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Features Sites and Downloads

This Week on Gears and Widgets…

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[ End of the Line for Eudora ]
[ Firefox 2.0 Available! ]
[ 10 Wierdest iPod Accessories… Ever ]
[ Internet Explorer 7 Available! ]

Categories
Sites and Downloads

CyberWalker Relaunches!

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Last week, rather quietly, Andy Walker relaunched the massive tech resource site CyberWalker.com! His own baby, the site had previously been a massive library and reference for technology tips, tricks, how-tos, guides, links to other articles and technical information, all ranging in topics from the Macintosh to Windows, from Linux to networks, from securing your computer to building a new one, from backing up your data to choosing the best formats for backing up your data. The site was massive and expansive, and, according to Andy, needed a refresh to make it easier to get around and to keep it up to snuff.

Well, the site definitely got that refresh! Check out the new digs below (click the image for a larger view):

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The site has navigable buttons everywhere-breaking down the multitude of content from tools to the Lab Rats video to the software library all at the top of the page. In the middle of the page, you’ll find links taking you directly to computer security topics, protecting your privacy online, tips to help you buy a new computer, what to do with that new computer, and more! Definitely head over and take a look at the site, it looks solid.

The new site looks gorgeous, Andy! Great work!

[ http://www.cyberwalker.com/ ]

Categories
Opinion Programming and Podcasts TWIT Archive

The End of TWiT?

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This Week in Tech, the TWIT network’s flagship podcast, is going on hiatus for the next two weeks, apparently this week because it was too nice outside to do a podcast and next week because Leo’s away on a Geek Cruise. Leo claims in a post at the TWiT website that This Week in Tech is on life support and that the heart monitor is flatlining; more specifically:

It’s about 80 degrees out – in all likelyhood the last nice day of summer in Northern California – so all the TWiTs decided to play hookey. At the same time. Unfortunately that means there will be no show tonight.

It’s my turn to play hookey next week. I’m off on a Geek Cruise next Friday, and will be gone through November 4, so there will be no TWiT next week either.

I’ll decide what happens to TWiT, the show, when I come back, but at this point it looks like it’s on life support and the heart monitor is flatlining.

You can read the whole post (I only left out the last paragraph where he says he’ll put up This Week in Law in TWiT’s feed this week) here.

I have mixed feelings about this. Personally I’d miss TWiT if it were gone, I think it’s one of the few podcasts that I really really look forward to every week, and without it the TWiT network would kind of be adrift without a flagship podcast to really bring a large number of its audience back to TWIT every week to listen. The majority-if not all-of the listeners to the other TWiT podcasts, like MacBreak, Windows Weekly, MacBreak Weekly, DailyGizWiz, This Week in Media, and Security Now! all came to those podcasts because of TWiT, and it would be incredibly sad and a significant loss to see it go. Most of the listening and podcast world seems to agree with me, and the inevitably rallying cry has gone out to Save TWiT.

At the same time, I think Leo needs to loosen the reins a bit, and give up on drumming up support via controversy. I think the whole “netcast” v. “podcast” thing was a starter, inadvertant as it might have been, where a rather silly (in my opinion) distinction turned into an massive rallying cry against essentially nothing-a powerhouse cure for a disease that hasn’t struck anyone yet, and I think that this kind of rallying of the troops in the name of controversy is a little tiring. I stop just short of insinuating malice or ego, I don’t think it’s nearly that bad, but I do think that Leo couldn’t possibly have thought the reaction to his comments about TWiT, which seem to the rest of us to be coming out of the blue (no one Leo, NO ONE, thought that TWiT was on life support until you said so. Maybe the other panelists thought so, but none of your listening public thought so, so I don’t see where that’s coming from-and I’m very certain that it’s not on life support by way of lack of listeners or listener input) would have been any different than the outcry he’s seeing.

Why is he saying what he’s saying now? Maybe the other TWiT network podcasts need attention. Maybe he’s just burnt out and wants to do something different and is tired of TWiT. Maybe all the TWiTs are tired of TWiT. That could all be very true, by why not say that, instead of being ambiguous? I don’t know.

