Jan 10

Five Best DVD-Ripping Tools

You pay good money for your DVDs, but they’re hardly the only format you need these days. These five ripping tools ensure you can back them up, keep them on your media server, and load them on your favorite portable player.

Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite DVD-ripping tool. We tallied up the votes, and now we’re back to highlight the five most popular tools used by Lifehacker readers to rip, backup, and encode their DVD collections.

DVD Shrink (Windows, Free)


DVD Shrink is a free and capable ripping tool that excels at, as the name would imply, shrinking DVDs. DVDs come in two common formats: DVD-5 (4.7GB) and DVD-9 (8.5GB); the Reauthor mode in DVD Shrink helps you to ditch disc extras and strip most larger DVDs down to fit into a standard (and less expensive) DVD-5 disc. DVD Shrink does a good job handling many protection schemes, but hasn’t been updated to remove some of the newest schemes.

DVD Fab (Windows, $50)


DVD Fab is a commercial DVD ripper that supports the removal of all current DVD copy protections. In addition to being current on protection schemes, it boasts a large array of options for stripping and repacking your DVDs once the copy protection is removed. You can rip the entire disc, rip only the main movie, or split it into pieces—among other options. Like DVD Shrink, DVD Fab also supports compressing DVD-9 discs to fit on DVD-5 discs.

Handbrake (Windows/Mac/Linux, Free)


Handbrake is a DVD-ripping tool with a strong emphasis on not just ripping media but recoding it for playback on computers, portable devices, and other non-disc based systems. Handbrake can help you convert DVDs and other MPEG-based video into MP4 and MKV files. You can tweak settings like video frame rate and audio codec playback to your heart’s content with Handbrake, and even batch encode all your media at one time to make filling up your iPod or other device relatively painless. The one major shortcoming of Handbrake is that it doesn’t have any copy protection removal tools built in, which means you may occasionally need to use a 3rd-party stripping tool to prepare your DVD for conversion.

AnyDVD (Windows, $60 per year)


AnyDVD is another commercial entry in this week’s Hive Five. It’s not cheap, with a one year license running $60—although the multi-year discounts quickly stack up—but it can boast that it stays on top of current protection and encryption schemes to makes sure you’re never locked out of your own discs. In addition to stripping protections from the disc, it also has the ability to control DVD playback speed so that DVDs played on media center computers will play slower and quieter, and it allows you to remove things like forced subtitles, warning screens, and disc material you don’t want.

DVD Decrypter (Windows, Free)


Although DVD Decrypter hasn’t been updated since 2005, it still works on a significant number of DVDs and has a strong following resulting from both its original user base and new users who find it cuts through the copy protection on their current DVDs protected with CSS, Macrovision content protection, region codes, and other hindrances.

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Oct 15

As the Oct. 22 launch of Windows 7 nears, the Microsoft marketing machine is running at a frenzied pace. No, Windows won’t make your kids cuter or transport you to a magic land where unicorns romp, as in the TV ads. But as software goes, Win 7 is a big deal. If you’re running Vista, you should plan to spend $120 or so for an upgrade. And if you have an older PC running Windows XP, then maybe this launch is a good excuse to think about a replacement.

The innards of Win 7 are little altered from Vista, other than offering a welcome boost in performance. It’s nice to see an operating system from Microsoft that’s less demanding of hardware resources than its predecessor. More important, Win 7 solves a large number of quirks that made Vista annoying and adds some very polished features that make the program easier to use.

I’ve been running the final version of Win 7 on my main PC since Microsoft finished the software at the end of July. My positive first impression has grown stronger as I’ve used it. There are few compatibility problems—Microsoft has delivered on the promise that if an app runs on Vista, it will run on 7—and it boots up significantly faster and performs more snappily than Vista.

