. You can see it in action below.

Results from a custom Search Connector

User Account Control tips

The User Account Control (UAC) security feature was one of the most reviled additions to Windows Vista, with good reason -- its constant warning messages asking for permission to continue many operations drove users around the bend. UAC has been significantly improved in Windows 7 so that it's not as intrusive as in Vista, but you can still tweak it if you like.

Modify UAC

Here's how to turn UAC on or off, and make it less or more intrusive than the default:

1. Go to the Control Panel --> User Accounts and Family Safety.

2. Click User Accounts, then click Change User Account Control settings.

3. From the screen that appears, use the slider to select the level of protection you want. Here are the four levels, and what they mean:

Always notify me. Think of this as UAC Classic. It works like Vista's UAC: When you make changes to your system, when software is installed or when a program tries to make a change to your system, an annoying prompt appears.

Notify me only when programs try to make changes to my computer. This is the default; make a change yourself and UAC leaves you alone. When a program makes a change, a prompt appears. Otherwise, UAC sits there silently.

Notify me only when programs try to make changes to my computer (do not dim my desktop). This setting is identical to the default setting, with one difference: It won't dim your desktop so that you only see the UAC prompt asking you to take action. This presents a slightly elevated security risk over the default setting, because theoretically a program could allow a malicious program to interfere with the UAC prompt.

Modifying User Account Control UAC
Modifying UAC.

Never notify. In this one, UAC is completely turned off. This is, of course, an insecure option and not recommended for most users.

After you make the selection, click OK. Depending on the selection you made, you may need to restart it for it to take effect.

Use gadgets without UAC

If you turn off UAC as described in the previous tip, you can't use gadgets, tiny applets that run on the desktop, because Microsoft deems them a potential security threat. However, if you feel comfortable enough with that potential threat, you can use gadgets even when you've turned off UAC by following these steps.

(Important: Always create a Restore Point before editing the Windows Registry.)

1. In the Search bar, type regedit and press Enter. This will launch the Registry Editor.

2. Go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\
CurrentVersion\Sidebar\Settings
.

3. Create a new DWORD value called AllowElevatedProcess. To create the new DWORD, select Edit --> New DWORD (32-bit) Value and give it the name AllowElevatedProcess.

4. Set its value to 1.

5. Close the Registry Editor, right-click the desktop and select Gadgets. You'll now be able to add gadgets as you would normally.

Taskbar tips

One of the most significant changes to the Windows 7 interface is its new taskbar, which acts more like the Mac OS X dock than the Windows taskbar of old. Here are a few tips for using the new taskbar and tweaks for taking charge of it.

Take control of the taskbar notification area

The notification area, at the far right of the taskbar, shows system messages and alerts, and displays the icons of programs and services that typically run in the background, such as Windows 7's wireless service. But what determines when, how and which icons show up there seems one of Windows' great mysteries.

There's a simple way to find out, and better yet, to customize it.

1. Right-click the taskbar, select Properties, and from the dialog box in the notification area section, click Customize. A screen like the one below appears.

Customizing the notification area
Customizing the notification area.

2. For each application, select from the drop-down box whether you want the icon and notifications to always be displayed, to never be displayed or to have an icon appear only when there's a notification of some kind. Click OK when you're done.

You can also customize the system icons and services that appear there, including the clock, volume, network, power and Action Center icons. At the bottom of the same screen, click "Turn system icons on or off," and from the screen that appears, choose whether to turn on or off the icon and notifications. Click OK twice when you're done.

Get back the Quick Launch bar

Windows 7's new taskbar functions as a program launcher as well as task switcher, and so the old Quick Launch bar, an area on the left side of the taskbar that contained shortcuts for frequently used programs, has been banished. However, if you really miss the little applet, you can add it back. Here's how to do it:

1. Right-click the taskbar and choose Toolbars --> New Toolbar.

2 . You'll be asked to select a folder for where the new toolbar should live. In the Folder text box at the bottom of the dialog box, enter this text:

%userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch

After you do that, click Select Folder. A link for the Quick Launch bar will be added to the taskbar. It will be on the right of the taskbar, just to the left of the Notification area, as you can see below.

Quick Launch bar docked
The Quick Launch bar docked on the right.

It's not particularly useful docked all the way to the right with no application icons showing, so we're going to have to do a bit of work on it to make it useful. Right-click the taskbar and in the pop-up menu, remove the check next to "Lock the taskbar." Now right-click Quick Launch and remove the checks next to Show Text and Show Title.

Once you've done that, drag the vertical triple dotted line next to the Quick Launch bar to the left until you expose its icons, as you can see below. To prevent further changes, right-click the taskbar and check Lock the taskbar. You can now use the Quick Launch bar as you could in Windows XP and Vista, including adding and deleting icons to it.


Run multiple copies of applications from the taskbar

The Windows 7 taskbar serves a dual purpose, which can get confusing at times. It's used to launch programs, and also to switch between programs that are running. So you launch a program by clicking its icon, and also switch to that program after it's running by clicking its icon.

