Friday, March 28, 2008
Prevent Forget Password, Create Password Recovery Disk [How To]
Prepare a blank disk, or a thumb drive. Follow the following steps:
1. Click Start, go to Control Panel.
2. Look for User Accounts, go inside and look for your account name.
3. Under Related Task (left), click Prevent a forgotten password.
4. Follow the steps until you the Finish button.
You are done, eject the disk or thumb drive and make sure you remember where you keep it.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Easy Files Upload To Flickr, Facebook, etc [Firefox Tips]
Firefox Universal Uploader is a Firefox addon that allows you to upload files and photos to your social network accounts or online photo albums all in a single interface. This convenient Firefox addon currently supports:
- Flickr
- Picasa, Youtube,
- Box.net
- Webshots
- OmniDrive
magine using this to handle all your future uploads without going to each of the websites. Firefox Universal Uploader supports multiple files uploading and keeps you notified on statuses of the uploads. Developer Rahul Jonna promises more supports for other sites like Google Video in future. I really hope to see this supporting more social network like Bebo, Myspace, Friendster, etc.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Beyond the keyboard and mouse
Earlier this week the front page of the Austin Chronicle featured a picture of the band the Guitar Zeros - a group of musicians who perform using hacked versions of the Guitar Hero video game controller.
It's an extreme example of how popular the game and it's guitar style interface have become.
"It's pretty amazing we took something that was real and made it fake and they took something fake and made it real" said Kai Huang, CEO of RedOctane who created the game.
But while games like Guitar Hero and the Nintendo Wii are exploring new kinds of kinetic interface, in our work lives most of us are stuck with the Qwerty keyboard and the computer mouse: inventions that date back 134 years and 24 years respectively.
At SXSW in Austin Texas, what comes next has been a hot topic of conversation across a range of expert panels.
For Huang simpler interfaces like Guitar Hero point the way to the future.
Minority Report has inspired many designs, including the Cynergy controller |
Guitar Hero "allows people to jump from point a to point b, it skips all of those hard years, the 10,000 hours it would take someone to learn a real instrument.. and I think that can be applied to just about everything," he told the BBC.
Outside the realm of games, Microsoft's Surface is another alternative to keyboard and mouse beginning to find a place in the consumer world.
Kristin Alexander, head of research and planning for Microsoft Surface, says interfaces will, in the longer term, move beyond table top screens to other spaces.
Guitar Hero has been praised for its innovative interfaces |
"That's why we called it Surface and not table.", she said, adding that the long term vision was both horizontal and vertical. Although she stressed Microsoft remained very committed to the mouse.
If that's the plan, then Microsoft may have a bit of catching up to do, Rick Barraza of Cynergy Systems was showcasing a home made "Minority Report" style gesture-interface made of a Nintendo Wii controller, a gutted computer mouse, and a pair of baseball gloves dotted with infra-red LED's, "the whole things is maybe around $150" said Barraza.
In spite of the homebrew feel, the results were impressive.
"It was unabashedly inspired by Minority Report... very much like Microsoft Surface without the surface."
Currently, the Surface costs several thousand dollars.
Microsoft is pushing Surface, but not abandoning the mouse |
The Make it So: Learning from Sci-Fi Interfaces panel at SXSW looked at how science fiction might influence the future of design.
Panellist Nathan Shedroff who teaches an MBA in design said: "If you talk to the people who worked on the film they had to keep taking breaks because Tom Cruise would get tired."
Barrazza and Shedroff might disagree about the physical demands of gesture style interfaces, no such problems face the Emotiv system which uses electrical activity in the brain to control computer systems; it was seen as a promising development by several speakers.
"In 20 to 40 years that technology is going to advance," said Huang.
But while the world waits for brain powered computing there was general agreement that in many ways the key to easily accessible computing wasn't necessarily only a matter of greater sophistication.
"The simple thing is to add a few more buttons. The really difficult thing is to simplify that down," Huang told the conference.
