General Gaming Article |
- Maximum PC Digital Edition: Now Available!
- 31 Apps, Games, and Utilities to Enhance Your Chrome Experience!
- Microsoft Announces 320GB Xbox Slim Hard Drive
- Universal Backs Away from $60 New Movie Rentals
- BlackBerry Outage Continues, May Be Spreading
- Future Tense: The Baby Cooper Dollar Bill
- Asus Zenbook to MacBook Air: Let's Dance
- Sony: Your Bravia HDTV Could Ignite in Flames
- Cooler Master Introduces Hyper 412 PWM Air Cooler
- Facebook Refuses To Share Some Personal Data With Users, Calls It A "Trade Secret"
Maximum PC Digital Edition: Now Available! Posted: 12 Oct 2011 05:25 PM PDT To those of you who have been clutching your various gadgets to your chests and bemoaning the lack of a digital version of your favorite publication - Maximum PC, of course: wait no longer, the day has come! That's right, today we unveil our brand spankin' new digital version. Finally, you can have Maximum PC available where ever you are, where ever you go, for as long as your batteries will last! Now, granted, we've had a Nook version available for a little while now, but today's massive iOS 5.0 update (which includes Newsstand, a new application that allows users to subscribe to and download digital publications) helped us to increase our digital presence. All of Future's other publications, such as PC Gamer and Xbox mag, are also available and we're working on a Kindle version for an expected November release. That's just in time for the Kindle Fire. Go, download it now (we'll wait) and then tell us how you like it in the comments! Our November issue is currently available in the Apple Newsstand! |
31 Apps, Games, and Utilities to Enhance Your Chrome Experience! Posted: 12 Oct 2011 02:12 PM PDT Like any dependable sidekick, Google Chrome has proven to be reliable, fast, and easy to work with; so much so, in fact, that we decided to feature the various apps, games, and utilities Chrome has to offer in a weekly series. But to make things easier for all you Chrome fans, we've decided to compile the last 30 weeks worth of posts and bring them to you here, in one huge comprehensive list of reading apps, games, utilities, and more. Check em' out below, and by all means, let us know what we missed in the comments. Enjoy! GamingGun BrothersNo matter how much we love Gun Brother's special brand of shoot 'em up gunplay on Android and iOS devices, we couldn't recommend it for use as a Chrome web app. When it was released to the Chrome Web Store several months ago, it was a glitchy, ad-filled mess where slow downs crashes and errors ran rampant. Fortunately, in the time since our last unfortunate encounter with the game, it appears the game's developers have worked out the kinks, finally making us comfortable selecting Gun Brothers as our Chrome Web App of the Week.
To make the game more awesome, the game's development team have made it possible to swap out the A.I. player in favor of one of your pals via Facebook, making an already fun game even better. Dead FrontierWith brands like Angry Birds and Plants vs. Zombies available in multiple formats on just about every piece of hardware imaginable, it's never been easier for casual gamers to get their goof on anywhere they go. Sadly, those who prefer a bit of blood with their gaming have far fewer outlets available to them, especially when not in front of their home rig, console or handheld. What's an office drone feeling a bit of bloodlust while trapped in his cubicle on a Monday afternoon to do? Might we recommend embarking on a zombie killing rampage with Dead Frontier? As you may have guessed, it's our Chrome Web App of the Week.
Equipped with a meagre set of weapons and limited ammunition, you are sent out into the dark to explore, loot and kill the undead in the name all in the name of survival. Should you survive long enough, your character will gain the experience and cash needed to become the zombie slaying machine you always knew he could be. Offering an addictive mix of tension, action and familiar game mechanics, for a browser-based game, Dead Frontier offers Chrome users a surprisingly deep experience that'll keep you coming back for more. SteamBirds SurvivalAngry Birds is out for Chrome, and it is indeed glorious, but doesn't playing it with a mouse feel just a little unnatural? We think so. Fortunately, there are a lot of great ways to whittle your productivity down to a splinter. Might we recommend SteamBirds Survival? It's free, fun and just happens to be our Chrome Web App of the Week.
Gloomy? You betcha. Fun? Absolutely! The more planes you down, the more copper you'll receive--money that can be used towards the purchase of new, more powerful aircraft with unique abilities. You'll also find that many of the fighters you eighty-six will provide you with power-ups such as additional health, bombs and homing missiles. With varying levels of difficulty, unique play mechanics and enough ways to kill your foes to keep you entertained for hours, SteamBirds Survival is one game that'll keep you coming back time and time again. UtilitiesWaveWith so many ways of spending our hard earned dough, it can be difficult to keep tabs on where our cash goes. For small business owners whose work expenses often overlap the cost of day-to day living, things can get even more complicated. If you're serious about getting your financial life straight and keeping it there, Wave Accounting is the right tool for the job. Free, easy to use and insanely powerful, Wave is our Chrome Web App of the Week. Wave draws power and simplicity of use from the fact that the application is designed to interface with your existing online banking and credit card accounts, making manual entry of expenses and income a thing of the past. Users can choose from a wide variety of banks and credit card vendors, enter their online banking password information and import all of their income and expenses in under five minutes. Once the import is completed, you'll be asked to categorize your expenses using an extensive, but easy to navigate checklist. LucidChartEven the most spontaneous of souls, needs to have the facts of a situation laid out for them now and again. No matter whether you're noodling out your annual road trip with the family or preparing a massive presentation of proposed personnel shuffle at the office, you'll want to have the right tools on hand to get the job done as quickly and easily as possible. Thanks to LucidChart, Chrome users can have access to a powerful set of free diagramming tools anywhere with an internet connection. LucidChart offers users an easy to use drag-and-drop diagramming interface, well suited to designing even the most byzantine of organizational charts, mind maps or chapter breakouts. Design elements are easily created moved, resized and connected, mimicking many of the UI touches offered by high priced desktop applications such as Microsoft Visio or The Omni Group's Omnigraffle. Speaking of Visio, LucidChart allows for the import of your desktop-side created diagrams, allowing you to take your organizational show on the road. Don't like an of the elements offered by the app? No problem--LucidChart provides the ability to work with user uploaded images, making it possible to create the custom look you're going for. For those that can't bear the thought of being along, the program also offers the ability to collaborate on a diagramming project with other users. With such a wealth of on screen functionality, off site saves, printing, download and upload capabilities and even HTML 5 support (with a number of features for the iPad and other tablets coming soon) LucidChart is a must-use web app for anyone that takes their diagramming duties seriously. PadMapperMoving, we're certain you'll agree, sucks. Packing, organizing the logistics, paying a security deposit on your new digs, cleaning your old pad from top to bottom after you move out and--worst of all--unpacking, has been rated as one of the most stressful gauntlets of experience that life has to offer. For those of us who have moving to a new apartment in their cards, PadMapper, Our Chrome Web App of the Week, does what it can to make the whole process just a little less painful.
