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In The Land of iPhone, iTunes is Still King over All Others

Posted by Jeffrey Powers at 2:34 PM on July 13, 2009

This last week I gave up my older HTC 8125 for the Apple iPhone. It’s been an interesting experience so far and I really like how the phone works. I also like the apps – Especially the ones that keep me productive. I am not really a gamer or a fluff app person – I may download and try it, but those apps usually go to the wayside.

Two apps I was excited to try out were Stitcher: a Podcast aggregation site, and Pandora: for online radio stations. I’ve used both before getting the iPhone and couldn’t wait to install and try them.

Of course, I could just use the integrated iTunes program on the phone. It does music and aggregates podcasts. However, I like to try out all the options – make sure I have the easiest and best program.

So let’s take a look at each program and see what advantages there are to it.

Stitcher

Stitcher

If you haven’t tried this site out yet, you should. Stitcher is a Podcast aggregator. You can get many great podcasts, add them to your watch list and be alerted when new episodes are available. You can listen to your shows on your iPhone, Blackberry or on any PC.

In turn, iTunes also has an area to download podcasts. You can search the store and download episodes. However – As Todd noted in his last podcast – While the PC version lets you subscribe to the podcast, the iTunes store only allows you to add episodes. I have yet to find a way to “Subscribe” from the iPhone.

Pandora

Pandora

Pandora

Pandora has just been in the news because of the agreement they have reached for Internet radio. You can join up with a radio station, listen to it and move on. The control of the music is not that great; which was a design of the new agreement.  You can skip songs, but only 6 per hour. All this, so you won’t have to pay for any music you want to hear.

Flipping over to iTunes, you can pay .99 cents a song, sync up with one computer to get your playlist of songs and go. You can customize your playlists and listen to new songs. They even give you some free ones.

There are other apps, like Audio books. Audible lets you read books right from your iPhone. iTunes also has an Audiobook option. I have not tested that feature yet, so we will leave it as a footnote.

iTunes

iTunes

The Advantage

The biggest advantage iTunes has is that if you have to use another application; like checking your email, whatever you are listening to will continue to play. If you try the same for Pandora or Stitcher, the program will close. Once the application is re-opened, you will be able to continue listening. However- in the case of Pandora – it will not continue where it left off.

iTunes will also do video – TV shows and even Video Podcasts. While there is no Hulu application (yet), you do have the option of YouTube – which also comes with the native OS.

I don’t want to make it sound like you shouldn’t download Pandora or Stitcher. They are great programs in their own right. The applications are free and can be an addition to any iPhone. That is why they are on my iPhone to stay.

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Is Twitter a Fad, or Here to Stay?

Posted by susabelle at 6:21 AM on July 13, 2009

twitterThis will likely be the shortest article I’ll have ever written.  Longer than 140 characters, but still, short.

The question is, is Twitter a fad, or here to stay?  I saw a reference to Twitter as a fad in a recent article in the USAToday.  The author of the article was interviewing Robert Bartholomew about the book he just co-authored, Outbreak!, The Encyclopedia of Extraordinary Social Behavior.  The Encyclopedia is a compendium of public overreactions to events or occurrences.  The author asks about Twitter and whether it is a fad, and Bartholomew’s answer:

“Most fads are not social delusions but are short-term infatuations. Only time will tell whether Twitter is a fad and will go the way of the CB radio after a year or two of intense interest or if it will become a more permanent fixture of our social landscape. Fads typically offer status but quickly fade when ‘everyone’s doing it’ and hence loses its novelty.”

That’s exactly how I feel about it.  I am not a Twitterer, yet.  And I don’t know if I will be, but I’m often slow to jump on fadish bandwagons.  I’m waiting to see if it will be something that would be valuable to me to use, or just another time-waster like Facebook and MySpace and LinkedIn  have turned out to be for me.  Remember when LinkedIn was “the next great thing?” Yeah, me too.

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Why Should I Get Excited About a Google Operating System?

Posted by susabelle at 7:42 AM on July 11, 2009

I, along with every other geek this week, have invariably heard about the new operating system to be produced by Google.  I have read multiple articles and really haven’t formed an opinion one way or the other about whether it will be good or not.

My real concern is about the ability of any operating system to truly overtake Windows as a standard.  As much as we hate Windows and complain about the things that don’t work or get broken, the fact is, Windows is a known commodity, and the majority of users we will work with will be Windows-literate.  Changing how they think, and operate, a computer, is a daunting task, and not one I will undertake lightly.  [Yes, I am deliberately and knowingly leaving out the Mac discussion for this article.]