I’ll bet it’s been a while since you heard anyone wax poetic about a task bar, right? Well, Microsoft redesigned this little strip at the bottom of the screen that serves as your control center, and it’s one of the most engaging elements in this upgrade. Unlike its predecessor, the new version shows icons only for programs currently running and any others you, not Microsoft or other software publishers, choose to keep there permanently. Each running program is represented by a single icon. Hold the mouse over that icon and you’ll see thumbnail images of each window the program has open. Move the pointer to one of the thumbnails, and a full-size version appears. Click, and it becomes the active window.

If you right-click on a task-bar icon instead, you get a “jump list,” a menu of choices specific to that program. For example, right-click an Internet Explorer or Google (GOOG) Chrome icon, and you get a list of frequently visited pages. Other menu choices let you reopen a recently closed window or create a blank window.

Something Borrowed

Of course, few good ideas are entirely new. In the grand tradition of computer innovations, this task bar is an improved version of the Mac (AAPL) OS X Dock, which itself borrowed heavily from an earlier version of the Windows task bar. I found that this and other design features took a bit of getting used to, but they soon felt both natural and more efficient.

Windows 7 also fixes the “system tray,” that jumble of icons at the far right corner of the task bar that harasses you by announcing events such as routine updates that you didn’t need to know about. The new “notification area” lets you control which icons appear and what they notify you about.

Device Stage is an oddly named but useful feature that provides a simple, visual interface for controlling printers, scanners, and other add-on devices. It’s up to the device manufacturers to implement it, so it isn’t available for all products, but I’m sure it will become ubiquitous.

Setting up a networked printer has always been a black art in Windows, but now it’s about as easy as on a Mac. Click “Add a printer” and the choices on a home or office network appear on a list. Choose the one you want, and it’s ready to use within a minute or two. If you have a laptop that you bring home from work, you can set it up so that it automatically switches default printers when you move between home and office. A new feature called HomeGroup makes it much easier to share files, printers, and other resources on a home network, but only among systems running Win 7.

One downside to the new version is that certain familiar applications are missing. Microsoft has been under pressure from European antitrust enforcers to unbundle applications from its operating systems, so it has removed Movie Maker, Photo Gallery, and, most important, Mail (known as Outlook Express on Windows XP). Fortunately, improved versions of all three are available as free downloads.

I’m going to go out on a limb and say Microsoft has relearned the importance of listening to users. If you are one of the computer owners who had to up your dose of blood pressure meds after switching to Vista, I think you’re in for a pleasant surprise. Even XP diehards might want to reconsider their loyalty to an eight-year-old operating system that is showing its age badly, especially in networking and security. It has been a long wait for something truly better, but I think we have arrived.

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Oct 04

Managing disks and files is one of the most common everyday tasks that IT professionals deal with. Sometimes it seems that Microsoft falls a little bit short when providing tools for managing these tasks. Fortunately there are a number of 3rd party alternatives that come to the rescue. Here are three freeware utilities that I can’t live without.

SequoiaView

Sequoia View. This is one my favorite tools. For those of us who manage file servers, keeping track of where all the disk space goes can certainly be challenging, and Windows provides no easy method. Using SequoiaView, IT admins can quickly track down disk space hogs and identify the types of files clogging up your business’s servers. SequoiaView uses a visualization technique known as “cushion treemaps” to create an image of your hard disks contents. File types are color coded, and a mouse over quickly provides the name and path of the file in question. What used to take lots of time drilling down through various directories can now be accomplished in a single glance.