With select cities, PadMapper also provides users with the ability to overlay crime statistics, locate nearby mass transit routes and even factor in their potential work commute time as variables for selecting a new home.
Utilities (contd.)Autodesk HomestylerUpdating the look of a single room or your entire home can be an exciting and stressful affair. Exciting because taking the time and spending the coin to pick out new furniture, paint or otherwise tinker with your home can breathe new life into a stale living space. Stressful because, let's face it, sometimes the vision of how a room should look that we see in our head just doesn't work out the way we planned when we get down to putting it all together in the real world. Fortunately, Autodesk Homestyler is here to help you iron the kinks out of your home styling faux pas.
If you happen to create a design that you'd like to follow through on, it can be saved for later (saving requires you sign up for a free user account), printed, exported as an image file or sent to a number of social networks. AutoCADThere's a good number of drawing and design programs available through the Chrome Web Store. Most of them will let you knock out awkward looking stick-figure sketches or primitive landscape images using features similar to those we've enjoyed/loathed in MS Paint over the years. Some offer more complex features, such as layering and various virtual paint brushes… which most of us end up using to knock out awkward stick-figure sketches or primitive landscape images. If you want to draw something useful--the blueprints for your next house, for example--there's only one Web App that'll do: AutoCAD WS. It's a Web App with so many awesome features and such rich functionality that we had to make it our Chrome Web App of the week. Designed with designers, architects and engineers in mind, AutoCAD WS brings a startling number of features previously found only in AutoCAD's legendary desktop design software to a free, relatively easy to use web-based application. Thanks to AutoCAD WS, designers can ply their trade on any computer rocking Chrome. The App offers deep design functionality, automatic versioned back-ups, the ability to upload files from a desktop CAD program and tools for real-time multi-user collaboration. While it doesn't have the guts to replace a dedicated piece of CAD software, AutoCAD WS is a compelling online offering that no serious CAD user with a need to work on the go should overlook. Offline Google MailWhile eating pizza on the moon may still be a ways off and there's still no cure for cancer, these are nonetheless magical times, my friends. We are living in an era where WiFi is available on airplanes, phone calls can be made from the summit of a mountain and revolutions are stoked with 140 characters or less. Most amazing of all, Google's finally got their act together and given us the ability to work with our Gmail accounts without being connected to the internet, thanks to Offline Google Mail, our Chrome Web App of the Week.
Quick NoteCloud-based services such as Dropbox, SugarSync and Box simplify our lives by making even our most complex files obtainable with push button simplicity anywhere there's an internet connection. Google Docs boils this convenience down even further by combining a robust document creation application and file syncing into one free-to-use solution. But to get down to the nitty-gritty essence of cloud-based note taking, we'd like to suggest you give Quick Note a try--it's our Chrome Web App of the Week.
In addition to text input, Quick Note also allows for the drag-and-drop addition of images to any note file, making it a great option for individuals that want to take their note taking to the clouds without the complexity or deep feature set of a service such as Evernote. What's more, Diigo has mentioned that they have plans to integrate Quick Note with a number of online services, giving this already great web app a very bright future indeed.
Utilities (contd.)Pixlr-o-maticSince it first popped up in the iTunes App Store, Instagram has taken the smartphone photographic world by storm. Currently being rocked by more than 10 million users, the free photo editing app allows users to give their iPhone photos a warm vintage look via the use of a number of filters, making mundane image captures a little bit more extraordinary. Wait there's more! Once you've processed your photos, you can share them on a wide variety of services, such as Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr! Sounds good right? If you're an Android phone user, take heart: Instagram will be coming to your handset... eventually. Until then, we can be content to use pixlr-o-matic, our Chrome Web App of the Week.
Oh, and should opening up Chrome to tinker with your pictures prove too much for you, the application's developers have also cooked up downloadable and Facebook-bound iterations of the app. Murdoch BlockThere's a lot to hate about Rupert Murdoch's media empire these days. The allegations leveled against what was once one of the mogul's flagship publications run the gauntlet from unethical to disgusting, dragging journalism through the mud all along the way. Illegally tapping telephones in the name of an outrageous headline? Bribing law enforcement officials? Dead whistleblowers? It's all so seedy and sordid. If you're of a mind to protest all of this dire hullaballoo, boycotting Murdoch-owned publications and television stations is a good start, but to do it right, you'll want to take the fight online as well. To make your online NewsCorp as easy a go as possible, the smart money's on Murdoch Block, our Browser Extension of the Week.
