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Showing posts with label Computing. Show all posts
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The Urban Shogun’s Guide To Buying a Laptop

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If you’re looking at perhaps treating yourself out to some tech goodness or just looking to update the mammoth of a machine that you’ve been using then look no further. Below is a breakdown of some of the key things you should look out for when purchasing a new laptop including a few recommendations at the bottom. For more advanced users, there are plenty of advanced advice at AnandTech which maybe more up your street. Of late I’ve done a bit of laptop shopping myself as well as advising upon a few people, so either a lot of people have been tempted to change round or perhaps they’re gearing up towards the ever busy Winter holiday period. Either way, here are my two cents on buying a new laptop.

 

Contents

 

Classes of Laptops

Key Features

Extras

Recommendations

 

One of the most important factors when it comes to purchasing a new laptop really depends on who you are as a user. Going on from that, what you use your computer for the most will affect what laptop would best suit you. There are generally three classes of laptops out there on the market being:

 

Classes of Laptops

 

Netbooks

These are the little babies of the computer world. Generally between 8 to 13 inches in size, these are small low powered laptops which primarily are acer-aspire-onegood for checking your email, document writing and browsing the web. The average price of a Netbook now in the UK is around £200 - £400 and the more popular models include the Acer Aspire One as well as the ASUS Eee PC. The main positives of this class is that they’re very light at around 1kg and the battery life last anything from a couple of hours to a whole working day. The negatives are however that they’re underpowered, have a small screen estate and usually comes at the sacrifice of ports and optical drives.

 

Notebooks

The mainstay of the all laptops, these are the middle of the range with the most diverse choice and therefore the most options. What we’re talking about here is anything above a netbook at 13” and below a desktop replacement usually at 16” or 17”. Your average notebook can range from anything from a £300 cheap studenthp-envy-14-3-580x361 laptop to a very good entry level Intel i3 processor at £600 which will be explained further down the page. The range of options are vast but your best bet would be to the Toshiba Satellite Series, Acer Aspire, HP Envy Series and the Dell Inspirons. Most of the these laptops will weigh around 2-3kgs, have a battery that last usually 2-3 hours and are usually separated by a few key extras such as DVD/Blu-ray drives, backlit keyboards and extra USB ports for example.

 

Desktop Replacements

Desktop Replacements or Gaming Laptops however you look at them are the mother of all laptops. As the name suggests, they’re primarily designed to pack the power of a big desktop into the relatively small frame of a laptop however that does come at a cost. Your average gaming laptop ranges anything up from the standard 15.4” to the big 17” beasts. Everything that can be achieved on a desktop PC can bedell_alienware_m17x_d_big achieved on one of these machines and come in at a price of anything between £600 upwards to money no object laptops at £3,000. Your options include the stylish Sony Vaios, the legendary Dell XPS/Alienware series and of course the much underrated MSi range of gaming laptops. The good thing about these laptops is they pretty much run everything under the sun, the downside is that these machines usually weigh upwards of 4kg and you’ll be lucky if the battery survives more than 2 hours on a single charge not to mention of course being the most expensive of all laptops.

 

So those are all the classes for you. Of course there are those tablet PC’s and desktop-all-in ones that you can check out but those I consider more to be novelties. So you know your laptop class now, how do you pick the right laptop with all these complicated specs thrown at you? Below is a breakdown of the main features to look for in your average laptop with of course the netbooks and desktop replacements being accordingly under and over powered versions of these specs.

 

Key Features

 

RAM

The importance of

Random Access Memory or RAM is all too often overlooked. Sometimes all you need to beef up your system in a noticeable way is to up the RAM. On a new laptop the minimum you should be looking for is 3Gb of RAM and with 4Gb being more the standard today. You’ll need a 64-bit processor in order to use anything over 3Gb’s but that I’ll cover in the next part.