But what if you want to launch a second instance of the program? Once the program is running, it seems there's no way to launch a second instance, because when you click its icon, you only switch to the running instance.

There's a simple fix: If a program is already running and you want to launch a second instance from the taskbar, hold down the Shift key and click the icon. A second instance will launch. You can keep launching new instances this way.

Run multiple copies of Windows Explorer from the taskbar

There are times when you'll want to run multiple instances of Windows Explorer -- for example, doing that can make it easier to copy and move between different PCs on your network. Unfortunately, though, you can't launch multiple instances of Windows Explorer from the Windows 7 taskbar using the Shift-click technique. When you try it, you'll only switch to the already running instance of Windows Explorer; a new instance won't launch.

There's a simple way to enable multiple Explorer instances from the taskbar. Right-click the Windows Explorer icon in the taskbar, then right-click the Windows Explorer icon near the bottom of the context menu that appears. Select Properties. Enter this text in the Target box and click OK:

%SystemRoot%\explorer.exe /root,::{031E4825-7B94-4dc3-B131-E946B44C8DD5}

Now you're ready to launch multiple instances of Windows Explorer. Click the Windows Explorer icon as you would normally to launch a first instance. To launch a second one, hold down the Shift key and click the Windows Explorer icon. A second instance will appear. You can keep launching new instances using this same technique.

More nifty taskbar tips

Want some quick tips about the Windows 7 taskbar? Here are a few:

First, you may not realize that it's easy to rearrange the icons across the bottom of the screen -- simply drag an icon to where you want it to live. You can also add icons to the taskbar by dragging them from an application, and delete the icons by highlighting them and pressing the Delete key.

If you're a fan of using the keyboard rather than your mouse whenever possible, you can launch any program on the taskbar without the mouse. Press the Windows key and the number that corresponds to the position of the application on the taskbar -- for example, Windows key-1 to launch the left-most application on the taskbar, Windows key-2 to launch the second left-most application and so on.

taskbar in thumbnail view
The taskbar in thumbnail view.

One of the nicest things about the taskbar is that when you move your cursor from icon to icon, you can see thumbnails of all open windows for each of those applications. If you're a keyboard-centric person, you can do this without a mouse. Press the Windows key-T, and you'll move the focus to the left-most icon on the taskbar. Then use your arrow keys change the focus to other icons.



Video Wallpaper

In Windows Vista, you could get the extraordinary experience wallpaper. You may put video as wallpaper at desktop. This feature called Windows Dream Scene. To get this experience, first you must have Windows Vista Ultimate Edition original with supportive hardware graphic aero. Then right click mouse in desktop and chose Personalize. Chose the option of Window Color and Appearance and then chose Open option classic appearance properties for more color options. Further, followed the steps:
1. The clique [Start] > [All Programs] > [Extras and Upgrades] > [Windows Ultimate Extras].
2. Make sure your computer connectedi to Internet.
3. In Windows Update window, click [Check for updates].
4. Give the sign in Windows Dream Scene Preview option, then update from the Microsoft site.
5. After Windows DreamScene installed to your system, restart your Windows.
6. To activate Windows Dream Scene, right click mouse in desktop and chose Personalize. Chose the option [Desktop Background].
7. The difference of the Location position with Windows Dream Scene Content Pack. Further chose the available video option there and saw in your desktop.
8. If you want to used file from the other video, shift the location to the Video or Browse to determine the video location in your hard disk. If you were unsatisfied with one file, repeated the step to 1 to 5.

Source:PCplus

AMD overclocks new Phenom II X4 to 7 GHz

While 7 GHz was achieved with extreme cooling, AMD says overclocking up to 3.8 GHz for the 3.2-GHz X4 955 is safe at home

April 23, 2009 (Computerworld) Advanced Micro Devices on Thursday introduced the latest member of its Phenom II X4 family of high-performance quad-core CPUs, which the No. 2 chip maker said it had run as fast as 7 GHz in extreme overclocking tests.

Out of the box, the new X4 955 Black Edition, which is aimed at gamers and hobbyists, runs at 3.2 GHz, giving it similar performance to Intel's fastest desktop chips at lower cost, AMD says.

However, AMD was able to more than double the CPU's speed during its tests, said Brent Barry, an AMD product manager.

The Web site Ripping.org notes that hobbyists with early access to the X4 955 chip have been able to clock it at up to 6.7 GHz.

At the International CES in January, AMD demonstrated its then top-of-the-line X4 940 running at 6.5 GHz. (Watch the YouTube video.)

Key to achieving such speeds is the use of exotic cooling materials, primarily liquid nitrogen and liquid helium.

Barry said liquid nitrogen can help bring PC systems down to about -140 degrees Celsius. Liquid helium is even more potent, able to bring systems down to about -240 degrees Celsius, which starts to approach absolute zero (-273 degrees Celsius).