Unlocker. It can be frustrating when you try to delete or move a file and you are unable to because of a lock on the file. Often the culprit is a system process or anti-virus software. Unlocker is a simple tool which alleviates this issue for you. Right-clicking a file or folder will reveal an icon to launch Unlocker. If the file or folder is locked, you’ll be given the option to unlock it, or kill the offending process. You can then delete or move the file. No need to reboot your computer

Defraggler

DeFraggler is a simple, light-weight defragmentation app which improves upon the functionality of the utility built into Windows is a number of ways. For one, it allows you to defragment individual files. If your performance is flagging, and you want to quickly defragment specific essential files, Defraggler will do that for you. Defraggler also brings graphics back to defragging. I don’t know why Windows no longer offers a visual representation of the fragmentation status of your disk, but its back with Defraggler. Also, if you select a file in the file list, Defraggler will highlight for you where on your drive it is located. This handy little 800k utility also offers niceties such as quick defragmentation, file-type, exclusions, and scheduling. Lastly, if you want to move larger files to the end of your disk, so that smaller files will be accessed more quickly, DeFraggler is there for you.

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Oct 04

A screen-sharing program can help train workers or update clients. They’ll see your PC as if looking over your shoulder, even if they’re across the office or around the world. But before you splurge on a paid service with unlimited connections, consider free and cheap alternatives. You can save if you only need to share a few times a month, or scale up if you need to buy more functionality.

One sharing service, Yuuguu fulfills my biggest demand for online collaboration; participants don’t have to install anything. They just connect through a Flash-enabled web browser on any computer.

As the host, you’ll download and install the free tool on a Windows, Mac, or Linux system and sign up for a free account. You’ll launch a web conference through Yuuguu, and just give the participants the URL and access code to enter.

Up to 5 people can work in a free session together, and you’re limited to 100 minutes of browser-based sharing each month. If each person installs the Yuuguu software, that time limit is waved; you could take this thrifty step within a business, but it’s probably too much to ask clients or outsiders to install a program.

Paid subscription options expand these limits, starting at $15/month for a single user. Up to 30 people can join sessions, and you can conference with browser-based participants as long as you want. Yuuguu also sells a $30/month plan for 20 users, and other alternatives.

Yuuguu also provides voice conferencing through Skype on PCs or standard telephones. United States participants can dial in for free–less the cost of any national long distance fees–and international callers are charged on a per-minute basis.

While screen-sharing presentations make Yuuguu most appealing to me, additional features might suit your business. The host computer’s keyboard and mouse control can be passed around in screen-sharing sessions, turning the service into more of a live collaboration tool. You can text chat throughout sharing, plus Yuuguu works as a general instant messaging client, connecting to users on AIM, Google Talk, Skype, Yahoo, and MSN Messenger.

Yuuguu’s paid screen-sharing options might be compelling enough for your business to buy. But its free core connects to anyone in a web browser without spending anything.

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Oct 04

Everyone has their favorite method of launching apps and opening folders. For example, I used to be a die-hard fan of Launchy, a keyboard-based launcher. Then, when I moved from Windows XP to Vista, I ditched Launchy in favor of the latter’s similar Start-menu launcher.

Now I might just have to switch again. MouseExtender is one of the coolest, handiest launchers I’ve seen yet.

Once installed, a click of your mouse’s middle button opens the MouseExtender window wherever your cursor happens to be. Then just click the program icon or folder you want.

Adding programs to the launcher couldn’t be simpler: Right-click in the window and choose Add Running Program. (Or choose File or Folder to add those kinds of items.)

ME also provides three system buttons: Control Panel, Restart, and Shutdown. Very handy.

By the way, if you need your middle mouse button elsewhere, you can “exclude” MouseExtender from specific programs–meaning the middle button goes back to its regular function when those programs are active.

All told, I’m loving this little launcher, especially because it’s free. Once you get accustomed to middle-clicking your way to your favorite programs and folders, you’ll wonder how you got along without MouseExtender.

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Oct 01

Upgrading your operating system is always fraught with problems and anxiety, and quite often with disaster. But by taking the right precautions, gathering the needed materials, and hoping for the best while preparing for the worst, you can upgrade your PC without losing functionality or gaining gray hairs. I’m here to tell you how.

Upgrade Advisor: Click for full-size imageSince you’re reading this, I’ll assume you’ve already made the decision to upgrade, have checked to make sure your hardware is compatible, and have purchased your upgrade. If you haven’t yet checked your hardware, download and run the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor (as a general rule, if you’re running Vista, you probably already have Windows 7-capable hardware).