 

Processor

The two main brands of processors out there are Intel and AMD. Some people will traditionally stick with one or the other but really there isn’t much of a difference as long as you can compare one to another directly which CPUBenchMark.Net comprehensively does although the list is a little daunting to see at first. For a lowcorei7 end computer you should probably stick with a cheap Core II Duo processor however that technologies quickly going out of fashion. Depending on your price range an entry level Core i3 will set you off at around £500, Core i5 at around £600/£700 and the Core i7 at anything over £800. The AMD equivalents are the AMD Athlon II X4 for the Core i3, AMD Phenom II 955 for the i5 and AMD Phenom II X4 for the Core i7. As the AMD cores are older than those of it’s Intel counterparts, you won’t get as much power from these than the i3, i5 and i7 series. If you want to understand what all the fancy L1/L2/L3 Cache and Front Side Buses etc, you might want to check out this good article in PC World. Also to take advantage of anything above 3Gb of RAM, you’ll need a 64-bit processor. This used to be a problem a few years back with compatibility issues but pretty much most modern programs offer both a 32-bit and 64-bit version of their software.

 

Graphics Card

Unless you simply have no interest in HD video, photoshopping or playing any video ati_vs_nvidiagames avoid the Integrated Graphics Cards that ship with a lot of modern day laptops like the plague. If you plan on playing anything more than the default games that come on the Windows then a discrete graphics card from Nvidia or ATI is a must have. Look for anything above 512mb of discrete RAM to 2gb for the best gaming performance and personally I’d recommend a 1Gb of discrete memory which should allow you to play pretty much every game out there today. TomsHardware.com gives a very good benchmarking table for comparison for those who want to delve deeper.

 

Hard Drive Capacity

The standard for last year’s computers was 250Gb, now that’s been upped to around 320Gb as standard. As 2011 approaches however, it’s looking increasinglysamsung-solid-state-hard-drive like a 500Gb hard drive has become standard for the industry. When picking out hard drives, you might also want to take a look at the higher speed 7,200 RPM drives compared to the standard 5,400 RPM drives. Further down I’ll address SSD drives that some laptops will have available to them.

 

Screen Size and Resolution

This really is entirely up to you and your preference. Obviously the larger the screen, the heavier it’ll be and the more expensive the laptop so if you want an average sized laptop, you’ll usually find it bringing a 15.4” screen. This year there’ve been a lot more 16” screens which accommodate widescreen modes and so don’t be phased by the resolution being a funny 1366 x 768 as that too is becoming standard. Your higher end graphics cards will support higher resolutions usually up to 1920 x 1200, and why would you need this? Well the higher the resolution, the more things you can pack onto the screen and that includes pixels, giving crisper sharper images. There can be a trade off though as sometimes the screen isn’t large enough to accommodate the high resolutions and you’re found squinting at small text. You’ll also want to look for whether the screen you’re looking at supports HD, and not just 720p but the full 1080p for the best media viewing. Even if you can’t quite dig deep enough into your pockets to fork out on a full HD display, if you have a proper TV that supports HD and a spare £3 then purchase a HD cable and use the TV to view all your HD goodness.

 

Extras

 

3D Laptops

These are a relatively new line in laptops and therefore have quite a hefty price tag. If you’re into 3D gaming or media viewing, I’d recommend a laptop which has 104078_firstNVidia 3D Vision capability. What you get is a display which has a high Hz rate usually around 120Hz compared to the standard 60/70Hz, a pair of NVidia active shutter glasses and a USB-powered IR emitter. You’ll usually find that there’s about a £200 premium on the 3D models over their standard counterparts so it’s really a personal preference of how much you want 3D really.

 

Touchscreen

Touchscreens on a laptop rarely work, and the few experiences I’ve had with them feel more like an out-dated touchscreen mobile from a year or two back. Often the inbuilt software provided is too sluggish to be used naturally and well, the screens are usually a fingerprint magnet so my recommendation is to hold off on the touchscreen at least for now.

 

Backlit KeyboardLogitech illuminated keyboard

You’d be suprised how much of a difference a few LED lights behind the keyboard can make. Aside from the general cool factor, even in dimly lit rooms, the backlight on a lot of newer laptops really come into their own. On that note, you should be careful to try out a lot of laptop keyboards before putting down on the hefty price tag, sometimes the keyboard can make or break a good laptop.