Personally, if Leo let TWiT happen without him, a little in the way that MacBreak and MacBreak weekly happen without him, and now how This Week in Law happens without him, we might see the show pick back up on its own: I’ve thought this from the TechTV days: Leo-you don’t have to have your hand in EVERYTHING. Relax and listen to your own network sometimes, it’s pretty good what you’ve done-you can let this bird fly a little now.

Either way, I really don’t want to see a stellar podcast like TWiT go down the proverbial tubes (not at all like a truck) because the stars are tired. Bring in some other names, cover some other topics, or divest the podcast to some of your biggest fans and listening public. Every one of the core TWiTs has another podcast presence somewhere-how about some new blood? I’m particularly fond of Cory Doctorow’s appearances, and Lawrence Lessig’s appearances, not to discount my favorite panelists like Patrick Norton, David Prager, and John C Dvorak, but I can see why they might be getting burnt out, and I can certainly see why Leo might be getting burnt out.

But still, Leo, please, let it go a little and don’t be scared to change the show before scrapping it, picking up your ball, and going home.

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Pixel Perfect with Bert Monroy // Episode 3

Another Pixel Perfect is available, this time titled “The Lamp,” which is really less about how to draw lamps but how to flesh out the thought process that goes into creating art, digital or otherwise. Bert walks you through, from start to finish, what’s going through his head when it starts with blank canvas and makes something come alive on it, from start to finish, with attention to detail, and of course some really notable graphic design and photoshop tricks in the process.

Pixel Perfect with Bert Monroy Episode 3 // The Lamp
[ episode notes and download links | download ]

Categories
DiggNation Acrhive Programming and Podcasts

DiggNation // Episode 68

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This week’s DiggNation is another winner, this week with Alex and Kevin back on the couch talking about everything from breast implants to geeky license plates and more. Among the top stories at Digg they get to this week are an amazing clip of Steve Jobs from his first 90 days at NeXT, how to use one of my favorite sites: dodgeit.com, a compliation of clips from “The Price is Right” featuring bouncing breasts, what a flame looks like in zero-g, and much much more.

DiggNation Episode 68 // October 22, 2006
[ episode notes and download links | revision3 mp3 download | TTVF mp3 download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

New Podcast :: This Week in Law!

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A new podcast in the TWIT network has rolled out, this one called This Week in Law, featuring Denise Howell, covering all things legal in nature, from Creative Commons and copyright law in general to current events like YouTube’s woes and whether or not being owned by a juggernaut like Google will help them in the long run at all. This week’s inagural episode takes on all of those topics, discusses whether Creative Commons is a good or a bad thing, more on the legal wrangling between the RIAA and the people, and much much more.

This week’s panel is Denise Howell, Cathy Kirkman, Ernie Svenson, and John Palfrey with special guest Hank Barry. We won’t be covering this addition to the TWiT network because the starring players aren’t exactly TechTV alumni, but it’s still a technology oriented podcast with lots of information about geek law and how the technology news and events playing out around us are a sign of things to come and a symbol of what’s gone by. Definitely worth subscribing to!

New Podcast :: This Week in Law
[ TWIT.tv :: This Week in Law ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

This Week in Media // Episode 24

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This week’s This Week in Media is all about the hollywood crusade against technology-or against our technology, to say the least. From the PS3 to the resistance to releasing DVDs sooner than they’re released now, from targeting customers like the RIAA made so popular to the concept of “digital doubles,” Alex Lindsay, Kenji Kato, and John Foster get down to business discussing how Hollywood’s got it all wrong when it comes to technology, and how they shouldn’t be taking lessons from the RIAA.

This Week in Media Episode 24 // October 21, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Windows Weekly // Episode 3

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This week on Windows Weekly, Leo and Paul sit down again and chat this time about Windows Vista’s license agreement and how it is, in their words, a bit “enthusiastic,” and how Windows users will learn to cope with having to buy new copies of Vista every time they make significant upgrades to their computer or try to swap out components between machines. Also, they discuss IE7 and its release, and much much more.