For anyone that takes their online boycotting or protesting seriously, this is one extension that you'll want to at your disposal. Chrome TasksAs anyone who's used a computer will tell you, a service or application's usability is directly influenced by its accessibility. In other words, if you can't get to it, you're not going to use it. Google in particular has learned this lesson well. Their popular Google Calendar and Gmail services, which were once an online-only affair, were recently given a load of offline functionality by the Mountain View based company, making countless users around the interwebz very happy puppies indeed. Unfortunately, since Google hasn't gotten around to giving us the same offline awesomeness with Google Tasks, a third-party developer has taken it upon himself to make using Google's already very useful product just a little bit easier. Tasks is a Chrome browser extension that allows users to peruse, add, and check off items from their Google Task list from their browser's navigation bar. So long as you've got a browser window open, you'll have access to your tasks through a minimal or full sized Google Tasks interface designed to suit your needs no matter how much or how little you've got to keep track of. Remember the MilkHaving your Google Calendar and Gmail available for use everywhere you go is a productivity godsend (or a curse, depending on how you look at it), making it possible to stay in touch and plot out your life no matter where you roam. That said, both of Google's web applications lack anything even close to a useable task management system baked into their interfaces. Fortunately, Remember The Milk's got a solution to this problem, and we feel it's slick enough to be our Browser Extension of the Week.
It's even possible to link tasks to specific pieces of mail, Google Calendar events, and Google Contacts. If at any time you decide that you can't bear the thought of how many tasks are awaiting your attention, just click the left side of the Remember The Milk for Gmail interface to tuck it away, out of sight out of mind.
Utilities (contd.)Google +1With so many ways to socialize online, there's no excuse for being a digital hermit these days. Facebook now offers the ability to follow feeds, Twitter's still cranking out the tweets and instant messaging just keeps on keeping on. Now that Google+ has made the move from invite-only exclusivity to being a social media network that anyone can join, the time seems right to declare Google +1 Button our extension of the week. In a sea of third-party Google+ extension options, Google +1 Button for Chrome is unique in the fact that it was cooked up by the web-minded folks from Mountain View. Once downloaded and installed to your browser, Google +1 Button is good to go, as chances are, you'll have signed into the Chrome Web Store with the same account as you rock Google+ with. In the off chance that your primary account isn't linked to Google+ (individuals with a Google Apps account, for example), the extension will demand that you sign into a Google+ account before it can be used for the first time. Once you're good to go, giving a +1 to any page you frequent is as simple as clicking a button in your browser's navigation bar. In addition to allowing you to voice your approval for a page, the extension also shows how many other users have given a thumbs up to the site you're viewing. Best of all, should any site you've given a +1 to fall out of your good graces, rescinding approval is as easy as pushing the same button you used to hand it out in the first place. Save to PulseIf you're an Android or iOS device user, you're faced with the happy dilemma of having a gazillion ways to ingest the news and stories that are important to you while you're on the run, chilling on your lunch break or hiding from the boss in the bathroom. One of our favorites is Pulse by Alphonso Labs. Sleek, easy to use, and most importantly, free, Pulse is an example of what a mobile news aggregator should be. Now, thanks to Save to Pulse, our Browser Extension of the Week, Chrome users who rock Pulse on the go will find chomping on the content that interests them even easier.
What's more, by sending a story to Pulse via the extension, you're not only stashing it away to read later on, you're also making it possible to share that story with just about anyone you please, thanks to Pulse's wide ranging of forwarding and social media interaction options, making it a godsend to anyone who works a gig where socializing online is verboten. SearchPreviewIs trawling through page after page of text generated in response to one of your search queries your idea of fun? We didn't think so. Let's face it: as great as the internet can be, trying to track down what you're after online can sometimes be a yawn-inducing drag. While it might not help you break any web search speed records, SearchPreview for Firefox and Google Chrome does make scrolling through search results a little more colorful by offer up an image of every page your search engine latches on to.
While Chrome users may have enjoyed similar functionality as a feature of their searches for some time now, accessing the website image provided required that a search result be clicked. SearchPreview removes this superfluous step, making finding what you're looking for just a little bit less daunting.
Utilities (contd.)After the DeadlineSpellchecking software has been in the business of softening up the brains of computer users everywhere since 1980, and let us tell you: business is good. In the three decades since spellcheck first hit the scene, most of us have come to rely upon the safety and false sense of intellectual security provided by the knowledge that even though we've failed as students of our mother tongue, we can still shine in print... most of the time. When you're dealing with the wild and wooly world wide web, the availability of decent spellchecking can be deeply varied. While you might be able to sort out the mistakes you've made in Google Docs, Twitter will still show all of your ugly spelling errors to the world. Unless of course, you install After the Deadline, our Browser Extension of the Week.
Click on the underlined word and After the Deadline will offer you a number of suggestions to make it right. The extension can even offer you stylistic suggestions to help you polish up your work, making it a breeze to put your best written foot forward online. CloudMagicWhen it comes to cloud-based productivity, Google's got it going on. With services like Gmail, Google Docs, Google Calendar and Google+, staying productive, in touch and up-to-date has never been easier. For those of us that rely heavily on what Google has on offer, it's never been more of a pain to find what we're looking for. While Mountain View makes it a snap to create tons of useful data with their services, keeping track of that data isn't anywhere near what we'd call a breeze. Fortunately, CloudMagic makes taming cloud-based information simple and pain-free.