 

Solid State Drives

The term solid state drive or SSD refers to a hard disk without mechanical parts. The benefit of this is simply a ridiculously fast drive and as there aren’t any mechanical parts, it’s a hell of a lot sturdier and resistant to bumps and knocks, something that can be important in a portable device like a laptop. What’s the catch? Well SSD drives can cost you an arm and a leg and for a small capacity. The standard for SSD drives are the 64Gb and 128Gb drives which although fast, will set you back price wise.

 

USB Ports

Your standard laptop should come with a minimum of 2 USB ports but I usually find that when you add a cooler, external hard drives, wireless mouses and the plethora of other computing peripherals that 4 is quite a good base number for USB ports. You’ll also perhaps find the odd laptop sporting one of the newer USB 3.0 standards or a high speed eSata port on some of the newer laptops which’ll enable high speed data transfer. Useful if you do a lot of photography or chunky music library.

 

Multi Touch Track pads

Multi Touch Track pads are a standard on Apple computers and are very quickly Multi-Touch-Trackpadbeing built into the majority of new Windows computers. Even if your track pad doesn’t support multi touch out of the box, there’s a good chance that you’re using a Synaptic branded track pad in which case a manual install of a few of their newer drivers will give you all the multi touching goodness you can handle.

 

Speakers

Look out for Hardman/Kardon or Bose speakers when purchasing a new laptop. Although not usually a deal breaker, it can often help if you watch a lot of movies or listen to a lot of music. On the other hand if you do end up with tinny speakers then hook up an external subwoofer and some stereo speakers and you’re good to go.

 

As with anything, purchasing a laptop is a matter of personal preference and use. The perfect laptop for somebody might be a nightmare for another to use. So what I’ve listed below are some of what I feel are the better laptops in their class.

 

Recommendations

 

Netbooks

 

Samsung N210

ASUS Eee PC 1201N Seashell

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Standard Notebooks

 

Toshiba Satellite L650-1FW

Dell Inspiron N5010

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Gaming Laptops/Desktop Replacements

 

Alienware M17x

SONY Vaio VPCZ13V9E/X

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Of course these are only a few laptops and there are many many more that you should definitely consider but at least now you have somewhere to start looking.

 

EDIT (25/11/10) – The guys over at Gizmodo have just released their best laptops of 2010. It’s a very good list and something you should definitely take a look at here.

 

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Origin's $17,000 XBox 360 Hybrid Gaming PC Beast


If you were a multi multi billionaire (in which case, why are you even reading a blog like this) and money was no object and you wanted to do a spot of gaming on your PC, then take a little look at Origin's Big O. For those of you who think like me, even though it's named the Big O, it doesn't mean that it requires foreplay and a little teasing to get it turned on. Instead this Hybrid PC come Xbox combo hopes to have everything you need in this neat little liquid cooled tower.

The configuration over at Kotaku cost just under $17,000 and the only way to describe it is it's either  technological beast of a machine or it's creators made something powerful enough to kill a small child. The specs are listed below and taken from the Kotaku page but if you can't be bothered to scroll then what you really need to know is that it's a six-core Xeon 5680 processor which over clocks to 4.3Ghz along with Quad SLI Liquid Cooled GTX's with12Gigs of souped up RAM.


From the mouth Origins,

The Big O will satisfy the demands of even the most power hungry gamer, but when you create the ultimate personal computer system it has to be designed to go above and beyond gaming" said Kevin Wasielewski, CEO and Co-Founder of ORIGIN. "From the hottest games on the market to digital video editing and 3D rendering you will have the power to perform at every level. To have the best you have to build using the latest in computer technology that guarantees unmatched performance and that is exactly what you get with the Big O.
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Lagoa Multiphysics 1.0 Engine will blow your mind

Lagoa-Multiphysics-1.0-Physics-Engine

A guy by the name of Thiago Costa over at Lagoa Technologies Inc have released a “teaser” video of it’s very promising graphics engine, Lagoa. This demo video shows off a multiphysics simulation performed by the engine and I must say it looks to be a very very impressive piece of kit. It’s definitely one of those “seen, to be believed” type of demos.

