Panasonic’s DMC-GF1 / GH1 / G1 firmware updates improve autofocus performance

Curious timing, no? Nary a fortnight after Olympus announced an autofocus-related firmware update for its line of Micro Four Thirds cameras (the PEN E-P1, E-P2 and E-PL1), along comes Panasonic with an all-too-similar round of firmware fixes for their own MFT range. Slated to hit the interwebs on May 10th, a trio of new updates will purportedly bring improved autofocus performance with third-party lenses as well as recognition of the new 14-42mm kit zoom to the DMC-GF1, DMC-GH1 and DMC-G1. We’re also told that there will be improved flash performance for the latter two, and if you just so happen to be the proud owner of one of these, you can head on past the break for the full changelog.

Continue reading Panasonic’s DMC-GF1 / GH1 / G1 firmware updates improve autofocus performance

Panasonic’s DMC-GF1 / GH1 / G1 firmware updates improve autofocus performance originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 11:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Free BurnAware is Available, Again

This article was written on August 26, 2008 by CyberNet.

burnaware free.png

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In March we covered two free CD/DVD/Blu-ray burning applications that pretty much amounted to everything you’d need. One of the programs, called BurnAware, was sold off a few months later to a company who scrapped the idea of offering a free version of the program. I had uploaded a mirror for the last free version, and over the last two months it’s been downloaded almost 1,500 times. That’s a good indication that peopled like the app, but not the price tag.

It’s not often that you see a program go from being free to paid, and then back to free, but that’s the path BurnAware has taken. The company offering the program still has a paid version available, but they have unveiled the no-cost BurnAware Free which supports all the basic operations most people need:

  • Create data and multisession CD/DVD/Blu-ray Discs
  • Create Audio CDs and jukebox CD/DVD/Blu-ray Discs
  • Create DVDs-Video
  • Create and burn disc images
  • Supports all current hardware interfaces (IDE/SCSI/USB/1394/SATA)
  • Supports UDF/ISO9660/Joliet Bridged file systems (any combination)
  • On-the-fly writing for all image types (no staging to hard drive first)
  • Auto-verification of written files
  • Supports CD-Text
  • Supports Windows NT/2000/XP/Vista (32 and 64 Bit), no drivers required

Go ahead and grab the free version before they change their minds, again! ;)

Download BurnAware Free for Windows

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Adobe halts investment in iPhone-specific Flash dev tools, has another dig at Apple (update: Apple responds)

Color us unsurprised, but it’s still notable to hear that Adobe is stopping investment in its software’s capability to port content over to iPhone OS. The company’s great hope on this front, Packager for iPhone, will still ship as part of Flash CS5 as planned, but beyond that Adobe is essentially giving up on Apple’s mobile OS until further notice. In spite of being repeatedly rebuffed by Jobs and company before, the Flash maker had kept up hope that it could sway (or nag) Apple into validating its wares, but the final straw in this relationship seems to have been Apple’s dev tool lockdown. So what will Adobe do now? Principal Product Manager Mike Chambers tells us that Android is doing kind of okay and his company will shift its attentions to it and other mobile platforms. Of course, we’re just giving you the cleaned up version — for the full finger-pointing diatribe against Apple, you’ll have to hit the source link.

Update: Right on cue, here’s Apple’s terse response: “Someone has it backwards–it is HTML5, CSS, JavaScript, and H.264 (all supported by the iPhone and iPad) that are open and standard, while Adobe’s Flash is closed and proprietary.”

Adobe halts investment in iPhone-specific Flash dev tools, has another dig at Apple (update: Apple responds) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 03:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SugarSync for iPad Adds Editing

screen-shot-2010-04-20-at-121422-pmWhen somebody writes an iPad app which both syncs files with the cloud and lets you edit them, they’ll make a killing at the App Store. Until then, we have workarounds like this one from SugarSync.

SugarSync is an application for Windows, Mac, iPhone, BlackBerry and now the iPad. It works like many cloud-sync apps: You point it at, say, a folder on your computer and when any file is changed or added, it is automatically mirrored in the inter-ether. This means that you not only have an offsite backup but you can access and edit your documents wherever you may be.

What this iPad update adds is document sharing. Now, thanks to OS 3.2, you can tap a file and choose to open it with any compatible app on the iPad. Word docs can be sent off to Pages, for example, where you can edit them. This is a lot handier than Apple’s clunky solution which involves emailing things to yourself or dragging files into each app’s storage area in iTunes. With SugarSync, you always have any file to hand, and all in one place.

