Google Releases an Official Chromecast App for the iPhone/iPad

So, Google gives Apple folk some love!

Google releases a Chromecast app for iOS to help users set up and manage their $35 TV dongle

“Google released an official Chromecast app for iOS devices today, making it easier for users to set up the new $35 TV dongle, switch between multiple Chromecasts and change common network settings.

The app can be used to pair a new Chromecast with a nearby Wi-Fi network, as well as change the name assigned to the device and the network it connects to by default.

For users that own multiple Chromecasts and have them set up on the same Wi-Fi network, the app is also useful for managing which devices stream to which dongle. An area at the bottom of the screen also displays a list of supported Chromecast apps – which for now only features Netflix and YouTube.”

PowerPress 5.0 is Out!

A new major version of PowerPress, with great new features!

RawVoice launches PowerPress 5.0

“Podcasting powerhouse RawVoice announced the release of PowerPress 5.0, a platform that provides content creators everything they need to podcast with a WordPress website or blog. The latest version includes Taxonomy Podcasting and Post Type Podcasting, which expands on the ability to podcast with blog posts and categories.

‘Taxonomy Podcasting and Post Type Podcasting add additional control for content creators to organize and display podcast content,’ RawVoice CIO Angelo Mandato said. Custom Post Types allow users to organize content into specific types, while custom taxonomies help users to classify content. Taxonomy Podcasting, co-sponsored by AfterBuzzTV.com, can be used to add podcast to a custom taxonomy-built website, navigation system or search mechanism.

‘Before PowerPress 5.0, we were limited to organizing our podcasts by category or custom channels,’ RawVoice CEO Todd Cochrane said. ‘Now we can separate and organize our websites into silo’s of podcast content, organized with category navigation separate from our blog categories.’

PowerPress 5.0 also introduces podcasters to the latest in Web-based media playback by including the MediaElement.js HTML5 Media Player.

‘Playing media on your podcast website just got better by utilizing the MediaElement.js media player library,’ Mandato said. ‘This open source HTML5-based player provides Flash and Silverlight fallback for older browsers and supports iPhone, iPad and Android.’

PowerPress 5.0 continues to make podcasting easier with its new Advanced and Default Modes that will help new podcasters get setup within minutes of installation.

‘With Advanced Mode, all of the settings and features are available,’ Mandato explained. ‘In Default mode, only the essential settings are provided, these two setting give both the novice and the professional the right amount of tools to syndicate their podcast.’

RawVoice, parent company to Blubrry and Tech Podcast Network, has provided content creators the power to expand their audiences, make money through advertising, receive detailed audience measurements and host their audio and video since 2005.”

Windows XP is Doomed… Upgrade NOW!

Win XPSurely no one that reads the Dr. Bill Blog is still on Windows XP?!? I hope not. It is time to move on, people!

Your perilous future on Windows XP

Larry Seltzer for ZDNet – “An older relative (a really frugal but sharp guy in his 80’s) once bemoaned to me about the scam in the computer industry pushing people to upgrade all the time. ‘Why’ (I’m paraphrasing here) ‘should I upgrade a computer which does what I want it to do?’

We’re coming up on one really good answer to his question. As Mary Jo Foley reported the other day, Microsoft is stepping up their warning campaign about users still running Windows XP, which will reach end of life on Patch Tuesday, April 8, 2014.

Security is the reason my relative doesn’t appreciate for why running old software is often an inherently bad idea. Security technology in Windows XP was never really that great, even if it got a lot better with SP2, but the product was a runaway smash hit to such an extent that we may never be rid of it. Next April will be 12 years since Windows XP was made generally available; this is an astonishingly long time to keep supporting a software product. Nobody else keeps support life spans like Microsoft; with Windows XP they actually extended the normal 10 year life by 2 years, a move I consider a grave error. In fact, they should seriously think about cutting the 10 year standard down.