 

 

This isn’t your average pre-rendered video either. Instead all the tasks are performed virtually on the fly and solely relying on the calculations of the Lagoa engine. The types of things simulated in the engine are things like plastic deformations, liquid movement and things generally breaking apart and/or melting. What’s for sure is that in the not too distant future, we’ll be creating physics engines that will be so realistic, we won’t be able to tell them apart.

Source: TechCrunch


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Essential Software: WinDirStat

windirstat logo

There are an absolute wealth of system disk space managers and visualisers out in the software market. However on my quite regular quests to scrounge out every megabyte from my disk like a junkie on crack, WinDirStat is easily my personal recommended choice.

 

For anybody who is unfamiliar with WinDirStat or indeed other disk space visualisers, the purpose of these types of software is to map out your hard drive and give the user a graphical image of where their space is taken up. This is often an amazing time saver when it comes to freeing up some free space or even occasionally finding something you’d forgotten and left lying around (such as in my case, my BSG series 1-4 collection).

 

WinDirStat

Click to enlarge

 

At first launch, WinDirStat allows you to select one or more drives you’d like it to scan first. It then does it’s business and presents an image similar to the one you see just above. Every folder is arranged in an oblong formation and every subfolder of that becomes arranged within that formation. Every coloured block you see in the display actually represents a single file.

 

So for example the white segment highlighted above represents how much space “Edwin’s Music” occupies. Similarly if I were to click that middle yellow square at the centre-top of that, it would show me that that block is an episode of The Engadget Show podcast that I’m subscribed to. From there I can decide to delete the block, open up the containing folder etc etc.

 

All in all, a great piece of software if you’ve got a mass of data and/or multiples hard drives to keep up with (like me and my 2 terabytes of storage over 4 drives). WinDirStat is available only for Windows.

 

You can find WinDirStat and the download links on their homepage here.


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How Secure Is Your Password?

how secure is my passwordSo one of the most common topics in internet security these days amongst both your everyday consumer and in big business to date is in how secure is one’s password? In my opinion there are two issues that largely affect users and they are the lack of information/understanding about internet passwords and also the dissolution that they have a “strong password”. This site helps any user determine just how strong a password is whether or not you’re an experienced C++ programmer or on the other end of the scale, you use a mac (the Early Learning Centre computer for adults).

 

So How Secure Is My Password? aims to solve much of the headache of creating a password by telling you how long it would take a standard desktop PC to crack your password. Clearly unless you’re using some form of 256-bit dynamic Cipherunicorn-A  method of cryptology, then every password is crackable with enough processing power and brute strength. However it’s scary just how quick some passwords can be cracked according to this website. It calculates it using the processing speed of an average desktop PC so if you’re the most wanted man on Earth and have Interpol on your tail, it’s likely they’ll chase your butt with something more substantial than an Intel Core 2 Duo running XP.

 

Either way I must admit, my Facebook account did get hacked lately by someone in Illinois (according to Facebook who had my location as suspicious). So naturally I was curious and after inputting what I thought was a pretty secure password, I get the following depressing screenshot:

 

secure password not

10 seconds … seriously? I then went ahead and inputted my current password that I use for Facebook and was relieved to find that the figure went up to a very comforting 42 years. I then tested a few other passwords I’d used before and finding out that the most secure password I have, which I use on one of my machines would take a PC a good 163 thousand years to crack. Big smiles all round.

 

Anyways you should all definitely check out this website even for just a minute just to double check your password. There is a note on the website that this is totally secure and no, you’re not misguidedly sending your password to the webmaster or anything like that. There’s a copy of the source code for anyone whose into that and also a useful link to how to pick a good password.

 

How Secure Is My Password?

 

EDIT (03/07/2010): Also, for a list of the Top 500 most common and therefore easiest to crack passwords, go here. Shamefully I recognised two from the list as my previous passwords.

 

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G-Speak: The First step to the Future of Operating Systems?

Tom Cruise Minority Report Ever since the release of Minority Report (2002), Steven Spielberg’s vision of a wall-sized display which merged gesture recognition and floating panels has been a geek’s wet-dream of an operating system. Now Oblong Industries have developed G-Speak, in which they describe it as a “Spatial Operating System”. It’s a very cool combination of using very intuitive hand motions to control the screen in front of you. A lot of this is aimed at being used for data analysis and large data sets but who knows, it could easily be something we could find on our home PC’s in the next decade.