There is still a problem getting the files back out. To do so, you have to mail the resulting document back to your SugarSync account, which creates another copy. There is currently no way to just save the file. This is one of the worst parts of the iPad. In order to keep things “simple”, Apple requires that you create a brand new iteration of a document every time you need to use it elsewhere. There is no way to shift the same single document back and forth between machines.

If you have a SugarSync account, though, you probably already have this app, so the added convenience of a central store is a boon for you. Unless Apple fixes this mess, though, somebody will have to come out with an office suite and file sync service combined. Something like, say, Windows Office Live.

SugarSync for iPad Part Deux…with Editing! [SugarSync. Thanks, Jill!]


Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps

Look, there’s a better-than-average chance you’re buying a 2011 Ford Fiesta simply because it’s the rebirth of the Fiesta, but if you need a little encouragement, look no further. The aforesaid automaker has just confirmed that Sync AppLink will be coming first to next year’s Fiesta, enabling drivers to access and control select Android and BlackBerry apps via in-car voice commands and control buttons. At least initially, Pandora, Stitcher and OpenBeak will be AppLink-capable, but we’re pretty sure other app makers will be adding updates as the bandwagon swells. In fact, Ford’s going to be encouraging such behavior with the creation of the Mobile Application Developer Network, and if all goes well, AppLink will be installed in every single 2011 Ford model with Sync built-in. Of course, only time will tell if our demands for an INXS Pandora playlist leads to one capped off by Baja Men, but hey, at least the concept is sound.

Continue reading Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps

Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Apr 2010 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Split Your Monitor into Virtual Regions

This article was written on March 06, 2009 by CyberNet.

maxto-2.jpg

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It seems like I am always finding myself being overloaded with a dozen or two different windows open at any given time, and it can become a bit tedious to manage them. This is where applications like GridMove or WinSplit Revolution have come in handy, and today we’ve got another great alternative called MaxTo.

With MaxTo you’ll be able to define regions on your monitor(s) that can serve as constraints when maximizing windows. Setting up your regions is pretty straightforward: just select a region and choose whether you want to split in half horizontally or vertically. From what I can tell you can split all of your monitors into as many sections as you’d like.

Here are some of the features for MaxTo:

  • Easily change regions
  • Easily disabled by holding Shift
  • Move windows using shortcut keys
  • Multi-monitor support
  • Light-weight (less than 200kB to download)

Programs like this take a little getting used to because you’ll have to analyze your workflow if you want to get things just right. With a little bit of effort you can see some amazing benefits though. Once I started using a program like this to help manage my windows (particularly for Windows Explorer) I found that I was way more productive than I was without it.

Get MaxTo for Windows 32-bit and 64-bit [via Lifehacker]

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New Features I’ve Found in Firefox 3 so far

This article was written on February 26, 2007 by CyberNet.

For the last few weeks I’ve made Firefox 3 nightly releases my primary browser because my extensions all work well with it. I always like to get a sneak peek at what is coming, and there are always so many things that change that it can be hard to keep track of them all. I find that the people who see the new features gradually appear will notice them the most, which is why I want to jump on the Firefox 3 bandwagon early on. I did the same thing with Firefox 2 pre-release versions, and each time a new feature worth noting appeared in the nightly releases I made sure to relay the information onto our readers.

So far I have noticed two new things in Firefox 3 that will probably be overlooked by anyone who just tinkers around with it. Even though these features aren’t anything to die over I thought it might please some people who were afraid that Mozilla has not begun to implement new things in the browser. Actually, Mozilla has been working very hard on implementing Firefox’s graphics engine, called Cairo, that will not only load pages faster but it will also do things like scale images much better. I’m sure this is something a lot of Firefox users will probably take for granted when Firefox 3 is released later this year.

So what are the two new features that I found? Like I said, these aren’t exactly ground-breaking but I like them. First off I noticed a new setting in the Options that will let a user choose whether or not they are notified when a site tries to automatically reload or redirect the user. By default this is disabled, but I’ve now had it enabled for well over a week and I really like it.

Redirect FF3 Option

Then when a site tries to redirect or reload the page Firefox will notify you with a little bar at the top similar to what’s seen when a popup window is blocked:

Redirect FF3

So it is just something small right now, but it does make you notice when you’re being redirected. However, I’m hoping that they will implement a feature similar to the popup blocker where you can permanently allow certain sites. I still have this feature enabled, but it can get annoying if you constantly click on links in emails you receive at a Gmail address…which redirects you each time you click on a link. I’m sure there is a large list of sites this would get annoying at, which is why they need to let users choose which sites to permanently allow.

