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Monday, 6 December 2010

New skype.


Skype, the ever popular (but struggling) VoIP and video calling platform, officially releasing version 5.0 for Windows. The first thing regular users will likely notice is an overhauled interface that feels significantly more modern and clean than past versions. But the big news is that Skype will be integrating with Facebook using the social network's Connect feature. The interface will have a dedicated Facebook tab that displays your news feed, and will also place a call and/or SMS button next to your friends who have either a Skype name or cell phone number on file. You can also browse your Facebook phonebook, though apparently this only displays phone numbers, not Skype handles.

Otherwise, this is largely the Skype you've come to know and love. It still offers top notch voice and video calling, and supports 10-way group video calls. It's not clear when, or if, Facebook integration wil be coming to other platforms (like Linux, OS X or mobile apps), but it's a good bet the company is working to add the functionality across its offerings. You can download Skype 5.0 for Windows here.

AVG Update Keeping Some PCs From Booting

AVG
Users running both the 64-bit edition of Windows 7 and the free AVG 2011 antivirus suite may have had a little trouble booting their PCs after a recent update. The update, which AVG released yesterday, was causing a STOP error, thus preventing PCs from booting into Windows. It's since been pulled, but, if you've been stung by the bug, be prepared to break out that recovery disk. You can find detailed instructions here.

Google Calendar: Get Your Weather Forecast and Custom Date Views

Custom Date ViewFor all the good that Google has done in helping us keep our e-mails and events organized, it's notoriously bad for hiding useful tools and features out of sight. We've got two simple tips today for opening up Google Calendar's potential. Google Calendar's '4 days' view has always seemed out of place, but makes much more sense when you realize it's customizable. You'll need to head to Settings to make changes. Buried in the General Settings tab is a field for Custom view, which is set at '4 days' by default. You can limit the view down to '2 days' or open it up to as much as '4 weeks.' Any change here will be reflected in the tab between the Month and Agenda views.

Similarly, Settings also hides the option for daily weather forecasts. In the Location field, enter your zip code or city, select your favored temperature scale, and tap 'Save' at the bottom. Now, Google Calendar will display the weather for the next few days; clicking on the weather icon will reveal a more detailed forecast with highs, lows, humidity and more.

How to Move Your iTunes Library to a New Computer

move your itunes library
Here at Switched, we've been through countless hard drives over the years. That trusty ol' 400-gigabyte drive is going to fail sooner or later, swallowing your precious, carefully crafted music library as it goes -- unless you've prepared yourself. Fortunately, transferring your fully intact iTunes library to a new drive or computer is a cinch. You can, of course, grab the music files themselves and throw them on your new computer, but you'll probably lose all of your metadata like playlists, playcounts and ratings. Instead, the following technique will preserve all of your hard work, and save you the effort of manually rebuilding your library. (Who does anything manually anymore, anyway?)

Setup

iTunes MusicBefore starting, make sure that you've been diligently backing up your files and that you've set iTunes to automatically organize your media. We can't stress this enough: all of your media must be organized in a single folder for this to work. It's possible to pull it off without a consolidated iTunes library, but it's an extremely involved process. It's far easier to move thousands of files when they're contained in a single place to begin with. Also, if you happen to have an additional external drive, we recommend backing up all of your media a second time. The following process is straightforward, but you never know when a drive will fail, and it's always good to have a backup of the backup.

You can use iTunes' built-in Backup to Disc option, but that will probably take far too many CDs or DVDs. We recommend the external drive approach; storage is cheap these days. Plus, if you're moving your library to an internal drive, you'll be able to use the extra external for dedicated backup. Windows users, navigate within the file system to the iTunes folder (Your account\music), and copy the entire iTunes folder over to the new drive. Mac users, you'll want to go to your User Folder/Music/iTunes. Depending on your drive speed and library size, this could take a while.