 

Check out the awesome demo after the jump.

 

Some of the SOE's core ideas are already familiar from the film Minority Report, whose characters performed forensic analysis using massive, gesturally driven displays. The similarity is no coincidence: one of Oblong's founders served as science advisor to Minority Report and based the design of those scenes directly on his earlier work at MIT. Other foundational components are less directly visible but as crucially transformative. The g-speak platform braids development arcs begun in the early 1990s at MIT's Media Laboratory, where Oblong's principals produced radical user interface advances, distributed and networked language designs, and media manipulation technologies.

Source: Oblong Industries Introduction

 

Also check out LukeW.com’s article on other projects that have tried to create this Minority report like interface with companies including Microsoft  and Sun Microsystems here.

Source: Oblong Industries

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Next Gen Gaming Chips out this coming Autumn

AMD64x2 dual core 4400 with 2mb cache

If you’re a addictive gamer and you’re looking to upgrade your gaming rig or wish to just keep up with the current technology, hold off buying a new computer or components until later this year. When exactly? Probably around October 22nd, the rumoured scheduled release date for Microsoft’s Windows 7 Operating System.

 

The two largest manufacturers of gaming chips for the PC, Nvidia and AMD, have announced that they are looking to release the latest in their line of gaming chip products this fall. The reason for it is to coincide with this date is so that not only will new PC’s benefit from upgraded graphics cards but also because that it’ll be around the same time as Apple’s Snow Leopard OS emerges. The important point about this is that both of these Operating Systems will have GPU Computer, the functionality to allow the system to use the graphics card for non-graphic card applications. So for example, anybody who uses Photoshop, rather than just relying on the CPU to render the images etc, it’ll use the graphics card too (faster speeds)

 

Notably these chips will all have to be 40 nanometre chips if they are to keep up with the latest DirectX 11 update for Windows 7 and therein may lie the problem. Whereas AMD have confidently been stating that they are ready and are all good to go to ship the new chips, Nvidia have been decidedly quiet on that front leading to rumours that they might not finish the chips in time for OS release.

 

Either way if you’re planning on splashing out on a new chip or a new computer, wait a few more months, either you can get yourself a next generation chip or at the very least, the price of current components and computers will drop.

 

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Top 10: Reviews of the Most Essential Software around

I figured it’s probably now a good time to be a charitable citizen of the inter-webs and to publish my list of essential software nobody should go on without. The best thing is that everything on this list is absolutely free and available like the no-strings-attached one nighter you picked up last weekend.

Firefox_by_carlosnumbertwoFor those of you who aren’t as tech savvy as the rest of us, some of the following list contains Open Source Software which are basically alternative software to their more commercialised counterparts such as Adobe Photoshop, Microsoft Office etc etc. These can become absolute lifesavers if you’re running out of coins in the old piggy bank and can’t afford to dish out the $2,500 it costs for Adobe’s Creative Suite Collection.

Also I’ve noted down any other notable software that might be related for you to check out in case my choices don’t quite fly with you along with the URLs as to where you can find more information about the software and where to download them from.

Considering how diverse a category this bunch of software is, I’ll order them in terms of what I use most and find most useful. So let’s kick off the list with the one, the only …

 

OpenOffice.org

You might have read my recent review of the Microsoft’s latest offering: Office 2010 but what you might not have known is that there are several open source variations which are more often or not free. Leading the way in this department is OpenOffice.Org. This suite of applications incorporate most the programs you would normally find in Office but free and developed by the community. Their latest offering (Version 3.1) runs on all platforms, so whether you’re a MAC, Linux or Windows user, you can not only edit on one machine, but you can then take it over to another platform without any hassle. It’s also available in a variety of languages and can handle most common document types.

