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Archive for the ‘Software’

Office 2008 Release Delayed

August 02, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software 1 Comment →

Microsoft announced today that it has delayed the release of Microsoft Office 2008 for the Mac until the middle of January 2008. It seems they are having trouble fixing bugs in the software.

“It really is just a quality issue across the board,” Craig Eisler, general manager of Microsoft’s Macintosh business unit, said in an interview Wednesday.

In the meantime, you can get around the pesky DocX issue (why they did that, we’ll never know) by using this fix, or by simply refusing to use it - submit your files in universal PDF or RTF formats instead and break the Microsuck monopoly. You can also use Open Office, Google Docs, ThinkFree or any number of online solutions as well instead of Microsuck.

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Pownce Invites

July 17, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software 1 Comment →

I have 4 Pownce invites left. First come, first served.

SimplifyMedia Responds

July 16, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: DRM, Software, iTunes 3 Comments →

I love it when a CEO or co-founder is involved with their product. In this case, the co-founder of SimplifyMedia, Paul Joyce, responded to my lukewarm response to his software as discussed in this post. Here is what he had to say:

Leslie-

Thank you for the mention and the excellent write-up on the importance of music sharing. My music collection is like yours: more than 2,000 albums on vinyl (no weeding), another 1,000+ cd’s and many iTMS tracks.

The reason I wanted to write is that our software’s memory use on your machine is very unusual. This isn’t something we have seen ourselves, and so far yours is the only report from the field. We would really like to understand what the problem might be. If you have it, someone else most likely will too. Do you know how much memory we ended up using? Less than 50MB while streaming is standard for us.

Also, on iTunes-purchased songs, we do let you stream you own songs to an authorized computer, just like Apple LAN sharing. This is a capability other streaming solutions do not have. Just log in on the remote machine using the same screen name. What we can’t do is strip the DRM out so that, in your example, Cyndy can listen. You can thank the DMCA for that. A great Cory Doctorow article from last year does a nice job of summarizing the many reasons DRM sucks.

Thanks again, and have a great weekend.

Paul Joyce

Co-founder, Simplify Media

I replicated the memory issue with Activity Monitor running this morning so I could provide an exact number. I’m not sure if the problem lies in memory use or in compatibility with other programs, however; here is the data pulled from Activity Monitor from just before the last incident:

%CPU 0.30, #Threads 18, RealMemory 20.62 MB, VirtualMemory 361.80 MB

Programs that were also running at the time of each of the incidents: FireFox, Adium, iTunes, ecto, endo, Thunderbird, Word

I don’t experience this issue with any other combination of programs, and SimplifyMedia is the only new addition to the MacBook lately. I hope that helps you plan for future instances. I appreciated your response to my post. Future users of SimplifyMedia should be confident using your product regardless of issues I’ve experienced, just knowing that the company is paying attention. Regardless, the fact that you can’t play iTunes files due to DRM issues is a real sticking point for me that has nothing to do with SimplifyMedia. I’d be interested to know if anyone has a workaround in the works for this problem that you can use with programs like this one.

Private Information Stripper

July 16, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software, iTunes Comments Off

By now everyone knows that iTunes stores your personal information into the DRM free version of their downloads. This little tool will strip your private data from each file. It’s a bit awkward to use, as it only offers a per song interface, but if you’re diligent about stripping each song as soon as you buy it it won’t take too much time.

How Do You Find New Music In An RIAA Thug Age?

July 14, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: DRM, Software, iPod, iTunes 3 Comments →

The RIAA seems hell bent on preventing people from finding new music the old fashioned way - by sharing it with friends. I wouldn’t listen to music at all if I had been restricted to what the radio programming manager decided should be the handful of songs in rotation in any given week. My entire life I’ve never been a fan of what’s on the radio. I love punk, goth, alternative (real alternative, not the current umbrella category) and other off the wall choices. Would I have found the music I love in public consumption? Hell, no. I had to turn to my friends for that. They’d make me mixed tapes, and I’d go buy the albums if I liked the songs. I’d say what the RIAA considers illegal music sharing in analog form is what got me to the point where I own (as in paid for, you RIAA fucktards) over 400 cassettes, 800 CDs, nearly 800 records (it was 1000 - I weeded) and tons of iTunes and eMusic mp3s (over 1000 so far and still going). Tally that up, you narrow minded corporate drones - I may be one person, but that is a LOT of money spent on music over the years.

Anyway, RIAA rant aside, we are still left with the problem of how to share the music that we legally own. Playing a song for your friends, no matter where they are, is definitely fair use in my book. Not only that, it is fair use that leads to sales - it’s how we discover new talent. There are a few things you can do to find new music. You can listen to internet radio, assuming the RIAA doesn’t destroy that also in their quest to homogenize the planet and control the airwaves. Internet radio is full of stations that play truly alternative, cutting edge music. Streaming one of the stations, even the ones you see on iTunes radio, is a great way to find something new to love.

You can try programs like SimplifyMedia. My friend Cyndy and I tried this last night, and she wrote a review of it in her Web 2.0 series on Profy. She liked it better than I did. I give it points for catering to the voyeur in me - snooping around someone else’s iTunes and judging them for bonding with them over their taste in music is always fun. Plus you get to see the guilty pleasure songs they never allow to pop up on their iPod and tease them about it (she got to see my Johnny Cash hiding in my playlist, I got to see her show tunes). SimplifyMedia has a couple of major drawback though. First, you can not see the music you bought using iTunes. That is a huge blow against this software for me as I’m a big believer in fair use once I’ve paid for something. Second, while the program doesn’t take up much room on your hard drive, or use much bandwidth, using it really blows up your RAM consumption. I have 1.25 GB in my MacBook, and I found I had to close programs to keep the stream going - not cool.