Once backup is complete, disconnect the drive and plug it into your new computer. Now, you've got two options. First, you can keep your library on an external drive. Some externals take a moment to spin up, which can cause a lag while playing tracks in iTunes -- and, of course, you'll have to lug the drive with you if you want mobile access to your tunes. Second, you can import all your music onto your new computer's internal drive. This may not be the best use of space if you've got a giant media library, but, fortunately, most new computers come with hundreds of gigabytes of storage.

External

If you opt for the external drive, quit iTunes and hook the drive up to your new computer. Mac users should hold down the 'option' key and click on iTunes, forcing the app to prompt you about your library location. Windows users, hold down the 'shift' key during iTunes startup. Click Choose Library, navigate to the iTunes Music Library folder on your new drive, select, and wait. After a few moments, iTunes should load with your library intact, complete with ratings, metadata, artwork and play counts.

Internal

The internal drive process is similar. Make sure iTunes isn't running, and hook up your backup drive to your new computer. Make sure the iTunes folder that currently exists on your internal drive is empty of any music or video files you need, because you'll be writing over it. Drag the iTunes folder on your backup drive into your Music folder (under users), and wait for it to copy. Now, open iTunes according to the directions above and repeat. You'll want to navigate to the iTunes folder that now cozily resides on your computer's internal hard drive. While you are at it, take this time to prune and streamline your tunes. Smash Mouth? No one wants to listen to that. Trust us.

Apple's Smart Playlist....... For iPhone,iOs.

Since album art practically defines music (e.g., Joy Division's 'Unknown Pleasures,' Nirvana's 'Nevermind', even Britney Spears's 'Britney'), no collection is complete with covers in disarray. Artwork is a key component to any obsessively organized music library, and the latest version of iTunes makes it a breeze to sort and add art. While most downloads from the iTunes Store come with artwork, you'll know that any time spent ripping CDs, transferring vinyl or downloading tracks from the Web will fill a library with shoddy and incomplete graphics. Read on to get your lovely library looking top-notch, and wow your friends with a complete Cover Flow.

Getting Started: How to Add Artwork

artworkThere are several ways to get images into iTunes, but the most basic involves selecting a track and manually adding it. Once you've single-clicked a track (or tracks) in any iTunes playlist, you've got three ways to do this: 1) navigate to File > Get Info; 2) right-click and select Get Info; and 3) tap Apple + i on a Mac, or CTRL + i on a PC. To add the image, drag or paste the artwork you've found to the 'Artwork' box. Make sure you double-check your selections; you don't want to accidentally apply the wrong artwork across multiple albums.

Get Album Artwork The first semi-automated, extremely powerful image-finding process is built directly into iTunes. Simply right-click any song and select Get Album Artwork. (This will work with any track you've got, not just purchases from the store.) If available, the art will be downloaded and applied, and you can speed up the process by selecting multiple songs (even your entire Library). It may take a few minutes, but iTunes will display the processing status. Once complete, a window will pop up showing you the albums that couldn't be found.

If your music is impeccably tagged and organized, this trick will quickly cover most of your unillustrated tracks. If you've got a deep collection of obscure albums, EPs, foreign pressings or vinyl rips, you're probably still missing a lot of artwork.

Filter Your Artless Tunes in Seconds

has artworkClearly, adding artwork to your entire library could take a while, and simply finding the albums lacking artwork could take hours of sorting. Fortunately, iTunes 10 introduced a powerful new filter criteria for album artwork, so finding all of your unillustrated albums can be done in a few seconds. Create a smart playlist (File > New Smart Playlist) that searches for 'has artwork' and 'is false.' Rename this playlist 'No artwork' or something easy to find, and click to view all your songs without artwork.

Moving on from iTunes

Grab your drink of choice (we recommend something strong), and dig in; you'll need to manually add album artwork for these stragglers. For high-res art, start with Google Image Search, and set the search filter to large. Ideally, you're looking for images that are at least 500x500 pixels. (You can check in the image info.) Wikipedia often offers decent images for popular albums, and some smart googling can help you track down the harder-to-find covers. Automated third-party tools like GimmeSomeTune, TuneUp and Artwork Gofer will reach outside of the Apple ecosystem to Amazon, Google Images and other services to track down more obscure artwork. Yes, it's probably best to get in the habit of double-checking artwork whenever you add a new album, but these tools and tricks will help any library that's gotten out of aesthetic hand.