Personally I don’t use this (which explains why it’s last) but I do know of many people who do on a daily basis and recommend it to me if you don’t have Office. I’ve always been a bit of an MS Office user myself and if you can get Office 2007/2010, I’d recommend them first but for those instances where you can’t, OpenOffice.org is definitely the way to go.

open officeimage33-screen

Notable alternatives:  Google Docs, Lotus Symphony, NeoOffice

Find it here: http://www.openoffice.org/

 

Polaris

Many of you reading this will be either bloggers or own a website, for those who aren’t just skip ahead to the next one on the list or at least drool at the Adobe Air Interface. This is the second application I’ve used based on the Adobe Air Platform (the other being Tweetdeck) and I must say, I’m very very impressed with how it runs on a whole new GUI and brings a breath of fresh air to what would otherwise be ordinary applications. Everything from the Installation to the setup and the final product makes you sit up and pay attention.

After experimenting with a couple of website tracking utilities, Google Analytics has been far and away the best in terms of ease of use and the way in which it represents data to you (not to mention free!). Google Analytics itself will be covered in a review on a later date when I run the comb over my favourite websites but Polaris brings essentially a beautiful dashboard to your desktop via the Analytics engine.

polaris dash

This free version allows for tracking of only one site, but this is perfect for me (as I only have one site) and apart from that, appears to have no other limitations. It’s quick and from the drop down menu, you can easily pull a variety of useful data you can glance at without the need of opening up a browsing and navigating the Analytics Website. All in all, an absolutely superb piece of software for those who need to track your website.

polaris menu

polaris map Notable Alternative: Awstats

Find it here: http://www.desktop-reporting.com/polaris.html

 

Virtual CloneDrive

Now I must admit that this is a new one on the list for me, and if I hadn’t switched over to Windows 7 RC that I would have probably never stumbled across this. However, seeing as my once preferred Daemon Tools (including Lite) doesn’t work with the new Windows as of yet, I’ve had to go looking elsewhere for a drive emulator. That is how I met Virtual CloneDrive and I haven’t looked back since. It runs in much the same way as Daemon Tools in that it sets up virtualised drives on your computer in order to run .iso files. This won’t mean much to people who don’t backup files and folders onto discs or who don’t download illegal educational games and software from the internet. But to those who do, this is an absolute gem and hasn’t failed me thus far.

Virtual clone driveNotable Alternatives: Daemon Tools, Alcohol 120%

Find it here: http://www.slysoft.com/en/virtual-clonedrive.html

 

Windows Movie Maker 2.1

Now this one might come as a bit of a surprise to you but yes Microsoft does release free software *recoil in horror*. Now once you’ve caught your breath back, Windows Movie Maker is my choice for a simple to use movie maker with a variety of customizable options such as title screens, transitions, text overlays etc. Just check the rest of my site, and you’ll find a few examples of my (amateurish) video editing skills. Yes I’m also perfectly aware that the Windows Live Movie Maker Beta is out but the library of effects and the customisability appears to be stripped down for some unknown reason. There might be a way of displaying and showing the timeline in the new one, but I haven’t found it and it looks to me like Microsoft have taken a step backwards.

movie maker

A lot of you on the Mac platform will have the iCanMakeAnAmazingMovie software anyways and other more serious video makers with probably use Avidemux but that requires a bit of time and patience to get around the software. So if you’re not too concerned with making top notch productions and like me, mostly just post your videos to YouTube, this is a smart and easy to use piece of kit. Although they’ve taken a step backwards with new software it at least makes clear that not all new software upgrades actually upgrades software.

Notable Alternatives: Avidemux, Adobe Premier Pro, iMovie, Pinnacle Studio

Find it here: http://bit.ly/Lg8Xq

 

AVG

What has been the most reliable and unobtrusive anti-virus for the past few years in my opinion? Only one answer. AVG. For someone who downloads an obscene quantity of data on a daily basis, I’m really quite surprised that I haven’t had a major virus or anything come through ( cue the shooting myself in the foot scenario aka waves of hackers ). On the off chance that I do download a dodgy piece of software, up pops AVG like an experienced bouncer at a London nightclub. Without AVG, I’d definitely have a stockpile of buggered up CPU’s around my dorm and a general wasteland of Trojans and Worms all over my system.

Yet thanks to AVG, it runs nicely in the background and you won’t even notice it. It does have a few handy features such as being able to scan links sent to you via email or highlighting dangerous sites on Google. This is certainly a much sweeter answer than Norton Antivirus which in my opinion is way over-bloated and acts like an annoying child, asking permission of this, permission for that, permission to …avg

Notable Alternatives: Avast, NOD32, Avira AntiVir Personal , Clam Antivirus

Find it here: http://free.avg.com/

 

Live Messenger + Messenger Plus!