Windows Weekly Episode 3 // October 20, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Security Now! // Episode 62

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On this week’s Security Now! Leo and Steve discuss something that’s kind of a dirty topic for a lot of geeks; proxies, and how they can both speed up internet access as well as protect unwitting users from harming themselves on the net. Whether it’s restricting access or pre-caching often-used websites, proxies can often do a lot of good, and in some ways have gotten a bad rap. Learn more on this week’s Security Now!

Security Now! Episode 62 // October 20, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

MacBreak // Episode 24

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This week’s MacBreak is about turning your Mac into a remote control to control other computers anywhere on the internet. Sound cool? They get down using one of my favorite tools, Chicken of the VNC, and show you how to manage both other Macs and Windows PCs using VNC across the net.

MacBreak Episode 24 // October 20, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Futures in Biotech // Episode 7

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A new episode of Futures in Biotech is available, this time featuring Marc Pelletier on his own speaking with Dr. Ronald Desrosiers of the New England Primate Research Center. Together the two discuss Desrosiers’ discovery of SIV, the simian counterpart to HIV which turned out to be the closest relative to HIV we’ve found to date, and what its discovery can mean to HIV study, vaccine research, and the potential for treatments against the disease.

Futures in Biotech Episode 7 // October 18, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

CrankyGeeks // Episode 32

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Last week’s CrankyGeeks brought John C Dvorak back to the table to discuss this week’s top tech stories, along with Sebastian Rupley, West Coast Editor, PC Magazine; Gina Hughes, Tech Advisor, Yahoo! Tech; and Om Malik, Founder, GigaOM. The topics discussed this week include the release of Internet Explorer 7, Toshiba is rumbling about suing Sony over the exploding battery scandals, more and more MySpace predators and how code can catch them, taxes in SecondLife, and major security companies weigh in saying Vista is definitely not secure. All this and more on another stellar CrankyGeeks!

CrankyGeeks Episode 32 // October 20, 2006
[ episode notes and download links ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

DL.TV // Episode 105

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We’re a little late on the podcasts this week, but the TechTV Forever crew was out of town this weekend, so we’re just now catching up on it all ourselves!

So on last week’s Thursday live/Friday download episode of DL.TV, Patrick and Robert discuss everything from repairing hard drives both physically and recovering data with software, affordable GPS navigation systems (or the lack thereof and how to slap together your own), the release of IE7, individual segments of the show for viewing, and a peek at the new Family Guy video game!

DL.TV Episode 105 // October 20, 2006
[ episode notes and download links ]

Categories
Sites and Downloads

Undo.tv Pre-Launches!

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Undo.TV is up and looks fabulous and energetic! It looks like it has a lot of potential!
The following note appears on the Undo.tv “About Us” page:

Hey there!

Today, the idea of a tech-centric TV network has disappeared from the minds of Hollywood’s elite. Par for the course! Passionate communities are often kept an arm’s length away from their favorite broadcasted content in traditional media circles.

It’s time to undo that way of thinking, don’t you think?

TechTV alumni just wanted a place where we could all come together and funnel our independent efforts. “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts” keeps ringing through my head – not just our existing content, but NEW stuff (and NEW faces) as well. Leo Laporte and I have done our best to set the stage for UndoTV.

The blogger Steve Borsch commented in a previous thread: “So, who decides what gets ‘on’ UndoTV? Who the talent is? What emerges?” The UndoTV talent base is starting with the former ZDTV / TechTV staff, previous show guests, and vetted friends. Without a base of quality content, we’d be nothing more than a video portal clone.

Everybody is welcome here.

The community (you) will determine the direction of our efforts. Certainly, some former TechTV talent has gone on to do fantastic productions far outside the realm of the tech industry. Everybody is welcome to help us undo the idea of television – helping reinvent the way community can influence the active development of a site, its content, and its superstars.

You are tomorrow’s network. You control the horizontal – and the vertical, too. As such, we only want to see your own creations here. If you want to upload someone else’s content, please do so elsewhere? It’s the community’s job to keep this community clean, cool, and collected. We hope you take that responsibility to heart.

Expect, in short time, new features and functionality, new ways to interact, and new ways to find a passionate audience for your own talents.