I am my family’s de facto technical adviser and repair-woman.  When I get a call from my mother in Florida, I have to try to walk her through a fix or software setting via the phone.  She has used Windows the last 8 years.  My dad, who lives about an hour away, and his wife, both use Windows machines.  I have two brothers who also live within a few hours, who use Windows machines.  Needless to say, I’ve gotten really good at talking them through minor issues over the phone.  They understand most of the processes they are being asked to do, and can muddle their way through with my instructions.

I cannot imagine teaching any of these people how to use Linux.  One of the reasons I’ve not personally embraced it is because of all the “tinkering” that must be done to make changes, get programs to work properly, have all of your features available, etc.  Linux is not intuitive, and intensely harder to manage overall because of the hands-on adjustments you have to make to it.  And that’s okay for a geek, but not so good for the everyday user who just wants to sit down and surf the ‘net, type an email, or manipulate a photo or two from their digital cameras.

So when I look at Google’s offer of an operating system, I am more or less shrugging my shoulders and thinking “big deal.”  Another thing to learn, that may or may not be any easier to navigate and support than another free operating system already available (Linux).  I don’t see wide-spread acceptance of any new operating system at this point, despite the foibles and flaws of Windows.  At this point in the game, it is a little late to be putting Windows back in the barn and getting people to convert to something completely different.

Of course, I could be wrong.  It would be nice to think I’m wrong.  But it’s got to be more than “hey look, it’s FREE” to get me to look twice.  Because for all intents and purposes, Windows is free too, because it comes already installed on most new computers.  I know it’s not technically free, but the perception is that it’s free.  So Google’s new operating system has got to be bang-up better than what we already have to even have a chance of cracking the market and becoming a Windows killer.

And I have yet to see the app come along that can completely submerse Windows or other Microsoft software from majority use.  The fact remains that most businesses and home computers are loaded with Windows and Microsoft Office and Microsoft Internet Explorer, and that the majority of people are using those products in their daily lives.

Google’s got a very tough row to hoe with this one.

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GNC-2009-07-10 #492 Big Shocker Tonights Show!

Posted by geeknews at 12:57 AM on July 10, 2009

Big shocker tonight please do not send hate mail, I know your gonna send it anyway ;) . Lot’s to share as well as a invite to come hang out for the Tech Podcast Network Round Table this Saturday. I also may have a live streaming event tomorrow at about 5:30pm HST visit GNC for more details. Plans for show 500 talked about as well hope you will consider being part of it. Special job announcement on the Podcast tonight as well looking for a extremely qualified candidate.

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Summer of Podcasts Contest

Podcast Madness Shows to listen to Week 2
Bwana.org Radio
Geekazine
Jesus Geek

Listener Links:
Have YouTube Videos on your Website?
15yr old iPhone Hacker
Executives make way for new kids on the Block!
RyanAir simple insanity!

Show Topic Notes:
Apple wants new http video stream protocol
Google Chrome OS
Google Chrome OS the Players
7.2 Billion in spending decided by unpaid Volunteers?
Space Solar
Pandora cuts a mind numbing deal!
Cyber attacks Galore
NASA needs it’s own DARPA?
CA Antivirus False Positives?
Microsoft left users exposed to big bug for 16-18 Months?
Amazon Kindle 2 price Lowered to $295.00
More Mac Malware on the Loose.
More Young Kids using the Internet.
Control Apple TV with iPhone or iTouch
Short URL’s causing issues for Antivirus Vendors
iPhone 3gs Hacking is real Smooth
NASA to try on Saturday Evening for Launch Shuttle.
6 Patches on Patch Tuesday
As fast as the Speed of Light!
New Rocket gets put together at KSC
18 Million more for Gov Recovery Website
News Corp hacking Mobile Phones?
ASCAP wants you to Pay for Video Embeds on your Websites?
The True Speed of the iPhone 3G Slow
How is it Possible this stuff was online to begin with?
Rogers Canada starts DOCSIS 3.0 50Mbps Service (Not Cheap)!
Jay Leno’s tools to recreate old parts!
We be slow here in the United States?
People working Cheaper, More duties and much Longer Hours!
Aviary Great Screen Cap Program!
Trending on Trendrr
Nokia N97 Suggestions.
How to Find Creative Commons Images on Google.
Twitter Pimps Firefox
Teen is beyond stupid lands in Jail for Online Stunt!
NASA Test new Abort System.
Ulysses mission ends after 18 Years!