Looking for information on a project? No problem. By entering a single search parameter, CloudMagic will simultaneously scour your Google Documents, Contacts and Calendar for associated information, returning the results to you in no time at all. It works so well, we'd be shocked if Google doesn't end up buying the developers out or aping their designs in the next year or so. Seriously, it's that good. Weather Channel for ChromeAs the world stands upon the cusp of the month of September, the first of the autumn leaves have already started to fall for many of us. It's a special time of year when Mother Nature makes the transition from trying to kill us with months and months of unbearable heat, tornadoes and floods to doing her best to do us all in with two season's worth of hurricanes, a few more tornadoes and bone-chilling cold. While we can't stop her soulless onslaught, it is possible to leave the house in the morning feeling just a little more prepared for the weather that's being dumped on us, thanks to The Weather Channel for Chrome, our Browser Extension of the Week.
Check out the next pages for reading and entertainment apps!
ReadingReadabilityThere's a whole lot of information available on the internet, just waiting to be devoured. Unfortunately, a lot of it's damn hard to read. Often set in a terrible font or against the backdrop of eye-scarring page design an online article, no matter how awesome the content, can be difficult, if not impossible to read. Fortunately for Firefox and Chrome users, Readability is here to save the day... as well as your eyes and sanity.
Each of these features can be accessed via user-mappable keyboard shortcuts, which in our humble opinion makes this extension one of the best friends any hardcore computer rocking reader could ever hope for. Popular Science Magazine Chrome EditionWhoever said that nobody likes a know-it-all likely wasn't all that smart. There's no shame in cramming your noodle full of as much data as humanly possible, and there's a lot of joy to be found in thrashing an opponent Texas-style during an old school barroom trivia throw-down. But who has the time these days to tackle anything close to the amount of book learning required to become a Master or Intellectual Disaster? No one. Fortunately, Popular Science Magazine's Chrome Edition Web App is here to spoon-feed you all the cool factoids you'll ever need to intellectually dominate/alienate your friends and loved ones.
There's even an option to share the stories that you dig via Twitter Facebook, or email, making it a cinch to spread the word that you are indeed an individual who takes their scientific education seriously, and should not be trifled with. Kindle Cloud ReaderWhen there's twenty minutes left until the end of the work day and you can't stand the thought of crunching another number, there's nothing better than obliterating any chance you might have had at being productive with a little light reading from fine sites like--dare we say it--PC Gamer or Maximum PC. That said, there's also times when nothing else will do but to dig your teeth into the meat of a good book. If you neglected to tuck a paperback, e-reader or tablet into your bag, Amazon and Google have you have you covered, thanks to Kindle Cloud Reader, our Chrome Web App of the Week.
Best of all, Kindle Cloud Reader has been designed to let you take your literary show on the road, making it easy to download content for offline reading. While it might not be as portable as a Kindle reader or smartphone, having your favorite books available to read on your laptop during your next cross country flight is nothing but win. 20 Things I Learned About Browsers & The WebThere's no shame in not understanding how a computer does what it does. Then again, folks shouldn't feel too good about it either. As desktops, tablets, and laptops become more and more complex, it's not always easy to understand exactly what does what under the hood. The same goes for the internet: Cookies? Malware? Phishing? While the comprehension of topics like these might be second nature to many Maximum PC readers, the same can't always be said for our partners, acquaintances, or family. The next time one of your technologically-impaired inner circle asks you a question about the internet or online security, consider directing them 20 Things I Learned About Browsers & The Web, our Chrome Web App of the Week.
To make sure that 20 Things I Learned About Browsers & The Web reaches its intended audience, Google was thoughtful enough to include a number of sharing options including links for Facebook, Twitter as well as--and this is kicking it old school--print it out. If your parents still haven't figured out how to program their DVD player's clock or even worse, still call you for advice on how to work their VCR, this app is gonna be your BFF from the get-go. CoolirisMicrosoft is everywhere. One form or another of Windows can be found on most computers in the world today. Redmond is rocking most people's work rigs and if you're a serious gamer, the odds very good that your last computer wasn't designed in Cupertino. For most folks, software conformity is a given. They accept that with the exception of their wallpaper, their graphical user interface most likely is identical to that of their neighbors. A few of us however, refuse to fall into line, preferring instead to tweak, preen and modify the looks of our Windows GUI until it can hardly be recognized as such. If you're interested in taking a first bold step into something a little snazzier than your computer's stock aesthetics have to offer, you could do a lot worse than downloading Cooliris.
The extension even offers a number of channels, such as news, entrainment and games, ensuring that it's not just another pretty face, but also a respectable information aggregator to boot.