You can share music the old fashioned way, by burning your friend a CD or emailing them a song. That works for real life friends, but what about interweb fwenz? That puts them completely out of the picture. You can push your luck by using an old fashioned service like Napster used to be, but I wouldn’t recommend that. It puts you at risk for RIAA attention, of course, but also for viruses hidden in files - it just isn’t smart in either case. I believe you should be able to share music that way if you want, again because it drives sales, but this is one case where the risks outweigh the reward. I’d stick to email or CD “mix tapes” instead.

My current favorite way to share music is Mog. This new social network allows you to create a profile and place widgets on both the Mog profile and your web site (you can see my “currently playing” widget in the lower right sidebar). You then make friends, similar to Myspace, Friendster, FaceBook and others but with a much less obnoxious interface. what I love about it that you can blog your music on your Mog profile and upload songs, alum art and videos to support your review of the artist. Then you can embed the player in your blog or web page, giving you another way to point to your review and expose your favorite music to the masses. I’ve done this a couple of times, and know for a fact it resulted in sales - the people who bought the songs would not have heard of them otherwise. It’s easy, they do all of the work for you, and it doesn’t require any software to be installed on your computer. Both Mog and SimplifyMedia work on Macs without a hitch.

However you do it, don’t stop sharing your music tastes with the world just because the greedy people at the RIAA want more of your money (and believe me, it is the RIAA who get the money they sue for, not the artists). I tallied up the total spent on music from my list above and using average costs of cassettes, CDs and records at the tie of purchase, plus iTunes songs, I figured I have spent an average of $26,170 in music since the age of twelve. that’s more than my car costs, people, and yet the RIAA is still being greedy. Shame on them. If you have a favorite way to share music with friends, let me know in the comments. Shoot, if you like the kind of music I do, go ahead and recommend music to me in the comments - I’m always looking for a new earworm.

If you just want to add me to your Mog friends, click here for my Mog profile.

We got Dugg. Vote here.

mog.com More about this song Share

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Backing Up Your Data

July 04, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software 2 Comments →

This post could be titled “Mozy, Revisited”, since it is an indirect follow up to my original post on Mozy. I did download, pay for and try Mozy, and I have found it to be a truly sub-par service. The biggest problem: It crashes every time you try to back up your data. Every. Time. It has yet to finish a back up, and I’ve been shelling out $4.95 a month for a few months now to give it a fair shake. The second biggest problem: customer service. I’ve been emailing these people for about a month now with no response at all. Why have I been emailing? Because I want to cancel the service and free my credit card from further charges. There is a place to do this on their web site, but the feature is not working and it won’t allow me to cancel. It’s been very frustrating and if it continues much longer I’ll have to go at from the back end and alert my credit card company to refuse the charge. The third issue arises with their technical support. Their product is just not geared for the Mac or the way the Mac works. It is geared for PCs and PC users. This would be fine if a little clunky in interface, but it causes problems when trying to fix the multitude of technical problems, like crashing, hat arise with their software. They don’t seem to understand that Macs do not have the same file structure as a PC. Regardless, I am actively trying to get this sucker off my MacBook and cancel my service. I give this software no recommendation at all for the Mac user, in spite of the attractive price.

A friend of mine was also looking for an online backup solution. She loved Carbonite when it was on her PC before she switched to a MacBook, and was excited to see on their web site that they would have a Mac version soon, but so far no Mac version has surfaced.

This same friend is using Amazon’s S3 Service, and says she loves it. I may try that next, as soon as I can get untangled from Mozy. The price is right, with rates based on usage, and it has some other features that make it attractive, like data porting from one machine to another.

I’m sure several people will email me to say I need to be patient, the first backup always takes several hours. I am aware of that. The problem with Mozy is that after several hours, it crashes. Every single time without exception. So in this case being patient is not the answer, getting my money back is.

If you have a backup solution you’d like people to try, let us know in the comments. I’m always looking for new solutions to this age old problem: not losing your stuff.

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Read the full version of this article on HubPages.

Mac Independence

July 04, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software 1 Comment →

If you have a Mac, you are constantly looking for cool programs for it. We’ve done a post on freeware for the Mac and a post on open source software for the Mac, which you can read here and here. Today we’re just pointing you to an incredibly complete and useful web site: MacUpdate.

MacUpdate is an excellent source of Mac software, whether paid, shareware and free. what’s more, it tracks the versions of each software. this means you always know which version is the latest and greatest. There have been times where MacUpdate had the update posted before the software company website did. I highly recommend adding MacUpdate to your bookmarks.

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[posted with ecto]

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iTunes 7.3 May Have Custom Ringtone Support

June 27, 2007 By: Leslie Poston Category: Software, iPhone, iPod, iTunes 1 Comment →

This rumor gets a resounding “Hallelujah!” from me. Up until now I have happily been using a program called Xingtone to create my ring tones for my phone, but to have ring tone support right in iTunes would be wonderful.

As it is, as good as Xingtone is as a program, it only works with one phone number, and you have to jump through a few hoops with songs you buy in iTunes to get them to work. Songs bought on other sites, like eMusic, work fine, though.

I hope that iTunes Ringtone creator includes some of the features offered by Xingtone: equalizer, custom cut, fades, sequencing and other effects. You can even record a voice over the music usung Xingtone. If iTunes can do half as much, it will still be good, but if it can do it all that would be even better.

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[posted with
ecto]