Take Control of Your iPod and iPhone's Playlists (With an Ironlike Grip)

Manual iTunes Syncing
This week we've primarily covered iTunes as it exists on your computer, but we've left out an essential component of the iTunes system: mobile devices. Of course, managing music on your iPhone and iPod opens up a brand new set of problems and issues. By default, your iDevice is set to automatically sync with your iTunes Library; if you've got an extremely small media library and rarely listen to music on the go, auto-sync may work for you. For most, though, libraries are showing no sign of slimming down, and auto-syncing all your media is a sure-fire way to get an irritable and error-laden iTunes.

Although iTunes does let you sync specific playlists, you'll end up playing mind games every time you go to hook up your phone or iPod. "Did I add too many songs to the Late Night Jams mix? Will this overwrite my Morrissey B-sides collection? Exactly how many songs have I added to my 'New Albums' folder since last syncing?" Here is a rare Switched recommendation: Going manual is your best bet. This way, you gain complete control over the music you're carrying around, as well as the power to delete and filter without auto sync's playlist-based constraints.

Turn on Manual Media Management

Manually manage musicTo change the setting, click on the icon of your iPhone or iPod where it's located in the left rail of iTunes, and check Manually manage music and videos under the Options header. Manually managing your music is, to an extent, just like filling your CD binder of yore. You can simply drag and drop songs and playlists directly onto your device. Want to trash a song from your iPod? Select it under the Music folder, and simply tap the delete key. Want to clear out old playlists? Click the sidebar, and trash it. By selecting your iPod in your left rail, you'll see a mini iTunes within your device, with the same rules and ways to organize.

Autofill!

Autofill in itunes
One of the best parts of manual management is the extremely powerful Autofill feature. Autofill is, for lack of a better metaphor, the space at the top of your suitcase, allowing you to cram whatever socks, sunglasses or shoes you can fit. If you are carrying your device, why not fill it to the brim with a selection of tunes? To access it, click your device in the left rail and look at the bottom of the iTunes window.* You'll see an option to select a playlist, as well as a Settings button, where you can adjust the randomness of choices, propensity for higher-rated songs and a slider for precisely filling disk space. For example, augment your hand-picked albums with a random selection of songs you haven't listened to lately. (Just create a smart playlist to grab all the songs you haven't played in the last six months.)

*Note: If you select your device and click the Music tab, Autofill is nowhere to be found. Instead, it's only accessible by clicking the Music playlist. Great design choice, Apple.

Manual Management and Smart Playlists

Earlier this week, we wrote about the power of smart playlists in iTunes, and they're just as powerful on mobile devices. Auto-syncing smart playlists simply copies everything in that filter over to your device. For example, if you try to sync your 200 GB smart playlist of 1980s music, iTunes will balk due to 'not enough space.' Sidestep this by manually managing your music, and creating the smart playlist on your iPhone or iPod itself; select your device, and start a new smart playlist under the Music heading. This will create a device-specific filter that only looks for '80s music already on your device. Or, as a couple of our writers have pointed out, you can create specialized smart playlists (e.g., only songs with five stars, anything from the recently added list or any tune marked "Alternative hip-hop") by manually checking the playlist on your device. These smart playlists, then, will function as live filters that sort new music as you add it, creating a new way to rediscover your favorite songs or find the ones you haven't played yet.

iOS 4.2 Music Bug Got Ya Down? Here's How to Fix It

iPod no contentChances are that if you own an iPod touch, iPhone or iPad, you jumped up to get the latest iOS update. iOS 4.2, in addition to introducing multitasking to the iPad, brought along a little bug that's making music collections vanish into thin air. A number of iPhone 4, 3GS and iPod touch owners have complained that, after iOS 4.2 brings multitasking from iPhone and iPod touch to iPad. So you can be more productive as you work, have more fun as you play, or do a little of both. Everything happens smoothly and efficiently — without slowing down the performance of the foreground app or draining the battery unnecessarily.2
updating to 4.2, the iPod app displays a message reading "No Content" (even if the files are still there, floating about in iOS purgatory.) Thankfully, the Switched team and their precious playlists have escaped the issue, but TechCrunch's MG Siegler couldn't locate any of the 7.8 gigs of music on his phone. After some forum digging, however, Siegler found that there's a relatively simple answer to problem.