EntertainmentRdioWhile everyone's been busy raving about Spotify finally coming to the United States, Rdio quietly continues to get better and better. Last week, in an effort to incite new customers to subscribe to their awesome collection of streaming tunes, the internet music juggernaut announced that it would provide a usage-based free monthly music streaming service to their customers that allows for a finite number of songs per month to be listened to. With this in mind, we've opted to make Rdio our Chrome Web App of the Week. With its easy to navigate interface and high quality sound, Rdio is a music lover's dream. With over 12 million songs to choose from, it's almost impossible to not find something on Rdio that'll please your ears. If you're feeling indecisive about what to listen to, you can also turn to other Rdio listeners for suggestions or hunt down your connections from Twitter or Facebook as well as a number of popular online mail services. Once you've hunted down some tunes you love, add them to your Rdio collection, tag them to listen to later or, as a premium subscriber, transfer them to your mobile device to listen to later. Given it's deep feature set, expansive catalog of music, connectivity options and the ability to kick out the jams from any internet connected rig, tablet and most smartphones, Rdio is a great choice for any music aficionado to get their groove on to. Art ProjectThe internet has spoiled us rotten. Connected as we are through pictures, words and images, those of us lucky enough to be alive today have unprecedented access to everything that the world has to offer with easy and ability that would leave past generations gobsmacked. And what, for the most part, do we usually end up doing with that access? Chase down memes, and tweet and flash videos of trashy pop tunes, of course. Isn't about time we classed our PCs up a bit with a little culture. If you're nodding your head as you read this, then you'd do well to download Google's Art Project, our Chrome Web App of the Week. Thanks to a cadre of art-loving Mountain View engineers, Art Project provides an all access viewing to a stunning collection of some of the world's greatest museums and art treasures. By leveraging technology similar to that used with Google Street View, users are able to stroll through museums such as the National Gallery, The State Hermitage Museum and MoMA, drinking in the massive collection of artwork they have to offer. Turning to individual works, Art Project users can view a single painting in its entirety, or zoom in painfully close and take advantage of a high resolution view of the work that's sharp enough to reveal individual brush strokes. Not sure where to start? No problem. Art Project offers an informative video to give you the low down on the best ways to rock the application, as well as another that provides some insight into the passion that drove its developers to bring it to life in the first place. There are hours of exploring and wonder to be had with this one folks and with Art Project gaining more access to additional collections, galleries and museums on a regular basis, you'll never be left wanting for a little beauty in your life. Amazon Cloud PlayerIf you listen to the pundits, there's little doubt that iTunes users will be getting word that their Apple powered ditties will be making their way to the clouds by the end of the day. That might be great news for anyone rocking Cupertino's resource hogging, behemoth of a music player or an iOS device, but what about the rest of us? If you signed up for a free or paid Amazon Cloud Player account, chances are that over the course of the past few months, you've had a chance to upload all of the audio files in your music library that your Cloud Drive can handle. Too bad Amazon's browser-based music player is, shall we say… clunky? Fortunately, Amazon Cloud Player, our Chrome Web App of the Week, brings a modicum of style to Amazon's streaming music service.
No search field, no tabbed browsing, no bookmarks--just you and your music. After one use, we're sure you'll agree that McSweeney's app elegantly simple app fills a void that Amazon has left empty for too long. Clickr.TVThere's never been a better time in the history of geekdom to give your cable or satellite television the slip. Over the past few years, consumers been spoiled for choice, with just about everything we once turned to our televisions for now available online. Add to this the countless steaming video sites that pumping out fresh content to the interwebz on a daily basis, and you've got the makings of a viewing solution that has cable companies and satellite providers running scared. To keep track of it all, many resort to software solutions like XBMC, MediaPortal or Windows Media Center. If you're a Chrome user, you've also got the option of rocking Clicker.TV, our Chrome web App of the Week.
Add to this the ability to stream content from other awesome portals like Funny or Die, The Onion or even your Netflix On Demand account, and you'll see why we're excited about what Clicker.TV has to offer.
For ParentsKid ModeThe Internet is a vast, amazing land full of information and wonder. Unfortunately, you have to cross a troll infested bridge to get there. While you might be willing to brave creepy wet-fingered Chatroulette touch-talkers and Nigerian princes in exile just to get a glimpse of The Oatmeal, we know you wouldn't dream of subjecting your kids to that sort of online debauchery. Fortunately, Zoodle's Kid Mode for Chrome is here to make surfing the interwebz a kid friendly affair. It's an idea so great that we're declaring it our Web App of the Week. Any net-savvy parent will tell you that Kid Mode has been around for some time now. However, as a Chrome application, the child-safe wonder really shines. Setting up a Kid Mode account only takes a few minutes. Once your account is activated, the folks at Zoodle provide a wide variety of age-tailored content for your child to enjoy. Music, books, math, social skills and art -- Kid Mode has it all, and it's accessible through one convenient, child-friendly portal. The web app even makes allowances for children with color-blindness and hearing disabilities. On the administrative side of things, parents are able to control their child's Kid Mode experience down to the last detail thanks to a number of powerful filtering options. Our favorite administrative feature? The ability to control how much time your child spends online with their Kid Mode account. It's hard not to be impressed by a web-based application that understands that kids need to get away from the computer once in a while and wants to help parents facilitate that. Well played, Zoodle. KIDO'Z TVSummer, with its seemingly endless hours of daylight and fun to be had, can be a great time for young children. No matter how someone might love their child, however, sooner or later, summer becomes a lousy time to be a parent. When your kid has no one to play with, you've taken the last day trip to the petting zoo that your budget can afford, and nothing you suggest turns their crank, the insanity begins. When thrown a little bit of boredom, those you once thought of as your little darlings can quickly become a rambunctious pack of hell spawn, gleefully dancing on your last nerve in an effort to entertain themselves. Fortunately, back-up has arrived in the form of our Chrome App of the Week.
To use KIDO'Z TV, parents are required to sign up, providing an email address, password and a bit of information on their child. KIDO'Z TV uses this information to provide your child with age and gender appropriate content. The web app makes it easy for parents to monitor and control their children's viewing habits, thanks to a simple to use suite of parental controls.