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Firefox 3.5 Mac Glitches

Posted by Nolan at 6:48 AM on July 9, 2009

Mozilla Firefox 3.5 Release NotesI upgraded to Firefox 3.5 about a week ago.  To be honest I have been unimpressed.  I am sure that somehow there is better protection under the hood.  Perhaps even a slight speed increase.  However, I have found more problems than obvious cures.

  1. Upon opening it freezes if having trouble loading the home page for some reason.  The standard “X” in the corner is unresponsive along with the normal top menu. Leaving no choice but to force quit the application and relaunch.  It used to crash and relaunch itself at least.
  2. Firefox will sometimes hesitate and freeze while opening a new tab.  For instance, I have three tabs running and click a link to open in a new tab.  Generally, I keep reading the prior open tab’s article while the new tab finishes loading.  On occasion my current tab freezes not allowing me to scroll down.  It stays frozen until the other tab finishes rendering.  Not all of the time, just part of the time.
  3. Most recently it started to runaway with the processor.  I had one tab open on a very basic text only page.  There was nothing trying to auto-refresh on the page.  And yet it ran away with 80% of both cores.  Yikes.  Something in there went horribly wrong.  Once again a force quit and relaunch.

So as a whole, every day I eagerly await an update to this update.  Granted I am still a fan, just a bit frustrated not unlike when portions of my favorite highway go under construction.  I’ll be patient, but please hurry.

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How heavy is a useable Petabyte?

Posted by Matthew Greensmith at 6:44 AM on July 9, 2009

The team at MatrixStore have a post up calculating the weight of a petabyte of storage today compared to 1980.  Needless to say todays weight was a lot less.  The article was inspired by a post on Gizmodo illustrating how big a PB is.  There are two problems with the calculations though.

  1. 2TB is a marketing number.  The formatted capacity of 500 2TB drives is more like 916TB
  2. The weight is for the drives alone, which is not storage you could actually access and use
Image courtesy of WD

Image courtesy of WD

If we want to use 2TB drives we need a system that can hold 3.5″ drives.  The highest capacity tray I know of for these drives takes 48 SAS or SATA drives in 4U of rack space (about 7″ x 19″ x 24″).  You can sit multiple of these behind a single RAID box which would provide access for your computer over IP or FC depending on the type.

To get a real petabyte of base 2 usable storage you would need 546 2TB drives.  The whole setup including racks and power would weigh 1400kg or 3100lbs.  It would also consume 12kVA of power spitting out 39KBTU/hr of heat.

546 drives is for a PB of raw storage though.  In reality you would need to protect it from drive failures using RAID.  If we go for as littlle overhead as possible we can create 24 disk RAID 6 sets which would have about 40.4TB useable storage each.  For this we need about 600 drives which adds another 100kg to the weight.  Still about 1/180th of the weight of a PB just 30 years ago.

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Is Google going to crack?

Posted by Nolan at 6:12 AM on July 9, 2009

googlechromelogoWith great interest I have been following the news articles and rumors of the upcoming Google OS release.  I am trying to wrap my mind around the Google business plan.  From search engine to online advertising dominance to Gmail to Google docs to Google Code to Google Mobile OS Android to Google Chrome to Google Wave to Google Voice to Google Chrome OS.  Not to mention a few other less known projects and discontinued items.  It is apparent that Google wants to control/manipulate our online life. And of course bring in a few billion advertising dollars.

So tell me what is different about Google than the “Ma Bell” days of yesteryear?  Google has the cash to buy pretty much any start-up it wants.  Google has the brain power to create pretty much any product it wants.  Google has and wants it all.  Or does it?  Google is still a company.  The larger the company the more difficult it becomes to maintain a cohesive core business.  The more difficult it becomes to truly allow creativity and innovation within.  The more difficult it becomes to maintain quality and support.  The harder it becomes to truly keep the user’s data and best interest in mind.  Eventually what goes up must come down.  Even the mightiest companies weaken, create spin-offs, and face downsizing.

As much as I love the Google products I am beginning to wonder, how much more diverse can they go before we see some cracks in the chrome?

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Mixero

Posted by KL Tech Muse at 10:08 AM on July 8, 2009

I have a Twitter account and am always looking for a better desktop application.  I have tried, Tweetdeck, Seesmic Desktop, Twhirl  and Tweetie  each has its pluses and minuses, but none are exactly what I am looking for.  Then I saw a post about Mixero another Twitter desktop application on Friendfeed and it looked interesting, so I requested an invitation code, which I received.  