Chat. Some people do it, and some people don’t. For those who do, I’m not going to talk about the new Live Messenger as such but instead focus on the superb add-on: Messenger Plus! (the exclamation mark is actually the title, I didn’t just feel excited ..). This Live Messenger Extension practically beefs up Messenger to a point which Arnie would be proud of. plsu live about There is a huge list of features which would take me months to get through (minutes really but I’m feeling lazy) so check out the site to see the full list. The one’s I think you should pay attention to the most because I couldn’t live without them is Tabbed Chats, Boss Protection and HTML Chat Logging.The first feature makes organising all your chat windows into one box with the ability to Ctrl + Tab your way through conversations. The second makes pressing a preset keyboard shortcut minimise all windows to one icon in the system tray and hide any sounds or pop ups from appearing. The third includes secure encrypting of logs and displaying them in a much nicer fashion.plus live

Notable Alternatives: none that i would trust not to break msn

Find it here: http://www.msgplus.net/

 

7-Zip

Anyone whose ever come across a .zip or .rar or even the .001 type files will know that the inbuilt windows extractor is deeply out of it’s depth. Here I bring you 7-Zip, a free file extraction utility that can quickly and easily extract virtually any file, whether the file was even meant for this type of extraction or not. What makes this really easy to use is that you can change the Windows context menu in order to make extracting a simple two click process and absolutely hassle free.7-Zip

The screenshot below shows  the built in Windows Context Menu in action. Just right click and then on extract here and it’ll do the rest.

7 zip context

Notable Alternatives: WinZip, WinRAR, IZArc

Find it here: http://www.7-zip.org/download.html

 

Picasa 3

As I was searching for a better way of organising and viewing my tens upon thousands of pornographic personal images, I came across Picasa 3. Under the heading of Google, Picasa 3 provides a very quick and easy solution to managing photo libraries small and large. Picasa 3 has features such as being able to automatically update the library any time it detects new images in any assigned folders, it can detect duplicates in all your folders to keep your photo library clean and also create fancy collages to your viewing delight.

Also it includes native support for uploading to the Picasa Web Albums directory and although it’s not too apparent from the screenshot below, the interface does make it both very simple to navigate and provides very cool looking graphicspicasa 3 interfaceSomething that I hadn’t noticed before was that opening pictures from Windows Explorer opens up a Cooliris-esque picture viewer which overlays the image you want to see on top of windows which looks incredibly sleek and if your GPU is up to it, is a very satisfying piece of eye candy. In terms of the UI, this definitely has one leg up over Windows Live Photo Gallery.picasa overlay

Notable Alternatives: IrfanView, Flickr

Find it here: http://picasa.google.com/

 

FeedDemon

Anybody who reads the news particularly a lot or needs to keep track of their favourite websites, subscribes to the RSS or Atom feeds right? Well with NewsGator’s FeedDemon, the software essentially aggregates all your news feeds and delivers it right to your desktop. Usually it’s the first thing i open when I switch on my laptop and keep up to date in the world of tech and news and (rightly or wrongly) takes priority over breakfast.

It’s as simple as clicking subscribe, typing in the name of your website, it'll find the feed for that site and once you’re done, it’ll  automatically download new posts depending on how often you would like to be updated. Whether that be once every 30 minutes or every 3 hours is up to you. If you’re done reading but wish to keep it in the background, closing it via the X can be altered to minimise to the system tray. newsgator

There’s the added functionality of clipping which is HUGELY useful if like me, you have half a kazillion feeds and say you see something interesting but don’t have time to read it, you can send it straight to the local or online clippings folder and access it later whenever you want.