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Microsoft Announces 320GB Xbox Slim Hard Drive Posted: 12 Oct 2011 02:02 PM PDT Since Microsoft released the new Xbox 360, users haven't had much choice in storage space, just that spendy $130 250GB add-on drive. Now Redmond is upping the ante a bit with a new 320GB drive, and is keeping the price set at $130. Still expensive, but this one does come with a little bonus. In most regions, the 320GB drive will come with Lego Star Wars III: The Clone Wars. Countries like Saudi Arabia, Japan, and Slovakia won't get the game as an add-on or otherwise, sadly. For those that want the $60 game, this definitely sweetens the deal. Strangely, the 250GB drive will not be getting a price drop, it's being discontinued completely. This change to 320GB drives was not unexpected. Several special edition consoles have shipped with these drives, as opposed to the smaller 250GB drives. $130 might be a bit steep, but it's nothing new for Xbox users that want expanded storage. |
Universal Backs Away from $60 New Movie Rentals Posted: 12 Oct 2011 01:49 PM PDT Just days after its plans were leaked, Universal Studios has decided not to go ahead with $60 at home rentals of an upcoming film while it was still in theaters. The service was slated to go through trials in Portland and Atlanta, but theater chains strenuously objected to the proposition. Faced with a possible nation-wide boycott, Comcast's movie studio relented. The idea of premium rentals was floated a few months ago, and theaters expressed doubt then, even with the prices so high. Movie studios felt that some consumers might be willing to pay more to avoid dragging the whole family to the theater. Some like the plan, but others felt the price was exorbitant. Now we might never get a chance to find out if it would have worked. For most, the movie watching experience probably isn't as good at home, except for those few with legitimate home theaters. But even at $60, it could end up cheaper than a family outing. Would you pay anything approaching $60 for a movie at home? |
BlackBerry Outage Continues, May Be Spreading Posted: 12 Oct 2011 01:13 PM PDT RIM can't seem to get back on its feet. Amidst falling sales, and shareholder discontent, the smartphone make is now dealing with a three-day long service outage that seems to be spreading, rather than abating. The outage started in the Middle East as well as parts of Europe and Asia, but now reports indicate that it may also be affecting some US and Canadian users. Unlike other smartphone platforms, RIM manages the flow of data and service for all its devices through its own back end. This allows lowers speed connections to still result in acceptable levels of performance, but when the servers go offline, RIM is stuck with a lot of unhappy customers. RIM has said that the outage was caused by a "core switch error", and it has been fixed. However, while the issue was being resolved, the servers were hit with a massive backlog of data, which now must be worked through before service can be restored. Do you have a BlackBerry that's been having issues? Let us know. |
Future Tense: The Baby Cooper Dollar Bill Posted: 12 Oct 2011 01:11 PM PDT The Baby Cooper Dollar Billan excerpt from I stared at the sentence for 15 seconds. I knew what it meant. The entire anecdote had flashed into my head simultaneous with the creation of that first ominous sentence. I typed, "The short version:" and began. 1741 words later, I had the longest paragraph I'd ever written. And one of the most terrifying predictions I have ever written: +++ …That was the nice thing about software entities. You could create the most interesting legal monsters and turn them loose upon society, where they would loose-cannon for decades to come. The Baby Cooper Dollar Bill, for example, was only fifty years old—and the lawyers would probably be fighting over that Trust until the turn of the century, by which time it would probably be worth more than the entire planet. The short version: Grandpa Cooper thought he was being cute. He bought a one dollar investment trust, the proceeds of which would be delivered to the first-born child of his only daughter (who was at that time only four years old) on the occasion of his/her twenty-first birthday. Then he died, leaving an investment-oriented software entity (which was quickly dubbed a "fairy godmother") to operate the trust without human overrides. The software entity invested the dollar first into Chinese labor contracts, shifting to optical leverages three weeks before the Pakistan Agreement, and then micro-biotechnical futures eighteen days before Apple announced the Pippin development project. And so on. Within fifteen years the electric-Scrooge had cascaded the yearly earnings of the Baby Cooper Dollar Bill into the millions. Well, hell, if all you had to do was study upwardly directed catastrophic trends—at the rate of 16 billion neurological operations per second—you'd probably make some pretty good decisions too. Then Wilma Cooper gave birth to twins. Cesarean. The doctor would live to regret it. Mommy and Daddy Cooper, thinking to be responsible and wanting to protect their children if anything awful happened to them, had created "guardian angels" to watch over their children's interests—specialized software entities to monitor and protect the twins' legal, financial and investment needs. As it happened, the accident that killed Daddy Cooper left Mommy Cooper a quadriplegic; the guardian angels were immediately activated and within three days had filed massive lawsuits on each other's client. The guardian angel for Twin B was now suing Twin A for half the money, claiming that Twin B would have been first-born if not for the intervention of the doctor. The guardian angel for Twin A was suing Twin B for slander, alienation of affections, attempt to subvert, violation of intention, and malicious litigation. Both guardian angels were also suing the doctor who had delivered the twins, the hospital where they were born, and the now-crippled Wilma Cooper who had signed the Cesarean consent form in the first place, claiming massive damages on the grounds that they were being forced to litigation because of the incompetence of the doctor, the hospital and Wilma Cooper. The twins themselves were unaware of these battles being fought on their behalf because they were only two years old at the time. Still following this? Good. Because now it gets baroque. Turns out that the ever¬-cautious Mommy and Daddy Cooper, fearing accidents, infertility, premature spousal termination, etc., had also deposited three viable eggs and six vials of sperm with the Northridge Community Crèche. The death of Daddy Cooper automatically turned loose three more guardian angels upon the legal network, each one claiming that its "client" had prior claim on the Baby Cooper Dollar Bill despite not yet having been conceived. The argument here was that conception was implied by the storage of sperm and egg despite not yet having occurred in actuality; therefore under the Protection of Intention Amendment, one of these three would-be children was the rightful recipient of the Dollar Bill Trust. Now the religious groups got involved and the case was aiming straight for the Supreme Court. (Already two justices had resigned rather than be forced to rule on any of the issues involved. The guardian angels had resisted all attempts to break the case into its component parts and were demanding total resolution, not particle resolution.) The Fundamentalist Judeo-Islamic Baptists were claiming that the whole case was a blasphemy because of Mommy Cooper's high school abortion. That had been the first-born child, they claimed. Therefore, upon its death, the money had to revert to the estate of Grandpa Cooper—who, it turned out, had at one time, signed an agreement of financial support for the Ministry for the Salvation of Lesser Souls (meaning cats, dogs, horses, cows, sheep and pigs; but not apes.) Grandpa had not yet honored his pledge (of $5) before he died and therefore the Ministry had filed a lien on the earnings of Grandpa Cooper's estate. The aforesaid Ministry for the Salvation of Lesser Souls was one of the subdivisions of the Christo-Baptist Coalition, which just happened to be now affiliated with the—are you surprised?