You have one other early decision make: Do you want to upgrade your current Windows installation, or go for a clean, fresh install? The upgrade is certainly easier–your applications, your settings, and your data travel with you, and there’s little you have to do after the install itself is complete. After a clean or fresh or (Microsoft’s word) custom install, you’ll have to set up your users and network, reinstall your drivers and programs, and move your data back into place.

A custom install is cleaner than an upgrade. Windows accumulates garbage as you use it, and flushing it out every so often makes sense. So does starting a new version of the OS with a clean slate.

If you’re currently using XP, the choice has been made for you. The custom install is your only option.

These instructions are for both kinds of installs. I’ll let you know when instructions are only for one group or the other.

You’ve got a few chores to do before you insert that Windows 7 DVD.

First, consider the driver issue. If you’re upgrading from Vista, chances are you’ll have no driver problems. If you’re currently on XP, you almost certainly will.

Make sure you can get Windows 7 or Vista drivers for your display, audio, and networking adapters. If you use a wireless keyboard or mouse, you’ll need to check drivers for those, as well. If you’re not sure what these are, check Device Manager: In XP, select Start, right-click My Computer, select properties, click the Hardware tab, and then the Device Manager button. In Vista, click Start, type device manager, and press Enter. You’ll also want to check for your printers and scanners.

Once you know the devices, how do you find the drivers? Check the Windows 7 Compatibility Center At press time, that site was still “coming soon,” but the Vista equivalent is a good substitute until it’s ready, especially for XP-to-Win7 upgraders. You can also check your devices’ manufacturer Web sites.

Speaking of hardware and visiting manufacturers’ Web sites, now would be a good time to update your firmware, especially if you’re not in the habit of doing this on a regular basis. Go to your system manufacturer’s site for system firmware updates. See “Firmware and You: A Comprehensive Guide to Updating Your Hardware” for details.

No matter how good your precautions, operating system upgrades can go horribly wrong. Some important program or device won’t work in the new environment. Windows 7 won’t boot. Maybe you just don’t like the new interface. Whatever the reason, you need a way to go back to where you were before.

An image backup of your hard drive offers an easy, dependable way to do just that, since it restores everything on the hard drive: Windows, applications, data, and even the Master Boot Record. To create one, you’ll need an external hard drive, and an image backup program. I recommend the free version of Macrium Reflect for image backup, although others will do. Plug in the external hard drive before you create the image, and select that drive as the Backup destination. Also, be sure to create the bootable Rescue CD (this option is on Macrium Reflect’s Other Tasks menu) before you start the upgrade.

An image backup of a really big hard drive can take hours. Run the backup overnight, with plans to do the upgrade the following morning.

Good morning. If you’re doing a simple upgrade, you’re done with prep work and can skip down to the “Run the Upgrade” section below. But if you’re planning a clean (aka custom) install, you’ve got more preparation to do.

You need to gather up installable versions of all of the programs on your hard drive that you want to keep. If you bought a program as a physical package, you’ll need the disc. If you downloaded the program, you’ll have to either find the installation file or download the latest version (really your best option). I suggest you make a stack of physical programs, and put the downloaded files into a folder in My Documents.

You’ll also need the license or product ID numbers that prove you purchased the program. If you bought the program as a physical package, this number is probably on the disc sleeve or somewhere else on the box. If you purchased and downloaded the program online, it’s probably in an e-mail that you hopefully didn’t delete.

Product Key Explorer: Click for full-size imageWhat if you can’t find the license? Open the program and select Help > About. There’s a good chance your license or product ID will be displayed there. Jot it down and triple-check it for accuracy. Or contact the vendor and see if they have it.

A utility called Product Key Explorer 2.2.1 might also help, although in my experience it doesn’t always. The free, demo version can’t print or save what it finds, so you’ll have to either write the numbers down by hand (be sure to double-check them) or pay the $30 registration fee.

