Archive for May, 2010

TechSmith’s screencast service Jing goes pro

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Of the news, one of the biggest changes is the move to the MPEG-4 AVC video format. It’s the go-to format for iPods and iPhones, as well as set-top boxes like the Apple TV and TiVo. Likewise, it’s been adopted by YouTube, which makes a separate encode for each file for Flash players and hardware that run H.264 clips. This means that going forward your screencast may end up being able to be watched on a wider range of devices.

On the export front I’m a little surprised TechSmith is offering such a simple way to offload captured videos to third-party hosting sites. It’s really nice, but will no doubt cut into potential revenue from people who might have paid the extra cash for the company’s video hosting sister product, Screencast.com. This service has a higher cap on its file size (2GB up from most service’s 1GB max), but limits how many people can watch your content to 2GB of streaming video.

On Tuesday, TechSmith released Jing Pro, a paid premium version of its free screen capture and casting software. The new service, which runs $14.95 a year, upgrades videos to H.264 encoding, takes off the Jing watermark in the bottom corner of recorded clips, and gives users the option to upload directly to several popular video hosting sites including Facebook, YouTube, Viddler, and Vimeo.

In addition to the launch of Jing Pro, TechSmith put up a new support site called the Jing Help Center, which has a handful of how-to videos and support documents. This is available to both free and pro users.

Download Jing (via CNET’s Download)

uTorrent for Mac leaked

Monday, May 24th, 2010

The details window of uTorrent's Mac client, now confirmed to be in alpha.

Available from the Swedish torrent Web site The Pirate Bay, the Cocoa-based client has been expected since 2006 when BitTorrent bought uTorrent and promised to develop a
Mac version. There was little said since then, until this past August when uTorrent developer Greg Hazel announced that a Mac version would be ready ”in a few weeks,” according to the torrent news Web site TorrentFreak.

(Credit:
TorrentFreak)

Ironically, you’ll need a torrent client to download this torrent client, since it’s only available from a torrent Web site.

Simon Morris, BitTorrent’s vice president of product evelopment, responded to the leak by saying that the version currently in the wild was not supposed to get out and is not recommended for use, although he hopes that people now believe him when he says that there is a Mac uTorrent client in the works. There is an official notification list for eager users available at the uTorrent site.
http://mac.utorrent.com/

[Via TorrentFreak]

Certain key features don’t work yet, such as searching. Comments about the app on The Pirate Bay confirm its bugginess. So far it only seems to work on Intel-based Macs, and only those running OS X 10.5 or higher. Because this is an extremely early build of the client, it’s not clear at this point how it will stand up to established Mac torrent clients such as Transmission, how it compares to its Windows sibling, or even if this means that a BitTorrent-branded Mac client is in the works.

A pre-release alpha version of a Mac version of uTorrent, the popular BitTorrent client for Windows, has been leaked to the public.

YouTube and Pulitzer Center look for best video jo

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

YouTube viewers will eventually choose the winner.

YouTube announced Monday that it has partnered with the Pulitzer Center to create a journalism contest designed to unearth the best news videographers.

Contestants have until October 5 to submit news clips three-minutes long or less that must focus on stories largely overlooked or ignored by traditional media. The Pulitzer Center will judge the competition and plans to trim the contestants down to 10 finalists following the initial round.

The winner will receive a $10,000 grant for travel abroad and the opportunity to work with the Pulitzer Center. When the field of contestants gets down to five, they will be given Sony cameras to work with.

Google is working with a titan of traditional journalism to help promote citizen journalism.

Windows Live tries to show its social side

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

As part of the latest changes, Microsoft is also upping the amount of storage provided with its SkyDrive service to 25GB from 5GB.

Part of this wave of changes is also the update to Windows Live Hotmail, in which Microsoft has merged its standard and classic modes–a move that left some users grumbling.

“The general thing people are trying to do in all of these services is keep in touch,” said Brian Hall, the general manager for Windows Live.

Microsoft is announcing a series of changes to its Windows Live services aimed to give more of a social-networking flavor to the company’s communications services.

Interestingly, Classic mode was an afterthought in the major Hotmail overhaul Microsoft did several years ago. Throughout the redesign, though, it took on added importance until it became the default mode when the revamped Web mail program ultimately launched.

To populate its news feed, users will have the option to include their activities from a variety of other sites. The company has signed up reviews sites like Amazon and Yelp, blogging sites like WordPress and Twitter, as well as some less well-known social-networking sites.

As for the changes to Windows Live itself, glimmers of the update are visible now, though most features are only in private testing and won’t be visible to the masses until next month, Hall said. For example, the latest public beta version of Windows Live Messenger has a “What’s new” feature, but for now it only shows things such as changing a profile picture within Messenger.

“Facebook and MySpace are not on there right now,” Hall said. “We’re announcing a set of partners that are deploying in December.”

On top of those, Microsoft is adding a revamped Windows Live Home page that focuses on a news feed of actions taken by one’s contacts as well as new types of views that focus on what a particular person or group is up to.