—Fundamentalist Judeo-Islamic Baptists. Since filing its lawsuit that group had splintered into six separate schisms, but not before it had created its own software entity to pursue its claims. This particular software harpy was being pursued by six harpies of its own, each created by one of the splinter factions. Then the woodwork really got porous. Turned out Grandpa Cooper owed everybody money. And they were all filing claims against his estate. The legal software churning the net had become a zooful of monsters. Grandpa Cooper's single fairy godmother had given birth to a whole host of guardian angels, harpies, demons, imps, whirlwinds, berserkers, trolls, and ghouls—not to mention several particularly vicious nameless horrors—all prowling through the system, looking for a throat to rip out. It was a legal firestorm looking for a place to happen—and sure enough it did…. It turned out that the original Baby Cooper Dollar Bill itself—which was still in the vault at McBroker's, sealed in a glass case—was counterfeit. Somebody had passed it to Grandpa Cooper. Unthinkingly, he'd passed it to the broker. The discovery that the bill was counterfeit was accidentally made during the course of a video feature story about near-sentient software entities. The shitstorm that this triggered made everything that had gone before seem like a fart in a tornado. If the original contract was invalidated because of Grandpa Cooper's failure to provide one legal dollar, then who owned the resultant fortune? McBroker's? The McShareholders thought this was a good idea. McBroker's immediately sued the Baby Cooper Trust for fraud. The Baby Cooper Trust countersued for breach of contract, claiming that McBroker's original acceptance of the counterfeit dollar validated the deal. True to form, the United States Government adopted a schizophrenic position: the Justice Department argued that to invalidate the original contract would violate the Protection of Intention Amendment; the Treasury Department argued that to not invalidate the contract would legalize the counterfeiting of plastic dollars. Justice argued that the statute of limitations had expired and therefore the dollar had to be treated as legal tender. Treasury argued that under the Seizure of Illegal Profits Act the entire Baby Cooper fortune now belonged to the government. The original counterfeiter came forward and claimed that the fortune was his, arguing that his dollars were works of art and he was only leasing them, not selling them. At least two Presidents had considered revaluing the dollar to zero for about twenty seconds, so as to force the Baby Cooper software to self-destruct in its own economic starvation. The doctor who had delivered the Cooper twins committed suicide; his family promptly sued everybody in sight, claiming that the mental stress of the years of legal harassment had driven him to his death. The twins themselves—remember them?—had been separated shortly after the first lawsuits were filed and reared separately. Neither had spoken to the other or to their mother since their fourth birthday. By the time they turned twenty-one, the Baby Cooper Dollar Bill was worth the better part of a billion dollars, but not a single one of the lawsuits had yet made it to court. On the day that the Baby Cooper Dollar Bill Trust surpassed the Zurich Lottery in value, a class action lawsuit on behalf of the members of the International Monetary Council was filed against the United States Justice Department for impeding the resolution of a case which would significantly affect the world's economy. This particular action guaranteed an additional twenty years, at minimum, of legal maneuvering—which was the intention all along; the Baby Cooper assets had to be kept frozen. Should that much cash turn liquid all at once, there was no way to predict what kind of hydrostatic shock waves would resonate through the world's economy. Meanwhile, an international community of software vampires was already looking for ways to buy into the donnybrook. Even though Baby Cooper futures were rated a very high-risk investment, shares of all seven of the major corporate entities involved were being traded on the New York Stock Exchange, not to mention more than a score of remora corporations riding on their earnings or echoing their investments. At least most of the software entities involved were smart enough to hedge their bets against an adverse court ruling; they were starting to expand into other investment areas—including the creation of several new Dollar Bill entities…. Rumor had it that the Supreme Court was reluctant to rule on this case for fear of crashing the market. That more than half of the human participants in this Byzantine affair were already dead was irrelevant to the software entities battling on their behalf. It just triggered a whole new class of software ghouls pursuing Beneficiary Claims; the filing rate for these set a three day record for the New York network. Unfortunately, the record was short-lived. When the National Resource Reclamation Act was passed, so many claims were filed on the first day of business that the system was down before lunch¬time. The commissioners refused to bring the system back online until they could rule the Baby Cooper Trust exempt from further actions. The Federal Appeals Court refused to uphold this ruling and the commissioners promptly allowed the system to crash three more times. (Yes, this also triggered a spate of suits and countersuits—everybody from the court and the commission to the bystanders whose transactions had been lost in the disaster.) Wait, it gets better—Congress's refusal to grant an exemption opened up everything that had gone before to the entire range of possible Reclamation actions. Yes, this was an open invitation to several hundred thousand more would-be players to leap into the mayhem—and it was deliberate. The Baby Cooper Dollar Bill was now generating more lawsuits per day than any action in human history. The whole thing had become a legal black hole, but the US government was generating almost as much income off the legal fees—these were all pay-as-you-go cases—as the Dollar Bill itself was generating in interest; so the Secretary of the Treasury had a very real stake in continuing the uproar for as long a time as possible. Now that's software…. +++ All right. Now you can't say you haven't been warned.