Run the Upgrade

Are you ready? Now it’s time to take a deep breath, bite your lip, and take that step forward into the next generation of Windows computing.

Choose Your Upgrade Style: Click for full-size imageThere are two ways to start the installation: You can boot from the Windows 7 Upgrade DVD, or you can insert the DVD while in your current version of Windows and start from there. If you’re doing an upgrade installation, you’ll have to start from inside Windows. For a clean install, either way is fine.

Exactly what pages the installation wizard displays, and in what order, will depend on how you started the installation, what’s already on your PC, and what choices you make. But here are some of the major options you will see along the way:

  • Early on, you’ll get the option to check for compatibility online or install. That first option just brings you to the Web page for the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor. You should have run that by now. Click Install Now and get on with it.
  • After agreeing to the 5545-word End-User Licensing Agreement (no, I haven’t read it either, but as someone who’s paid by the word, I’m envious), you have to make the big decision: an Upgrade or a Custom (aka: clean) install. I’ve explained the reasons to pick one or the other above.
  • You might be asked to pick a partition. Unless you’re planning on a multiboot system, pick the one with your current version of Windows.
  • If you’re doing an upgrade install, you’ll receive a compatibility report. It will warn you about certain issues (for instance, if you use Windows Mail, it will inform you that the program is no longer included). It may also tell you to cancel the upgrade and uninstall a particular, problematic program or driver. It’s best to do what it says.
  • If you’re doing a clean install, a warning box will tell you that you’re about to lose your existing version of Windows. You’re not; you’ve got that image backup. The warning will also reassure you that you won’t lose your files. They’ll be moved to a new folder called C:/Windows.old. Be glad they are.

Installing Windows 7: Click for full-size imageWhen the Installing Windows box appears with its list of automated tasks (Copying Windows files, Expanding Windows files, and so on), get up, jog, read a book, or take a nap. It could easily be an hour–maybe more–before you’re needed.

The wizard will eventually come back, this time running in Windows 7 on your hard drive. The new set of questions will be pretty self-explanatory, but a couple are worth noting:

  • You don’t have to enter the Product Key when asked, although you will have to enter it eventually. If you click Next with the field blank, then click No, the install will continue. You can always enter the Key and activate Windows once it’s running and you’re sure you like it.
  • One page, titled “Help protect your computer and improve Windows automatically,” offers options for how Windows will update itself. I recommend the middle option, “Install important updates only.”

When the wizard is done, your PC will reboot (not for the first time in this install, but for the last), and bring you up in a full, interactive version of Windows 7.

Congratulations. You’ve installed Windows 7. If you did an upgrade install, you’re almost done. But if you did a clean install, you still have a ways to go.

With Windows 7 up, lean back and admire the new look. It’s really quite lovely.

Unless, of course, the resolution is too low and all the objects on screen too big. If that’s the case, right-click the desktop and select Screen resolution to fix the problem. You may have to do this again after reinstalling your video drivers, but you might not and it’s easy enough to do twice.

Check the lower right corner (where the system tray used to be) for a flag icon. If you see it, click it for a problem report. It will probably just tell you that you need antivirus software (you know that) and that Windows Defender has yet to scan your computer. But it might give you some actual, useful advice.

With that taken care of, it’s time to deal with your drivers. If you did an upgrade install from Vista (the only version you can do that from), you’ll probably just check Device Manager and discover that everything is fine. If you did a clean upgrade from Vista, any problems you encounter should be easy to fix. But if you started with XP, expect some major challenges.

Windows 7 Device Manager: Click for full-size imageHowever you upgraded, select Start, type device manager, and press Enter. Do the following for any item accompanied by a yellow exclamation point: Double-click the item, then click the Update Driver button. Select Search automatically for updated driver software and wait for the results. Hopefully, that will fix the problem.