Notable Alternatives: Google Reader, Vienna

Find it here: http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/FeedDemon/Default.aspx 

 

VLC Media Player

Quite literally the definition of multi-format media players. I’ve yet to come across a video or audio file on my daily use that this multi-faceted player could not handle. When installed, it can either be used “straight out the box” or a further delve into the options reveals the ability to rip CDs, to convert file formats and even enabling simple re-skinning of the entire interface. Not much else to say but once you’ve installed VLC, then you won’t ever have to find a reason to rummage around for codecs.

vlcNotable Alternatives: Media Player Classic, Kantaris, GOM Player, Real Alternative

Find it here: http://www.videolan.org/vlc/ 

 

Firefox

Yup, as the photo up top was probably a big clue, the number one spot goes to Firefox. Now where to begin with Firefox. Firefox has in my opinion not only provided a great open source platform for which millions of users browse the web from but has also changed our behaviour in how we interact with the Web. From simple features that we often take for granted such as tabbed browsing to the more complex and forward thinking ideas of Ubiquity, Firefox has managed to bring internet browsing to the next generation of users. Firefox

Now I’ll keep this short and sweet because I’ll do a separate article specifically just about Firefox at a later date highlighting everything from the best extensions to new upcoming ideas and a review of the new Firefox 3.5 ridiculously quick TraceMonkey Javascript engine. But to the 90% of my readers who are reading this on Firefox, when was the last time you went a day without clicking on the Orange and Blue icon? Case Closed?

Notable Alternatives: Google Chrome, Safari, Opera

Find it here:http://getfirefox.com/

 

Feel free to leave a comment just down below and subcribe to the site. It would be very much appreciated. If you think i’ve missed a trick somewhere software wise then throw down what you think should’ve been in this list and have yourselves a little debate.

 

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Next Generation of DVDs to be 200,000x larger?

Dr James Chon of the Swinburne University of T...

Image by AFP/Getty Images via Daylife

Let me just re-assure you for a second. This article title is most definitely not a typo. Researchers at the Centre for Micro-Photonics at Swinburne University Austria have had a breakthrough in developing what can only be described as a colossal sized DVD. Specifically, ones that could hold 1 Quadrillion bytes of data. Now I can’t even begin to comprehend the amount of noughts and commas that even is.

In essence, their 5 year project budgeted at a cost of close to $1 million aims to make use of nano particles in order to expand current DVD dimensions. I’m sorry but NANO particles? Isn’t that like supposed to be particles on a molecular level? Anyways, led by Professor Min Gu and funded by the Australian Research Council, they aim to do this by essentially increasing the number of layers on a DVD. This currently stands at a (meagre) 4 layers, yet the team has demonstrated that this can be increased to a further 52 layers.

The next part is just way over and above me so read the extract from the original article if you wish to know the details of dimension altering nanoparticles:

The group, led by Professor Min Gu, is considering a range of technologies but is currently looking at a multi-dimensional system that keeps the architecture of the current CD-DVD drive but can break through the terabyte limit.

The project is looking at how nanotechnology can enable data to be stored in two further dimensions. The first is a spectral or colour dimension, which involves differently shaped nanoparticles being inserted on a disc to allow information to be recorded in a range of colour wavelengths on the same physical location.

The second is the use of polarisation. By altering the direction of the incoming light wave, and the electric field within, different nanoparticles will be aligned to allow storage of more data.

Now the implications of this I don’t think would be aimed at archiving materials or the backing up of supercomputers due to certain characteristics such as eventual oxidisation and other environmental damage. Rather that if this kind of technology was commercialised, we could see corporations such as MGM distributing every James Bond film in 1080p (or whatever the next standard in HD is) of James Bond on a single disc. Rather than pack your shelves with bloated box sets from your favourite TV series i.e. all ten seasons of friends, plus behind the scenes footages, blooper reels, and then some, you could fit it all onto one single (and precious) supersized disc.

Either way, it makes for some rather interesting thinking when it comes to the future of data storage.

Source: News.com.au

 

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I Want In On Microsoft’s Vision of the Future

microsoft-future-montage-2019 Holy mother of #>insert Religious figure here<#. Now this is the reason why geeks exist and is the root of all night terrors that plague granddads and grannies across the nation. It’s visions like this that get me so interested in new tech and the funny thing is that the more you think about it, the more likely than unlikely our futures will unfold in this way.

Now all i need is a bloody time-travelling DeLorean to cut out the next 10 years of my life ...

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