Fans of the Guitar Zero's would presumably agree.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Microsoft puts net at its heart
Web developers have gathered in Las Vegas for Microsoft's annual Mix conference. Blogger and journalist Ewan Spence gives an overview of the talking points from the event.
"We are placing the internet at the centre of our strategy," was the key message that Ray Ozzie, chief technology officer of Microsoft, got over to the attendees at the company's Mix08 conference in Las Vegas this week.
The annual "72 hour conversation" is where the Redmond based company sets out its vision and strategy for the next year.
The big picture driving Microsoft, explained Ozzie, was one of the internet and marketing shaping changes over every product line.
These changes should ensure that there is sufficient space for advertising to be presented to an increasing user base, both in the products and on community and content sites; incidentally this need for advertising space is one reason why Microsoft has shown an interest in Yahoo.
"The Web is acting as a hub for more devices every day," says Ozzie
Typical view
Previously the typical view of the internet was something that a PC would connect to. Now internet aware devices are becoming more commonplace. From 3G enabled smart phones, to digital music players and gaming machines; more consumer electronics are going online.
As people carry more of these devices, they are building their own "personal internet", and Microsoft hope to make the experience of working in this net as seamless as possible.
People should be able to move their information, media and even full programs between these devices without having to worry about if something will or will not work.
This web of devices can be viewed as many small pieces, loosely joined. Developers want to spend more time writing one program that can run on many of these devices, rather than have their creativity suppressed because they must spend time testing compatibility across the range of products.
Microsoft's Silverlight technology is where a lot of effort to solve this problem will be focused on.
This is a set of tools that plugs into your web browser and allows websites to display rich media content and applications - in a similar fashion to Adobe's Flash system.
With a heavy focus on media, especially video, Silverlight can deliver very complicated and detailed web pages.
Multi-view television
Demonstrations at Mix08 included multi-view television where viewers can decide on camera angles and what to watch, and AOL's updated web email client that delivers an experience comparable to a mail client running on your own computer.
The first version of the technology has seen a solid uptake, with 1.5 million copies of the plug-in downloaded every day.
Already available for Windows PC's, Macs and Linux, Microsoft also reiterated the announcement that Nokia would make Silverlight available for the majority of their handsets and internet tablets.
Probably the key release of Mix08 was the beta version of Internet Explorer 8 (IE8), the latest web browser from Microsoft.
In recent years alternate browsers such as Apple's Safari and Mozilla's Firefox have become increasingly popular, in part due to following internet standards in how pages are displayed - subtle differences between browsers can sometimes make pages look different on IE than in Firefox, for example.
This is no longer the case - the part of IE8 that displays a page has been completely re-written to be standards compliant, much like Safari and Firefox.
Developers will be able to spend much less time making a site work in each browser, and can concentrate on delivering a much better experience.
At a stroke, the single biggest complaint from web developers about Microsoft's browsers have been answered, and the initial reaction from the developers towards the sentiment is positive, albeit with the knowledge that this brings the browser to the same level as others.
Where IE8 is going to prove a success is in connecting the user to information on websites as they journey around the internet.
Microsoft have made it easy for websites that provide services to be used from any other website. For example, if you highlight a street address in IE8, the right click menu will allow you to bring up the location on through the Live Maps service. Find an interesting item you're looking to buy? Right click and be taken directly to the Ebay search results for that product.
Another new element can then be used; Web Slices allow you to subscribe to part of a page and be alerted when the information changes.
Such as when you find the perfect item on Ebay you can use a web slice to subscribe to just that one item; which is then easily followed from the IE8 toolbar.
What Microsoft has chosen to show at Mix08 are not finished products, but the first wave of new products that will become generally available over the next six months. If they continue to innovate and keep both the user experience and the requirements of developers in mind, then their product portfolio is going to be strong and compelling.
The key will be for Microsoft to continue to operate in the currently turbulent business environment, while giving their product teams the confidence to ignore the distractions, such as proposed mergers with Yahoo, and continue to develop the software.