If it doesn’t, and you did a clean install from Vista, click the Update Driver button again. This time, click Browse my computer for driver software. For the path, enter C:\Windows.old\Windows, make sure that Include subfolders is checked, then click Next. Chances are, this will work.

Why? Because along with your data, the installation program moved all of your Windows files to C:\Windows.old–including all, or at least most, of your old drivers. But the installation program doesn’t know enough to look for drivers where it put them.

This won’t work if you upgraded from XP, even though the old drivers are still in subfolders of C:\Windows.old. Windows XP drivers aren’t compatible with Vista.

So what can you do about drivers if you upgraded from XP? Before you go any further, install and update your security software–antivirus, firewall, and so on. You’re about to do some heavy Web surfing, and you need protection.

Then go back to the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor and look up the device there. If that doesn’t help, search on the device name and Windows 7 driver. Or even the device name and Vista driver.

If you did an upgrade install, you’re pretty much done, although you should skip down to “Final Touches” below for additional advice. But if you did a clean install, you still have work to do.

And your first job is to reinstall all of your programs. I told you to gather them up before the upgrade; now it’s time to dig into that pile. The downloaded files, which I told you to store in a subfolder of My Documents, is now in a subfolder or C:\Windows.old\Documents and Settings\logon\My Documents.

Start with your security software, if you haven’t installed it already. Do the others in any order. Make sure you have the licenses and product IDs handy. And as soon as a program is installed, check for updates.

Create User: Click for full-size imageYou created a logon for yourself near the end of the installation, but if other people use your PC and have had their own log-ons in the past, you’ll need to re-create them. If you can’t remember all the user names, use the folders inside c:\windows.old\users (c:\windows.old\documents and settings if you upgraded from XP) as a reference. To create user log-ons, select Start, Control Panel, and click Add or remove user accounts.

You don’t have to create a Public or shared account. It’s already there.

Now you’re ready to restore your data. Luckily, thanks to the above-mentioned C:\Windows.old folder, this is actually pretty easy. Select Start, type C:\users, and press ENTER. If you don’t already have the c:\windows.old\users (or c:\windows.old\documents and settings) folder open, open it now.

At this point, you have two Explorer windows open. The windows.old one, which I’ll refer to as the source, contains your data. The C:\users window, which I’ll call the target, is where your data should end up. Do the following for each folder named for a person who uses your PC:

  1. Open the respective folders in each Explorer window (so that the source window is open to C:\Windows.old\Users\yourname and the target to C:\Users\yourname).
  2. Make sure that hidden folders are truly hidden. If you see an AppData folder in the target, select Organize, Folder and search options. Click the View tab. Select Don’t show hidden files, folders, or drives, and click OK. (You can change it back later.)
  3. Drag all the folders–but not the individual files–from the source to the target.
  4. You’ll get a lot of questions as the files move. When Windows tells you that you need administrator permission, make sure Do this for all current items is checked and click Continue. If told that “The destination already contains a folder named…”, check Do this for all current items and click Yes. And if told that there’s already a file with the same name, check Do this for the next nn conflicts and click Move and Replace.

Windows XP keeps pictures, music, and videos inside folders within My Documents, while Vista and 7 store them separately. You’d expect that to cause problems, but Windows 7 is smart enough to put everything in the right place.

When you’re done with the user folders, repeat those steps one more time for the Public folders. If you upgraded from XP, your source won’t have a Public folder, but it will have a shared folder, and you should move the folders from there to the target’s Public folder.

At this point, Windows is ready to use. But keep the Windows.old folder around for a few months. There may still be something important inside–especially in the hidden AppData or Applications Data folder.

Final Reminders

If you didn’t enter your product ID and activate Windows 7 during the installation, now would be the time to do it. Select Start, type activate, and press Enter. Click Activate Windows online now and follow the prompts.

At this point, all you ex-Vista users should check out “3 Key Tweaks for Windows 7″ for suggestions on retrieving some Vista features that might actually be missed.