Photo sharing is a particular area of focus, with Microsoft offering its own storage options, as well as linking to third-party sites such as Photobucket and Yahoo’s Flickr. Starting next year, HP will also bundle Microsoft’s Windows Live Photo Gallery software with its consumer printers.

With the update, Spaces, Windows Live Hotmail, and Windows Live Messenger will get deeper ties with one another. While stressing that it is not trying to create a new social-networking site, Microsoft is nonetheless adopting concepts like news feeds and profiles that have made such services so popular.

The software maker is trying to expand the amount of time users spend in Windows Live, which Hall said already gets 11 percent of all Internet minutes, thanks largely to the popularity of Hotmail and Messenger.

Third Chrome beta another notch faster

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Google’s tests aren’t the only game in town; many use the SunSpider test. Here, too, the new Chrome got a notch faster, getting the test done in 2,546 milliseconds compared with 2,904 milliseconds for 0.3.154.3. (We couldn’t test the first version because the testing site was down at the time.)

On the SunSpider JavaScript peformance test, the new Google Chrome beta edges closer to TraceMonkey-enhanced Firefox. But the cutting-edge 'Minefield' version of Firefox edges ahead, too.

JavaScript is a programming language used to add some pizazz to innumerable Web pages, but more importantly from Google’s perspective, to power sophisticated Web applications such as Google Docs, Google Calendar, and Gmail. JavaScript is also up against Adobe Systems’ Flash and Flex, Microsoft’s Silverlight, and HTML 5, in the competition for what’s the best foundation for Web applications.

Using Google’s JavaScript benchmark I pitted the newest Chrome beta, version 0.3.154.9, against both the initial beta from September and the more raw 0.3.154.3 developer release from mid-October. A higher number is better on this test, and the first beta scored 1,851, the 0.3.154.3 developer release 2,265, and the new 0.3.154.9 beta 2,546.

The new Chrome score catches closer to the 2,250 millisecond score of
Firefox 3.1 beta 1 with its new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine enabled. (Tech-Recipes has useful instructions on how to enable TraceMonkey.)

And again with the caveats: These tests were run on a dual-core Windows XP machine, and your mileage will undoubtedly vary. They’re synthetic benchmarks that may not accurately represent all the particular JavaScript you have to run. And JavaScript isn’t the sole measure of a browser’s speed.

(Credit:
CNET News)

Google Chrome’s latest version, 0.3.154.9, shows a 37 percent JavaScript performance improvement over the initial beta released two months ago.

(Credit:
CNET News)

On blogger Matt Asay’s advice, I tested Minefield, the cutting-edge version of Firefox that’s updated daily. (Minefield is downloadable from Mozilla’s FTP site for those willing to use very untested software).

(Credit:
CNET News)

It had the best SunSpider score so far on my machine, 2,147 milliseconds. However, Firefox still lags on Google’s speed test. Chrome’s latest score of 2,546 is miles ahead of the 215 score from Minefield.

There could be something fishy going on here, though: Minefield, which has TraceMonkey turned on, actually is slower than Firefox 3.1 beta 1 with TraceMonkey turned off, which is hardly the result you’d expect for a JavaScript speed test. TraceMonkey-enabled Firefox 3.1 beta 1 couldn’t run the test because of a bug, and though that bug was fixed in Minefield, there could be something else awry.

Google began updating Chrome users with the new beta version, and my performance tests show the company has ratcheted the browser’s speed up another notch.

Google has begun automatically updating all Chrome users to the new 0.3.154.9 beta version.

The latest beta version of Google Chrome is a notch faster on Google's JavaScript speed tests, where a larger number is better. The cutting-edge 'Minefield' version of Firefox takes a step back from the the 3.1 beta 1 of Firefox, without the new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine enabled. All the Firefox versions trail Chrome on this test significantly.

Which digital-distribution service is cheapest

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Last week, I blogged about digital distributor RouteNote and did a brief comparison with CD Baby and Tunecore, two better-known services that help independent artists place their songs in online music stores such as iTunes and Amazon MP3.

Now RouteNote has one-upped me on its own blog and run a detailed–and very helpful–mathematical comparison of itself versus CD Baby, Tunecore, The Orchard, and Musicadium.

I found this to be a pleasant change from the usual marketingese that populates corporate blogs, in which competitors are rarely acknowledged except to be criticized. Of course, RouteNote can’t resist tooting its own horn a little bit, noting that its small size makes it more invested in the success of its artists.

You can check out a direct comparison of up-front charges and ongoing revenue splits, as well as a chart showing how much money the artist will earn after selling specific numbers of songs.

RouteNote acknowledges when its service might not be the best deal–basically, when you get up to about 5,000 track sales, TuneCore and Musicadium offer more money to the artist, and at 30,000, CD Baby begins to show a slight advantage.

In the interest of fairness, I’d add one caveat: while The Orchard looks like a crummy deal for artists on a straight dollars-to-dollars comparison, it’s more like a full digital record label. It handles digital distribution, as well as marketing and licensing (like getting your song on a TV show), and it works with video as well as audio.

Yahoo brings its Glue to the U.S.

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

The beta is designed to allow users to enter a search and have not only text links appear on the site, but also related pictures, videos and blogs.