Just plug your device into your computer, play a song that's stored on your iPhone or iPod through iTunes on your PC, then resync. Disconnect, and voilà -- your music will have magically reappeared when you open the iPod app. No need to fire off obscenity-laced e-mails to Steve Jobs.

Gift Guide: Apple iPad, the No Brainer Tablet for 2010

ipad
It's rare that a gadget feels as transformative as the iPad. With its recent iOS 4.2 update, which essentially brings the device up to speed with the iPhone/iPod interface, the iPad finally feels like the tablet we wanted from the beginning. The addition of the multi-tasking and folders functions is huge, and, if you've got an AppleTV, AirPlay should prove to be a nice way to seamlessly experience your videos and music on the big screen (and on real speakers). There are now tons of great apps available, and pairing Apple's own productivity suite (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote) with a Bluetooth keyboard can even turn the 'Pad into a usable work machine in a pinch. Battery life is great (roughly 10 hours), and it's become our platform of choice for watching videos on YouTube, Hulu Plus, Netflix and Vimeo, as well as for checking RSS feeds (with our favorite app,Reeder), scanning the New York Times, and much more. It won't replace your laptop anytime soon, but it will begin to feel like an essential part of your digital life very, very quickly.

iOS 4.2 Ends the iPad's Wait for Multitasking

iOS 4.2
Oh, what's that? Are iTunes 10.1 and iOS 4.2.1 finally here, ending months of anticipation for millions of early adopters? Yes, eight months after blessing the iPhone with multitasking , Apple is finally bringing multitasking to the iPad. While iOS 4.2 introduces a slew of media, app and printing updates to the Apple tablet, you'll find that your day-to-day use of the iPad is changed most by multitasking and folders. Neither are anything new, as the implementation is nearly identical to the iPhone, just bigger. This isn't necessarily a bad thing; both features drastically improve the device, and you can finally stream Pandora and check your mail at the same time. Groundbreaking...


Folders, Media and Printing

Upgraders will get access to folders, which can save you from scrolling through endless pages of apps on the home screen. Much as you would on the iPhone or iPod touch, just press and hold an app icon, and drag it onto another one to create a new folder on the home screen. The new AirPrint adds wireless printing capability to the iPad, while AirPlay is an expansion and rebranding of AirTunes that lets you stream music, photos and video to your Apple TV and other AirPlay-enabled devices, many of which will be launching this fall.

Mail and Safari

The iPad Mail app gets bolstered by much-needed messaging, which sorts your mail into conversations. Game Center brings social competition and leaderboards to your marathon iPad 'Angry Birds' sessions, but is otherwise just as underwhelming as the iPhone version. Mobile Safari finally lets you search on the pages you're currently browsing. Start typing in the search bar, and you'll see 'On This Page' results below the stock Google suggestions.

Losing the Hardware Orientation Lock

We've been using a dev version of 4.2 for a few weeks, and we most regret the loss of the iPad's hardware orientation lock, which has been repurposed as a mute button. With all the reclined reading we're doing, the lock was handy for quickly switching from portrait to landscape mode, or locking while going horizontal. The interaction works on the smaller iPhone, but is needlessly complex on the iPad; compare a simple button to a process that will usually involve two hands (one to stabilize) and four actions (double tap, swipe right, tap). While it's interesting that Apple is effectively reprogramming dedicated hardware buttons, it should be an optional, or at least a software-reversible change.

Wrapup

Once Apple pushes the update live, make sure you've recently synced your iPad, iPhone or iPod touch, grab the latest version of iTunes, boot up Software Update, and get updating!