Yours Digitally,

Leo Laporte Chris Pirillo

And with that, Undo.tv gets a good start on the way to being a central web location for technology and technology programming on the web, specifically the endeavors of TechTV Alumni and their new projects! The site is broken up into audio, video, photo, and text categories to accomodate a waide range and variety of projects and content to be uploaded, so it looks like they have their bases covered.

Chris and Leo have a lot at stake with this new network, and a lot of content worth delivering. Here’s hoping that when the official launch comes, Undo.TV is a robust network that can be a central locale for all manner of project from TechTV Alumni. No worries though, we’ll still cover it all at TechTV Forever at the same time!

[ http://undo.tv ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

DL.TV // Episode 103 and 104

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The DL.TV Episode 103 was a little late; they missed the Thursday show from last week in order to bring you a special show from the Digital Life Expo in New York City! Let’s start there.

On episode 103, Patrick and Robert come to you straight from New York City, and chat a bit about what’s going on at the Expo, including their hands on impressions of the Sony PlayStation 3, which was available to play at the event, and Madden 2007 on the Nintendo Wii, which was also there to play with! Also, super routers, and 1080i projectors.

DL.TV Episode 103 // October 17, 2006
[ episode notes and download links ]

On episode 104, Patrick and Robert are back in the saddle to talk tech and tech news, including Google’s going for solar power, industry groups declaring war on P2P file sharing, and more. Also, hacking iTunes, from adding album art that iTunes can’t find, map tricks without Google Maps, and whether or not Boot Camp is a destructive partitioning tool-to back up or not to back up?

DL.TV Episode 104 // October 18, 2006
[ episode notes and download links ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Infected with Martin Sargent // Episode 18

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This episode of Infected is apparently all about fashion. I don’t know why Martin, Joey, and The Gator decided to do a show on fashion, but apparently they went for it-they chat about how to look your best, and bring in Biker Fox to talk fashion tips on the air.

Infected with Martin Sargent Episode 18 // October 18, 2006
[ episode notes and download links | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Weezy and The Swish // Episode 71

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This week on Weezy and The Swish, Writer/Producer Steve O’Donnell joins the crew. You may not know offhand who Steve O’Donnell is, but he was Head Writer at Letterman for 15 years, and worked on shows like Seinfeld, wrote for Chris Rock, and currently, works on Jimmy Kimmel live. The show gets into, what else, comedy, and writing hilariousness for comedians and what kind of life it is, spending your daylight hours deciding what’s “appropriate” and “inappropriate” humor, how closely you can walk that line, and other topics that generally involve going “over the line.” Enjoy!

Weezy and The Swish Episode 71 // October 17, 2006
[ episode notes and video | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

MacBreak Weekly // Episode 11

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This week’s MacBreak Weekly brings Leo Laporte, Amber MacArthur, Scott Bourne, and Merlin Mann to the table to chat again, this time about a wealth of Apple rumors, including the notion that maybe the much anticipated “iPhone” might actually become reality, the iPod celebrates its five year anniversary with a windows virus, and dating tips from Steve Jobs? You’ll have to tune in to get the real scoop.

MacBreak Weekly Episode 11 // October 18, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Inside the Net with Amber MacArthur // Episode 38

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This week on Inside the Net, Amber and Leo sit down with Jay Goldman and Mike Glenn of Radiant Core [ http://radiantcore.com/ ] which is the design group that put together the new UI for Firefox 2.0. The new UI looks solid and retains most of its points from the old UI, but the design is a little different, a little smoother and sleeker than the previous more boxy and clunky UI. The panel discuss how difficult it is to design a browser that’s attractive, fast, usable, and after all of that, is cross-platform.

Inside the Net with Amber MacArthur Episode 38 // October 17, 2006
[ episode notes | download ]

Categories
Programming and Podcasts

Lab Rats // Episode 46

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This week is part two of Andy and Sean’s adventure at the Podcast Expo last week! On this episode, they get a chance to chat with Calli Lewis of GeekBrief.tv and Matt Harris of G4techtv’s Torrent, as well as Kent Nichols of Ask A Ninja, and of course, Leo Laporte, of TWIT and the TWIT network podcasts.

Lab Rats Episode 46 // October 16, 2006
[ episode notes and download links ]