————— David Gerrold is a Hugo and Nebula award-winning author. He has written more than 50 books, including "The Man Who Folded Himself" and "When HARLIE Was One," as well as hundreds of short stories and articles. His autobiographical story "The Martian Child" was the basis of the 2007 movie starring John Cusack and Amanda Peet. He has also written for television, including episodes of Star Trek, Babylon 5, Twilight Zone, and Land Of The Lost. He is best known for creating tribbles, sleestaks, and Chtorrans. In his spare time, he redesigns his website, www.gerrold.com |
Asus Zenbook to MacBook Air: Let's Dance Posted: 12 Oct 2011 12:47 PM PDT Asus this week unveiled its first Ultrabook, the Zenbook. Much to the delight of Intel, the Zenbook starts at a buck shy of $1,000, but with twice the storage of Apple's $999 MacBook Air and with a faster processor to boot. The Zenbook is as much about style and portability as it is function. It measures 0.11 inches thin at the front and 0.67 inches at the rear, and sports a silver exterior panel with a concentric circle design that refracts a halo of light, Asus says. There are five different models to choose from: UX21E-DH52 (11.6 inches), UX21E-DH71 (11.6 inches), UX31E-DH52 (13.3 inches), UX31E-DH53 (13.3 inches), and UX31E-DH72 (13.3 inches). The main difference between the $999 UX21E-DH52 and $1,199 UX21E-DH71 is the former features an Intel Core i5 2467M processor and the latter brings a Core i7 2677M processor to the Ultrabook party. Otherwise both 11-inch models share the same features:
Both the $1,099 UX31E-DH52 and $1,349 UX31E-DH53 come equipped with an Intel Core i5 2557M processor, while the $1,449 has a Core i7 2677M processor. Storage is doubled to 256GB in all three of the 13.3-inch models, the screen resolution is bumped up to 1600x900, and each one weighs 2.86 pounds. Image Credit: Asus |
Sony: Your Bravia HDTV Could Ignite in Flames Posted: 12 Oct 2011 12:21 PM PDT Sony's having a rough week (or year, depending on how you look at it). Having just suspended 93,000 hacked accounts and dealing with security issues all over again, Sony's Vice President of Television is making Bravia HDTV owners aware of a potential problem in which a particular component in certain models could overheat and even ignite inside their TV sets. Not cool (literally and figuratively). The issue affects certain 40-inch Bravia LCD HDTV models, including:
Sony says if you notice any abnormal behavior from your TV (things like unusual noise, smell, or smoking), you should turn it off immediately, yank the cord, and stop using it. The company said it "confirmed that the symptoms do not occur when power is off," so we can effectively rule out black magic as the cause. According to BusinessWeek, Sony has recalled 1.6 million Bravia TV sets since 2007. The issue stems from a faulty component in the backlight system. If you own one of the affected models, you can visit www.updatemytv.com to schedule a free evaluation. |
Cooler Master Introduces Hyper 412 PWM Air Cooler Posted: 12 Oct 2011 11:51 AM PDT Cooler Master's new Hyper 412 PWM CPU cooler has some mighty big shoes to fill. The company's Hyper 212 Plus set the bar in terms of price/performance ratio and impressed us so much it earned a perfect 10 and walked away with a Kick Ass award (you can read our review here). The Hyper 412 PWM is a similar looking cooler that promises the same "delicate balance between cooling potential and noise." According to Cooler Master, the aluminum fins are spread out a little wider this time around. This is supposed to lead to better heat dissipation at low fan speeds, and you can attach up to two fans (it comes with one). As before, the Hyper 412 PWM uses four tightly packed direct contact heatpipes to suck heat away from the processor, effectively creating a "virtual vapor chamber," Cooler Master says. The cooler is compatible with all modern sockets, including Intel LGA 2011, 1366, 1156, 1155, 775, and AMD FM1, AM3+, AM3, AM2+, and AM2. No word yet on price or availability. Image Credit: Cooler Master |
Facebook Refuses To Share Some Personal Data With Users, Calls It A "Trade Secret" Posted: 12 Oct 2011 11:32 AM PDT What makes you, well, you? That's the kind of question that can keep big-brained philosophers pondering for decades. We're no Nietzsches here at Maximum PC, so we'll just report on the facts, thank you very much – and the facts says Facebook thinks part of you actually belongs to them. Well, kind of. Facebook refused to turn over a complete log of the personal data the social network had collected about an activist group's founder over the years, because apparently, the company considers some of your personal data – such as "Like" history – to be their "trade secrets or intellectual property." Not to say that Facebook was stingy with Max Schrem's request. They gave a CD containing 800 pages worth of data to the "Europe vs. Facebook" founder when he asked for it, TechDirt reports. But when Schrem realized some tidbits were absent – such as "Like" shares, postings on other users walls, and more – he asked for the rest of the data, and Facebook started throwing Irish law in his face (Facebook's HQ is in Ireland). Section 4(12) of the Acts carves out an exception to subject access requests where the disclosures in response would adversely affect trade secrets or intellectual property. We have not provided any information to you which is a trade secret or intellectual property of Facebook Ireland Limited or its licensors. That's right – Facebook considers your personal data its intellectual property and trade secrets, even though European law saws any European citizen can request a full log of his or her personal data from any service. To be fair, we can see why a person's Likes could be marketable material, but is it right to keep the information from the user himself? Facebook also said some of the data couldn't be shared because it could "only be furnished after disproportionate effort." If you're wondering what kind of data Facebook keeps on you and is actually willing to share, the Europe vs. Facebook website details every group of data it received in response to an information request. |
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