Partly as a result of their policies and partly because of people like my relative, Windows XP is still a massive presence in the market, and it’s a massive target of attack. So are later versions of Windows, but those versions are far better able to defend themselves against attack. See the stats in this blog entry by Microsoft’s Tim Rains which explains just how much more vulnerable to breach XP is than Vista, Windows 7 and especially Windows 8. Imagine how vulnerable it will be when you can’t even get patches for critical vulnerabilities anymore. Only a fool would rely on it.

One point Rains didn’t make that I think is worth emphasizing: If you’re using Internet Explorer on it, and I bet many XP users are, you are stuck with a version that will soon be 3 generations old and without critical updates anymore. Don’t keep using XP but, if you do, use Chrome or Firefox. (This reminds me of the old line ‘Don’t stick your hand in the garbage disposal but, if you do, use your left hand.’)

Some other points: If you’re on XP and you care about updates you’re probably using Windows Update, and therefore automatically running the Malicious Software Removal Tool every month. Not any more after April 2014.

And it’s not exactly a wave yet, but more and more software is not supporting XP, or at least not well. You can make a good case that this is irrelevant, since the users sticking with XP are likely sticking with the software they already have, but it’s another thing to consider.

One thing you don’t have to worry about is antivirus support. I asked Kaspersky about their plans for XP. Elliot Zatsky, Senior Director of Consumer Partner Services at Kaspersky Lab said that about 20% of their user base is still on Windows XP (!). It’s slowly trending down and they expect, as a result of the end of XP support and the release of Windows 8.1, their XP decline will ‘increase slightly and continue on this steady downward trend for a few years.’ Zatsky says the company plans to include support for Windows XP in their 2015 product line and, therefore, for at least 2 more years.

I also asked whether the inevitable increase in unpatched vulnerabilities on systems makes it harder for antivirus to do its job. Obviously this increases the chance that a system will be infected in some way, but Zatsky says that their multiple layers of protection should catch any malware in real time even if it is trying to exploit a vulnerability.

I think they may be a bit optimistic with that last point. Things will certainly get worse for Windows XP. Once there are no more patches, demand for vulnerabilities may increase considerably. It wouldn’t surprise me if some are being stockpiled for next year; it’s a risk since someone else may discover it, but if you release an exploit for which there will be no patch, users will be helpless.

You out there, the one running XP! That’s you I’m talking about when I say ‘helpless.’ When the new models show up for the holidays it’s time to go computer shopping.”

Box Doubles It’s Free Space Offering!

I have a Box account, however, I don’t use it as much as my DropBox account. However, I may have to look at it again!

Box doubles down on free space; adds new SMB option

“Box introduced some big changes to its pricing model on Wednesday, adding a few new schemes — not to mention a (bigger) freebie.

The free storage space option for individual users is getting bumped from just 5GB to 10GB.

The next level up is a new $5 plan dubbed ‘Starter.’ Aimed at teams as well as small businesses, this option supports up to 10 users with 100GB to share.

The $15 per user Business plan remains relatively unchanged with up to 1000GB of cloud storage space to share with three or more colleagues.

Moving higher up the scale, things are being shifted around a bit for Box’s core user base: the enterprise.

Aptly named ‘Enterprise,’ the fourth subscription plan consists of unlimited cloud storage space with a 5GB file size upload limit at a rate of $35 per user.

The top-tier selection is referred to as ‘Elite.’ Much like luxury goods that simply come with taglines saying ‘Price Available Upon Request,’ this is a customized cloud platform plan that lacks a standard (let alone publicized) cost. The amenities include unlimited storage space, no limits on file sizes when uploading, a free test environment, and unlimited use of Box Content APIs.

Box’s customer base already stands at roughly 180,000 businesses and more than 20 million individual users overall.

Certainly, the business world has been Box’s primary target up to this point, separating it from Dropbox, Google Drive and similar personal cloud storage offerings.

But the bottom two plans (extra free space plus the Starter option) are bound to draw more attention away from those competitors too.”

Explore the TARDIS Interior With Google Maps!

Time and Relative Dimension in Space (TARDIS), oh yeah! You can explore it via Google Maps, just click this link. Then, click on the “double-arrows” at the bottom of the screen at the Call Box.