Facebook Unveils New Profile Pages

New Facebook Profile
On Sunday, Facebook announced big changes for Profile pages, hours before Mark Zuckerberg's '60 Minutes' interview. The biggest change is the emphasis on photos: from the summary at the top of the page to photos of your relationships, images dominate the new design. You'll also notice that Facebook has done away with the old tabbed interface that separated your wall, info, photos and events into different pages. These viewing options have largely been pushed into the left rail below your primary profile photo.

facebook wall Instead of hiding most of your personal information behind the 'Info' tab, the new design features an introduction at the top of your profile page that summarizes your job, relationship status, hometown, birthday and more. Beneath your summary is a row of the most recently tagged photos of you. Because these are highlighted so prominently on your profile, you'll probably need to be even more vigilant than before in making sure bad party pics or embarrassing high school candids are removed. Fortunately, you can hide any of the photos in your new Profile summary by clicking the 'x' that appears when you hover over each one.

Facebook Featured FriendsYour relationship status and significant other will be revealed directly beneath your profile photo. Facebook is also introducing the sure-to-be controversial Featured Friends section in the left rail. You can use friends lists to highlight (micromanage?) your family, best friends and other "friends who are important to you." The Friendship Pages that debuted in October are now integrated directly into the profile page; you'll find a Friendship module showing off shared photos and friends at the top right of profiles you visit with a link to explore the more detailed Friendship Page.

Facebook now visually displays most of your personal info (including music interests, college and employer) by using photos instead of text links. Your personal likes will become easily browsable grids of movie, book and album cover art. Additionally, your photo albums now have infinite scroll, so you'll be able to scroll or tap the space bar to move quickly through hundreds of photos.

Make a bootable USB installer for Windows XP, Vista, 7 with WinToFlash


Making a bootable USB flash drive for Windows Vista and Windows 7 isn't all that tricky, but it's always nice to find an app that simplifies things. Not only does WinToFlash make the process about as easy as it can get, but it can also create Windows XP, Server 2003, and Server 2008 installers.

The default options make it easy to roll a silent Windows install, or you can flip the custom switch and specify the exact setup parameters you want to use.

The handy app also has one more trick up its sleeve: moving Windows Preinstall environments. PE discs can be extremely handy for troubleshooting and repairs, and being able to painlessly zap them over to a USB flash drive means not having to burn a new copy every time someone's haggard old optical drive decides to chew up your CD.

WinToFlash is a free download and is totally portable. It's an excellent tool to add to your USB-related utilities.

Opera Mobile will support Flash and HTML5 video... soon

Android/Opera robotSpeaking frankly and quite technically, Pavel Studený of the Opera Mobile team has posted some info about its Android development experience. The post itself is pretty thin on details, except for two gems: both Flash and HTML5 video are coming to Opera Mobile.

The interesting thing is, Pavel doesn't say that Flash and HTML5 support are only coming to Android; in fact, he says "if you have Flash player installed on your phone, Opera will support it." Now, it's not like Flash actually runs on many mobile phones, but it still leaves some interesting possibilities open -- will it support Flash Lite for Symbian, for example? For now, though, only Android 2.1 and newer has access to an official Flash player. HTML5 video support, on the other hand, is far less exciting -- in fact, most mobile browsers, including the upcoming Firefox For Mobile, already support it. Opera Mobile is actually playing catch-up in that regard.

Beyond the Flash and HTML5 news, Pavel talks about the trials and tribulations of writing apps for Android. Unlike Symbian, the operating system behind Nokia phones, Android is very young, very fresh, and prone to rapid changes that developers sometimes struggle to stay on top of. The trade-off, of course, is that Android is accruing exciting features, and thus apps and users, at break-neck speeds.

Google rumored to have bought Groupon for $2.5 billion

Google logoIt seems, if unnamed insider sources and some speculation from TechCrunch are to be believed, that Google has just bought Groupon, the deal-of-the-day website, for $2.5 billion.