Yahoo rolled out a U.S. beta version of its Glue Pages, giving a visual boost to users’ search results, according to a posting on its Yahoo blog site.

With this effort, Yahoo is seeking to put related content all on one page, while its competitor Google currently offers up text links, with additional links to related photos, videos, blogs, books and news.

(Credit:
Yahoo)

Microsoft’s Live Search takes a similar approach to Google’s.

The company is taking a page from its Yahoo India Glue Pages site, which it unveiled in May.

A view of Yahoo Glue Pages when they debuted in India earlier this year. The feature builds a mini-portal around search results.

AMD MacBook issues giving graphics bad rap

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

In a phone interview Tuesday, Stan Ossias, director of marketing, mobile graphics, at AMD, began by asserting that my March 11 post “overstated” the case about heat and the instability of graphics processors in laptops and that some readers may interpret heat issues too broadly.

AMD announced new mobile GPUs last week based on a cutting-edge 40-nanometer process

(Credit:
AMD-ATI)

Ossias started off the discussion by spelling out how AMD mobile graphics processors can adjust performance and power consumption to different conditions. (The technology, it should be noted, is applied in various ways by many graphics chips.)

“Somebody may choose a GPU that doesn’t necessarily have the best operating characteristics or doesn’t deliver the optimal power consumption in all operating ranges. That’s a constant development challenge” for laptop makers, he said, then added: “A very, very large proportion of our customers do a very good job of this.”

“I don’t think Apple does a bad job of this in general. They are extremely meticulous generally,” he said. However, in some cases “a product decision is made (where) maybe there is more emphasis put on performance characteristics than on another characteristic. Again, that’s another choice that can be made,” Ossias said.

“When the system is calling upon the GPU to do more work, we either increase the voltage or increase the clock speed or increase the operating attributes of the system in order to maximize the performance, and when those things are not in demand we can scale them back so they’re not constantly being run at their maximum. This is the way we go about trying to avoid overheating,” he said. Strict implementation of these design parameters is particularly critical in systems where there is the greatest potential for overheating: thin notebooks and high-end gaming notebooks, according to Ossias.

“I know that when Nvidia announced (in October of last year) publicly that it was recalling or having to rework some of its products and they took a big write-down, we had to address concerns from our customers that we were not also experiencing packaging failures because of the overheating and design flaws that they were experiencing in their product line,” he said. “So, we basically had to go and calm down a lot of our customers and say, look, this is not something that’s inherent to our technology, it’s not something that you have to expect from any GPU.”

“In the case of Apple’s product, I don’t know what happened with Nvidia’s GPU but we’d like to avoid having the negative aspects taint the entire industry,” he said. (GPU stands for graphics processing unit.)

Last week, AMD announced groundbreaking mobile GPUs, the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4830 and 4860, based on a cutting-edge 40-nanometer process. Both chips compete in the same general performance category as the 4870 but start at a much lower power-consumption level (the low 20-watt range) and “therefore you can actually get the 4830 into a thin and elegant notebook design,” according to Ossias. AMD’s current 4650 and 4670 can fit into thin form factors also, he said. These latter two chips would be in the same class as the Apple MacBook Pro’s Nvidia GeForce 9600M, he claimed. The 9600M is the chip alleged to have heat and performance issues.

Advanced Micro Devices worries that lingering issues–both real and speculative–with Apple MacBooks are giving laptop graphics a black eye.

AMD provides tools to PC makers, he said, who make the final design decisions on how the GPU will perform in different power-usage scenarios. But sometimes the laptop maker won’t make the best choice.

Most recently, there have been reports of performance issues with Apple’s new 17-inch MacBook Pro, which has the Nvidia GeForce 9600M chip. But it’s unclear whether Nvidia’s chips are really the problem and it’s not known how widespread the issues are.

Ossias gave an example of the type of graphics chip that would not go into the new MacBook Pro, which is about an inch thick. At the high end of its mobile graphics chip lineup, the ATI Mobility Radeon 4870 can draw as much as 45 watts–a big power draw for a mobile chip. Due to these power characteristics, this would not go into a thin form-factor notebook like the new MacBook Pro, he said.

Twitter friend finder for FriendFeed gets official

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

The new Twitter importing tool from FriendFeed scours your Twitter friends list and lets you know if any of those users are also on FriendFeed.

If you were a user of the previously blogged about Twitter-to-FriendFeed Contact sync tool by Carter Rabasa, you’ll be pleased to know similar functionality is now built-in to FriendFeed. On Tuesday the company quietly launched its own importer as part of its other friend-finding tools.

To find buddies from Twitter who are also using FriendFeed you simply type in your Twitter username and it does the rest. Unlike Rabasa’s tool, there’s no need to give the service either your Twitter password, or (obviously) the one you use for FriendFeed. As an added bonus, FriendFeed’s import tool also lets you take whichever friends you’ve selected and add them to a new friends list–that is if you’re into that level of organization.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

I’d love to see this same kind of tool extended to other popular social services. While Twitter is an obvious match, I’d love to see it dig through Facebook, MySpace, and other places where I have typically met the people on my friends list.