The other feature that I noticed is when you click in a textbox to enter the path to a file on your computer it will automatically popup with the Open dialog box. Here is an example of how it works when composing a message in Gmail:

Gmail FF3

It kinda sounds like a stupid feature and really simple since you can just click the Browse button, but I like this. Well, I’m not even sure if this is a feature because I couldn’t find any info on it, so for all I know it could be some kind of bug. The reason I’m questioning whether it is a bug or not is because some fields let you enter in either a file on your computer or a URL to an existing file. With this you can’t actually paste in a URL since the Open dialog box opens immediately.

That’s all I’ve found since my last updates on the Firefox 3 graphics engine. I’ll continue to keep you posted as new things get included in the nightly builds. Oh yeah, and according the latest meeting notes for Firefox 3 it looks as though Places will be back in by the next Alpha release planned for the middle of March. It hasn’t made its way back into the nightlies yet, but I expect that it will within the next week or two.

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Wine 1.0 Release Date… After 15 Years in the Making

This article was written on March 24, 2008 by CyberNet.

wine birthday In 1993 a project called Wine was started as a way to run Windows applications on Linux without using an emulator. Instead Wine serves as a compatibility layer that includes their own implementation of the Dynamic Link Libraries (DLL’s) that make the Windows applications tick, and there has been a lot of reverse engineering done to get it to the current state.

It took over 12 years for the first Beta version of Wine to be released, and after a whopping 15 years Wine 1.0 will be shipping on June 6th, 2008. This has got to be one of the longest development cycles to reach version 1.0!

One of their big goals for Wine 1.0 is to get Adobe Photoshop CS2 fully functional, which is something Google is sponsoring. With over 1,200 compatible Windows applications adding Photoshop CS2 to the list will definitely be a huge success for the team and the software as a whole.

I’m definitely excited about Wine 1.0, but you can bet the bank that Microsoft isn’t jumping up and down in their seats. Sure it means that they might sell more copies of Office, but as far as I know Microsoft has never exactly gone out of their way to help out Wine.

Wine 1.0 Schedule [via Desktop Linux]

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Microsoft Plus! for Vista … Where’s the Ultimate Extras?

This article was written on January 16, 2008 by CyberNet.

Microsoft Plus Ultimate Extras

A forum member over at WinBeta snatched up what appears the box art for a Microsoft Plus! Pack designed for Vista. It was taken from an online Canadian store, called Future Shop, who has since removed the listing from their site. It was priced at $39.99 Canadian dollars, and the release date posted was February 15, 2008. The box says that it includes “four casual games enhanced for Windows Vista” developed by Mumbo Jumbo.

The Microsoft Plus! packs have been released for almost every consumer version of Windows since Windows 95. Often times they include things like games, themes, screensavers, and some small applications. I think that everyone expected Microsoft to retire the Plus! packs with the release of Vista Ultimate Extras, but I guess that’s not the case.

So maybe this is what the Ultimate Extras team has been up to instead of delivering those extra apps all of the Vista Ultimate users eagerly await? Maybe Microsoft will offer these for free to Vista Ultimate users? Who knows anymore.

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Sleipnir Browser Successful in Japan, Targets English Users Now

This article was written on July 23, 2008 by CyberNet.

Windows XP Professional-1.png
(Click to Enlarge)

Just when you thought we had enough web browsers available another goes and pops up right under our noses. That’s exactly what the Japanese browser called Sleipnir did, and it’s managed to scrounge up 9% of the browser market share in Japan.

What’s so special about Sleipnir? It reminds me a lot of Maxthon and Avant Browser in what it has set out to accomplish. Basically it uses Internet Explorer’s rendering engine (called Trident) to display sites, but the browser itself is customizable with the use of plug-ins and skins. One of the biggest benefits of using this over the other IE-based browsers is that it can also use Firefox’s rendering engine (called Gecko) to display sites. This is something that Maxthon used to offer, but it was abandoned when Maxthon 2 was released.

The best thing Sleipnir has going for it is how efficiently it manages its memory. When running it the memory usage starts at about 34MB, and will gradually increase as you open more tabs. No matter how many tabs I opened and closed the memory usage would always fall back to 34MB when I had no websites open. If I let it sit there idle for a few minutes it would even fall as low as 28MB. That’s among the best memory usage I’ve seen for any graphical web browser.

I don’t think I’ll be switching to Sleipnir anytime soon, but it’s nice to see alternatives like this. The browser arena is getting a little crowded though.

Note: A portable version of Sleipnir is available.

Sleipnir Homepage [via InfoWorld]

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