 Mixero has three areas, the right section where all the contacts are, the left section where the messages are and the middle section where you organize your contacts.   You can organize your contacts into groups by highlighting the contact  then highlighting the group and then hitting ok. You create groups by typing in the group name and hitting add.    You can also search for a contact, by typing their name and then adding them to a group. A person can be in more then one active group at a time.  Once you have the group organized, you can decide whether you want to make that group active or not.  If you make it active it goes into the middle column.   As  tweets come in from a person in an active group you will see a yellow number. The number of tweets are indicated by the yellow number. If you click on the group it will show up in the conversation block on the left hand side. If you want you can tear off that conversation into its own separate windows. You can also filter the conversation to look for or block certain terms. You can also create channels for specific search terms regardless of what group they are mention in. If you don’t have a lot of room on your screen you can also close both the right and left column and only open them when you see a tweet come in from one of your active groups. 

The ability to customize Mixero to your liking maybe its biggest strength and weakness at the same time. Those who like to customize applications to their liking may find Mixero exactly what they are looking for. However if you are the kind of person who likes to have things that are simple out of the box, then Mixero may not be for you. One of the things that  confused me at first, is that it only brings over about 750 of your followers. I thought I was doing something wrong and kept on refreshing the page. I wasn’t, the reason they do that is explained in the  blog post On Contacts vs Following problem.  This is one application where watching the how to video and reading the blog is very helpful.  I would recommend to the Mixero creators that they attach their how to videos and links to the blog directly to the application.  I think that Mixero  will be useful for people who have small screens, since it allows you to keep track of all the important people your following without using a lot of screen space.  Personally, I haven’t made the final decision on Mixero yet, but it has enough going for it that would recommend trying it out.   It does work on all platforms and they are working on an Iphone application.  Tags: , ,

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And We Are Using Internet Explorer Why, Exactly?

Posted by susabelle at 8:44 AM on July 7, 2009

firefoxeatsie“Microsoft warned users Monday about yet another serious security flaw related to its Internet Explorer browser for which there is no fix.”

If I had a nickel for every time I’ve seen that phrase come from Microsoft, I could retire early.  I have not been a fan of Internet Explorer for a long time; I was an early downloader of Firefox and have never looked back.  Firefox is not perfect, but it is much less likely to have a security hole that will give some nefarious user access to my machine.  The only time I use Internet Explorer is to access our proprietary online system at work, where I have to enter payroll numbers or look up requisitions and purchase orders.  Other than that, that monster stays closed, and I do all other business on Firefox.

I have gone so far as to remove easy access to Internet Explorer on any machine in my house, as well as from pc’s being used by my mom and dad.  I am that concerned about the issues with Internet Explorer.

As big as Microsoft is, with as many developers and bug-fixers as they have on staff, I find it hard to believe that these “holes” keep appearing followed closely by the phrase “there is no fix.”  As much as they try to insinuate themselves into our online lives, you would think they’d try a little harder to provide a product that is safe to use.  After all, if computers are infected, everyone loses, right?

The hole affects those using XP or Server 2003 through how Internet Explorer processes video, so if you’re using those operating systems with Internet Explorer, you should probably not be watching any online videos until a patch is installed.

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Birthplace, Birthdate, and SSN Assignations

Posted by susabelle at 8:18 AM on July 7, 2009

socialsecurityI debated about posting this, but think I should for the greater good.  Knowledge is power.

Apparently, there are regional patterns of how Social Security Numbers are distributed by birth place and birth date.  Scientists, using publicly-available information, were able to accurately guess social security numbers of individuals simply by plugging in those three variables.  This means that as random as we may think our SSN’s are, they aren’t so random after all.

I was born in 1961, and had two younger brothers, one born in 1962 and one in 1963.  In those days, a social security number and card were not needed until later in life, but somewhere around my sixth birthday, my mother applied for SSN’s for all three of us.  Our numbers are actually in a sequence, with my middle brother’s number the lowest, and mine the highest, the first 8 numbers exactly the same with the last number being the only one different.  I always thought that was odd.  My children’s SSN’s are not even close to being similar in any way, despite the fact that they were born in the same hospital, in the same city.  I assumed at that time that the SSN system had been somehow changed to make the numbers more random.

I guess not.  If it was this easy for a scientist to figure it out, then it will be pretty easy for a scammer to figure it out too.  Another thing to be worried about, but not something we have any way of protecting, which is unfortunate.  Just another reason to keep a good watch on your credit report.

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All I Want is a Program to do__________.

Posted by susabelle at 8:04 AM on July 7, 2009

When a product or service becomes cumbersome, users stop using it unless they are forced to use it (Microsoft Office 2007 is a fine example of being forced to use something).  I am a big fan of having little programs or services to do things, but more often than not, using the program or service becomes cumbersome, and I dump it or simply stop using it when I find something less cumbersome.