One last suggestion: Once Windows 7 is set up the way you like it, create another image backup, and keep this one as long as you have the PC. That way, should you ever need to reinstall Windows, you can simply restore the image and skip several steps.

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Sep 27

There are those who believe Windows 7 doesn’t need selling.

As long as reviewers continue to suggest that it is a fine, fine thing, then people will gravitate towards it as they buy their (much cheaper than Mac) PCs.

Microsoft is, however, taking no chances. It has released nine new ads designed for you to not be ashamed of being seen in public using the new operating system.

And what’s the best way of encouraging people to not feel ashamed? Why, you try to make your product cool.

It is not cool to ever tell people you are cool. You must be it. You must sound it. And you must look it.

So I have embedded three of the films for you to decide just how far up your frigid cool scale Windows 7 has risen.

You may note the very sparse use of words, the delicate musical choices, even the sly wit.

For myself, I tend to notice the rather excessive scrubbing that seems to have been eked out upon far too many of the actors.

Casting is a very difficult art, and especially in the “Your PC. Your Life” film, I wonder if the man who sings about waiting for his spaceship to fly (and what can that possibly mean?) doesn’t look a little too polished to be a truly raw exemplar of cool.

Still, as Mao Tse-Tung was always fond of whispering to those closest to him in intimate situations: “A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery.”

No, wait, that wasn’t the quote I was searching for. It’s this one: “Women hold up half the sky.”

No, no, it can’t be that one. It’s definitely this one: “Despise the enemy strategically, but take him seriously tactically.”

You see, the enemy’s tactics are, as Microsoft has learned sometimes to its cost, very cool indeed.

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Sep 24

After it has spent nearly a year on the market, analysts are reluctant to declare Android a success, but they say the platform could turn a corner in the next few months when many more phones are expected to go on sale.

Google and T-Mobile unveiled the first Android phone, the G1, at an event in New York City on Sept. 23 last year. The device hit stores a month later.

One million G1s were sold in the first six months, and almost the same number may have been sold in the period since, said Carl Howe, an analyst with the Yankee Group. In August this year, T-Mobile introduced the second Android phone, the MyTouch, which like the first was made by Taiwan’s HTC. There are now more than 10,000 applications in the Android Market.

But Android hasn’t yet lived up to the expectations set by Google, and some analysts say it doesn’t yet present serious competition to Apple’s market-leading iPhone.

Six million iPhones sold in its first year, and it then took off even more quickly, achieving a current installed base of 26 million since the device launched in June 2007, according to Howe. There are more than 50,000 applications in the iPhone App Store.

Still, compared to other, less iconic mobile-platform launches, Android has held its own, he said. “It’s not the iPhone, but it’s not bad for an open platform,” Howe said.

When Google first unveiled the Android project in late 2007, it positioned the software as a way to foster innovation in mobile phones by allowing developers to collaborate on new products and services. Google had complained about difficulties delivering products in the mobile market, where developers must often rewrite their applications for each phone operating system.

The search giant received some criticism for trying to solve the fragmentation problem by adding yet another phone platform. But Google predicted that Android would accelerate the pace at which new and compelling mobile services became available to consumers. Chairman and CEO Eric Schmidt said at the introduction of Android that he envisioned the software running thousands of phone models.

With those lofty goals, Android seems off to a slow start. Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Interpret, called the initial G1 “incomplete” for failing to support some basic functions such as Microsoft Exchange synch.

“Android has done a credible showing but they’re going to have to do an awful lot more,” he said. “They’ve proved it as a concept. The question is, how much is Google really behind this project in the long term?”

He wondered about Google’s commitment because of its relative silence about the platform recently. “We haven’t heard all that much directly from Google,” he said. It would be valuable to see a road map for what features Android will deliver in the future, he said.

Google has posted an Android road map online, but the page has only brief information and is updated rarely.