TARDIS Interior

Google Maps Easter Egg Lets You Explore The TARDIS

“Gasp! I would’ve had this post written 20 minutes ago, but I was too busy geeking out.

Tucked away in a single street view image of what appears to be a mere police box, a newly discovered Google Maps easter egg lets you go inside the TARDIS.

(If you don’t know what the TARDIS is, come on.)”

This is cool! Geek out, for sure!

Alas, Poor Windows RT… I Knew Ye Not!

Poor Microsoft. Windows RT is dead and they are stuck with warehouse, after warehouse, full of RT tablets. (Hee… hee.)

Microsoft Doesn’t Want To Admit Windows RT Is Dead

Microsoft is in a tough spot. Windows RT is all but dead in the water. But Microsoft has approximately a zillion and a half Surface RT tablets collecting dust in warehouses. And so Ballmer and Co. continued its ignorant fight against Apple and the far more successful iPad with another TV spot that pits the two against each other.

Spoiler: The Surface RT is declared the winner.

Like in previous commercials, the Surface RT’s legitimate advantages are touted over the iPad and iOS. And in many cases, Microsoft isn’t exactly deceitful. The Surface, and with that, Windows RT, has clear advantages over the iPad. At first blush Windows RT feels more productive and advanced than iOS. But after a couple of swipes left and right on the Start Screen, the novelty wears off.

Of course Microsoft failed to stack Windows RT’s apps against those found in iOS.

Windows RT was a dog from the start. And now that Asus pulled back from the market, the little brother to Windows 8 will quickly fade into irreverence. With Asus out, just Dell and Microsoft remain as the only Windows RT hardware providers. Samsung, HTC, HP, and Lenovo previously pulled plans for a Windows RT tablet.

‘It’s not only our opinion,’ CEO Jerry Shen remarked to the Wall Street Journal. ‘The industry sentiment is also that Windows RT has not been successful.’

At this point, with Windows RT’s support quickly drying up, Microsoft is doing consumers a disservice attempting to pawn their unsuccessful tablet onto unsuspecting buyers shopping on specs alone. The Windows RT product segment will soon be dead, and with it, the little developer support it currently has will quickly follow suite, leaving consumers with a tablet that will be stuck in the past.”

Ubuntu Edge Now Available for Pre-Order at $695.00!

I just got this email today as a Founder:

“Ubuntu Edge now $695, thanks to major industry backing

With 14 days to go, it’s time for our biggest announcement yet. From now until the end of the campaign, we’re fixing the price of the Ubuntu Edge at $695! No limited quantities, no more price changes. You wanted a more affordable Edge, and now you’ve got it.

How are we able to do this? Mainly thanks to all of you. The huge support the Ubuntu Edge has been receiving from all corners of the world has really sent a message to the mobile industry — and that message has been received loud and clear.

Yesterday we announced that Bloomberg LP has snapped up the first of the $80,000 Enterprise bundles, and we expect more businesses to follow suit. To make it even more appealing, we’ve raised the number of phones included in the bundle from 100 to 115.

Even better, since the campaign started breaking records on day one, we’ve been negotiating with several major component suppliers who are keen to see the Edge reach its goal and drive the adoption of new mobile technologies. This is one of the key benefits of keeping some of the core specifications open: as a result of these negotiations, we can now produce the same state-of-the-art device for less than we originally estimated.

Edge for less

So of course we’re passing those savings on to you. There’s now a single unlimited $695 Ubuntu Edge perk, which comes with a year’s subscription to LastPass Premium and a place on the Founders page. At the end of the campaign, anyone who’s already pledged more than $695 for the phone will be offered a refund of the difference.

There will be no further price reductions, and we must reiterate that the Ubuntu Edge is exclusive to Indiegogo. It will not be available to buy anywhere outside of this campaign, even at launch.

The target is still $32 million, so we will need to ship a few more phones at $695 than we would at a higher price, but we believe we can do it. We have two weeks, and we have the best community out there, so let’s get to work: share this news, get the word out, and let’s get the Ubuntu Edge made!

The Ubuntu Edge team

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