Liquid helium, however, is much trickier -- and more dangerous -- to work with than liquid nitrogen and other more conventional coolants used by home overclockers, including water or air, said Davis.

The amount of helium required is huge. To cool a PC for 90 minutes requires 250 liters of liquid helium inside a aluminum vat the "size of a VW Beetle," Davis said. The helium is kept under such high pressure that a leak has the potential to push all of the other gases out of the room and asphyxiate anyone inside.

"This is fairly insane, science experiment stuff," Davis said.

Technically, AMD's warranties don't cover chips damaged by overclocking. But AMD offers software such as its OverDrive application to make it easier for their chips to be safely overclocked. And the company says that the 3.2-GHz X4 955 should be able to easily operate at up to 3.8 GHz using conventional fan cooling.

The X4 955 will cost $245, which AMD says is about 10% cheaper than Intel's 2.83-GHz Core 2 Quad Q9550 processor, which costs $270, and 15% cheaper than the Nehalem-based 2.66-GHz Core i7 920, which costs $289.


Source:Computerworld

Thursday, April 23, 2009

MySpace: Here's how to get back on top

Needless to say, MySpace is in a bit of a tight spot. The News Corp.-owned social network has been eclipsed in traffic by Facebook worldwide and may be close to losing its top spot in the U.S. And now, a management shakeup initiated by new News Corp. digital boss Jonathan Miller has seen the departure of CEO Chris DeWolfe and shuffling of president Tom Anderson's role.

Entrepreneur Jason Calacanis, who sold Weblogs Inc. to AOL when Miller was in charge over there, came up with a list of ten priorities for the incoming CEO. He's mostly right. But I think it's simpler than that: MySpace just has to put entertainment at the forefront of everything it does.

Facebook has won the social-networking battle, not to mention the reputation for tech cred, and no amount of developer-friendly initiatives is going to win that back for MySpace (a clear exception: social gaming, which is likely responsible for why MySpace's engagement metrics are notably better than Facebook's).

But MySpace has tech cred of a different sort. MySpace Music, the company's streaming audio service bolstered by investments from all the major record labels, is still a relatively new product but has been well-received. There are still loads of opportunities for this to grow more, from international expansion to merchandise and ticket sales. Some geeks are already impressed: When I was at Social Web FooCamp last weekend, one young entrepreneur told me that he didn't use MySpace as a social network, but as a music search engine.

MySpace Music, and surrounding entertainment content, should be at the center of the brand. The company has the opportunity--and the muscle--to fill the void of a mass-market entertainment power that MTV once held.

The first rule is that when it comes to entertainment content, MySpace can't settle for low quality or a poor fit. MySpace's first forays into original programming were notable misfires. "Quarterlife," which was distributed on MySpace as well as its own Web site, was a sleepy shoegazer better suited to the Sundance Channel. Faux-reality show "Roommates" was just tacky and poorly acted. Web audiences have become discerning enough so that they won't settle for public-access quality.

A couple of months ago, I went to one of MySpace's "secret shows" concerts, which featured singer Lily Allen at the Bowery Ballroom, a relatively small downtown venue in New York. I told one of my colleagues about it after the fact, and his response was, "Why does nobody know about these things?" If more people knew that logging into the right MySpace page at the right time could give you details about a cool free concert, I'm pretty sure there would be, well, more people logging into MySpace. There also wasn't nearly enough wielding of the MySpace brand at the show itself. It was one of those situations where a handful of stickers could've gone a long way in free advertising.

MTV in its heyday (and still, to an extent, today) understood the importance of in-real-life events in maintaining brand loyalty. "Secret shows" and movie screenings are part of that, but it can go even further. When I was growing up in the '90s, kids much cooler than myself would show up in Times Square to catch a glimpse of MTV's "Total Request Live" taping or to the "Beach House" that was set up in a different seaside town each summer. More recently, we've seen the success of Yelp parties: Rent a venue, invite avid users, and just let them hang out. They'll stick around online, too.

It's also got to be easy to find this stuff. MySpace's interface is so confusing to me that I've found it easier to discover new music through Apple's iTunes Store. Right now, half the home page is taken up by ads and the rest pertains to content ("Final Fantasy XIII" and "The Hills") that I have zero interest in. The site needs a real back-end overhaul, and maybe this is where one of Jason Calacanis' recommendations can come into play: Make some acquisitions. There are so many content discovery and recommendation apps out there, a few of which must be hungering for a buyout.

If people can be confident that MySpace is a reliable hub for finding insidery information about the latest in entertainment--fresh new bands, movie previews, the fall TV season, great Web video--that could be enough to get its momentum back. It might've started out with the tagline "a place for friends," but maybe the attitude should change to "a place to be cooler than your friends."

But, obviously, that wouldn't be the official tagline. Because then it'd be more like "a place for tools."


Source:CNET