Take Delicious, for example.  I got a Delicious account four years or more ago, and saved all my bookmarks there, presumably for ease of use as I traveled between different PC’s and desktops.  I work with two desktops and one laptop at work, and at home a laptop and one desktop share my workload.  It was frustrating to have different sets of bookmarks on five different machines, not to mention that when I went to work on someone else’s machine, all the bookmarks I normally coasted to were not available to me.  So Delicious was the answer.

That is, if I could remember exactly where to place the dots in del.ic.io.us in the address bar. That was the first straw for me, in a long line of straws that saw me using it less and less, until I realized I hadn’t logged into it for a year.  All I wanted was a place to save bookmarks  out in the ether, where I could easily access them from whatever pc I happened to be sitting at.  I didn’t need to share them, tag them, sort them, or do anything else with them.  Just wanted a list of my bookmarks where I could get to them, easily and quickly.  I ended up starting a locked personal blogspot account where I could put links in an ongoing post that I update over and over with new links.  It’s the easiest way for me to get to what I need.  No bells, no whistles, limited choices and decisions to make.

I’m simple like that.  I want a clean interface, a clean experience, just get me to the meat and potatoes of what I want.  It is one of the reasons I use Open Office for my personal work, and for about half my business-related work.  We are forced to use Microsoft Office 2007 for internal communication, but for much of what I do externally, I stick with Open Office, which gives me a quick, clean interface with all the tools right at my fingertips and no guessing about where they moved page settings or print settings.  It is why I use the dumbed down versions of many pieces of software, including CoffeeCup FTP for moving files to my server, an ancient version of HotMetal Pro for creating html files, and more.  The simpler the better.  I am not fond of navigating through what I don’t need to get to what I do need.

Delicious could be a better product.  I’m a fan of widgets that work simply, like the one from quanp.com (drag and drop to the widget on the screen).  If Delicious had such a widget, I’d probably use it.  But for now, my little blogspot blog will have to do as a simple way to get my bookmarks to a place where I can use them.

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GNC-2009-07-06 #491 Monster Show

Posted by geeknews at 10:21 PM on July 6, 2009

I had so much content tonight that I could not cover it all, here the shock in my voice at 1:03 :) . Listen to the show for the promo code tonight to enter to win at PodcastMadness.com you cannot win unless you listen. Special prize next Tuesday for one listener that enters to win.

Please support the Show Sponsors as they keep the show rolling here!
[Save 15% off Hosting at >GoDaddy.com!] use Code Geek5
Save Money with all our GoDaddy Codes see our Promo Code Page
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Show Comments please call 1-619-342-7365 or e-mail geeknews@gmail.com


Summer of Podcasts Contest

Podcast Madness Shows to listen to Week 2
Bwana.org Radio
Geekazine
Jesus Geek

Listener Links:
Satellite to cut cell phone dead areas
Jet Powered F150
New Class of Black Hole
Inflatable Tower to reach Space!

Show Topic Notes:
The Decline of IE have you Quit Using it?
Is Free going to cause massive company failures?
Ultimate iPhone Case
.99 cent Netbook Computer
Does your iPhone look like this?
New Project Clock!
McDonalds to Offer Car Charging Stations
Nokia Android Phone?
Podcast Publishing Refined
Wireless Video Cameras
Nokia N97 Swiss Army Knife Included!
Technology and Sailing a Rich Mans Sport
RozSavage.com
Clear 80 Cities 18 Months or Bust!
Time Lapse Video from iPhone spectacular!
Automated Ramen Maker
Compuserve RIP
Immigrate us out of a Recession?
SSD Hard Drives and Moore’s Law
Auto Building Linux Machines on Massive Scale
Professional White Label Video Sites
Adult Material hurting Japan Mobile Companies
Justice Department to look at AT&T & Verizon?
Goldman Sachs Grand Theft Code?
Auto Calculating SSN’s?
Jaime Davis Ask for New Trial?
IE has huge Active X Vulnerability
Windows 7 Family Pack Correction
Buy your Twitter Followers for $87.00
1 Million download Sirius iPhone Application
iPod Touch Camera Coming?
Microsoft Warning on IE Vulnerabilities
Battery Measurement App for iPhone
Five Major Data Center Disruptions
Gaming community and death threats
RIAA tells Federal Judge to remove illegal Audio Recordings?
Get you smile scanned before you go to work!
Plasma Rocket Engine Full Power Test
iPhone 3GS Hacked

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