Yahoo tried, and failed, to buy Groupon for over $3 billion earlier this year, but little is known about why the deal fell apart. That Google has now apparently bought them for 'only' $2.5 billion would suggest that Groupon's management team would prefer a future as part of Google instead of Yahoo.

As far as what Google stands to gain from the deal, other than raw cash -- Groupon is rather profitable -- we will probably see extensive integration between Groupon and Google's Places and Shopping products. When searching for Places, coupons for local businesses could be shown. When looking for the lowest prices with Shopping, coupons could be worked into the results.

Ultimately, though, I just hope that this merger will result in a site called Goopon.

Tab Bundles for Chrome - Bit.ly link bundles made easy!

Bit.ly recently released link bundles -- a feature that lets you share multiple URLs using the same shortened bit.ly link -- but it's not the easiest feature to use. The Tab Bundles extension for Chrome makes copy-pasting links into bit.ly a thing of the past, by allowing you to bundle all your currently-open tabs with one click.

Tab Bundles works with both bit.ly and j.mp (a bit.ly-owned even shorter URL), and it allows you to create custom filters that automatically tell it which tabs to include in your bundle. Basically, it's a real time-saver for anyone who regularly shares a pile of links on Twitter. Even if you only need to use it once, installing and uninstalling an extension in Chrome might be easier than copy-pasting half a dozen links

Dolphin Browser Mini brings better Web browsing to older Android devices

Dolphin Browser HD is an excellent browser, but like a lot of Android apps it's not available on devices running older versions of the OS. If you're using an inexpensive Android tablet or smartphone, however, there's a great new browser which brings a much-improved Web experience: Dolphin Browser Mini.

A new preview build is now available for download, and it offers many of the same features as its HD cousin on Android 1.6 or newer. About the only major component missing is Dolphin Browser HD's add-on support, but Mini still shines with its built-in functionality. To get you started, Mini can import bookmarks from the Android default browser, Dolphin HD, or sync your Google Bookmarks. Dolphin Mini also offers tabbed browsing, a download manager, orientation lock, gesture support, private browsing, and a 'screen cut' tool for capturing Web pages as a JPEG.

Dolphin Browser Mini preview 2 is a free download [APK installer] -- the QR code is after the break along with a gallery of the nifty little browser in action!

Facebook updates profile page with 'snapshot' and LinkedIn-style features

Facebook has just begun rolling out an update to the Facebook profile page, its main focal point for finding more information, photos and commenting on the walls of your friends. Your profile now features a 'snapshot' of your life right at the top of the page, essentially summarizing key details with two lines of bullet points and a string of five photos. The bullet point descriptors are taken from your profile information and feature your current relationship status, your place of education, your home town, date of birth and current job -- in essence, all the information that Facebook thinks is required to define you in one quick glance. The string of photos are pulled from recently tagged photos, but you can click a little 'X' to hide an image from your profile page -- phew!

If you happen to have very few pieces of information in your profile, the snapshot can be a little lacking, but that's not the only thing Facebook has put some work into. The Education and Work section of your profile has also been beefed up, taking on a much more LinkedIn-style of job titles, recent projects, colleagues you worked with and so forth. You can add more of your work or education history as well, documenting your learned skills and featuring certain achievements. With employers using Facebook to vet potential job candidates, perhaps it could be helpful to get your skills up there to counteract the hideous drunken photos from your mate's stag party last year.

ExperiencesOf course it's not all work, work, work on Facebook -- the other information features of your profile also having been given a make over, with 'experiences' being the buzz word and pictures featuring heavily. Under 'Arts and Entertainment' you can choose to feature artists, books, TV programs and films that you particularly like in an album art-type display, with each item taking you to a fan page for that film, program, artist or book. Activities and Sports also got a major overhaul, becoming a much bigger part of your profile in a similar way to your work information. You can choose to feature certain activities you're interested in or sports you play, add a little description and tag people who you play with. Drag-and-drop organization has also been implemented, which means you can order your featured interests according to your preferences. Now you can show you're a die-hard supporter of your local third division football team.