For its part, Google talks as though it is as committed to the phone as ever. “Android has surpassed my expectations,” Erick Tseng, lead product manager for Android, said via e-mail. He said he’s looking forward to the next year with the launch of new phones and some “truly mind-blowing applications.”

Both T-Mobile and Google said they’re happy with Android’s progress so far. T-Mobile called the G1 “a resounding success.”

Android has largely followed in the iPhone’s footsteps, rather than setting new trends, but it has contributed at least one significant innovation. “It’s one of the few truly open platforms for developers,” said Howe. “If you’re someone who wants to reinvent the actual phone-calling experience, in some ways it’s the only game in town.”

Android may have attracted developers for precisely that reason, but developers have also expressed widespread discontent. Some have complained that aspects of the Android Market discourage application sales.

In addition, the openness of the platform could turn out to be a weakness. “The question is, if it offers this much freedom, how do you prevent it from becoming fragmented?” Gartenberg said. For example, if different vendors alter Android for their own phones, applications may not run across all the different devices.

Google will have to do more than simply deliver an open platform, he said. “At the end of the day, it’s going to be what Google can do to drive innovation beyond being open,” he said.

The real test for Android will arrive in the coming months. “If it weren’t exactly one year, but one year and three months, the question [of whether Android has lived up to expectations] would be easier to answer,” Howe said.

That’s because he expects at least six, and possibly a dozen, new Android phones to hit the market by the end of the year. Samsung, HTC and LG all could have introduced new phones by then.

Motorola’s Cliq should also arrive by year’s end. That could provide the first example of Android’s true potential, because Motorola has customized the software with a new user interface that highlights social networking. “All of a sudden it looks like a different phone” compared to the existing Android devices, Howe said.

The new models will be offered by other operators as well, with Sprint-Nextel and possibly other operators expected to sell them.

With more phones and more operators, millions of Android devices are likely to be in the market in 2010, a big enough base to attract even more developers, and thus more and better applications, Howe said.

While Android’s influence in the mobile market remains to be determined, the platform has made one thing clear: “If nothing else, it’s validating the idea that touch-based smartphones are going to be a new category,” Howe said.

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Sep 24

PC World – What do you want from a browser: lightning speed, a lean interface, or a host of innovative features? Safari can satisfy all these requirements. Most PC users likely know of this browser as Mac-only, but there’s a Windows version as well, and version 4 of it is good enough that you may want to switch from your current browser.

Like Opera and Chrome, Safari 4 is exceedingly fast. On all the sites I visited, it seemed to bring up pages more quickly than either Internet Explorer or Firefox. But there’s more to the browser than just speed; it has some nifty features as well. Probably the biggest addition to Safari in its newest incarnation is Top Sites. When you open a new tab, a page opens that displays thumbnails of the sites you visit most frequently, and they’re displayed (with Apple’s usual flair for style) in 3D fashion. If any of the pages have been updated since you last visited, you’ll see a blue star in its corner.

Another notable Safari feature is Cover Flow, which lets you browse through your history list and bookmarked sites visually, letting you see previews of the sites as you go through them. It works in much the same way that you flip through your album art in iTunes. Also useful is the ability to search through your history list or bookmarks. You can also tear off tabs and launch them in their own browser windows by dragging them, and you can recombine windows in a similar way.

That’s not to say everything is perfect in Safari browser. For one thing, the text for the titles of tabs is extremely thin and can be difficult to read. More annoying is that when you install Safari the Home button is not visible by default. To turn make it visible, click the icon of a gear on the upper-right hand side of the screen, select Customize Toolbar, and from the screen that appears, drag the Home button to your toolbar. The same holds for getting access to some other features, such as your history list–in the default installation, the button for accessing your history list is not displayed. You can tell Safari to display that button as well, in the same way you make it display the Home button.

These are small quibbles, though. If you’re looking for a very fast browser with several innovative features, Safari is worth a try.

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