Geek Software of the Week: AppCleaner!

AppCleanerThis is a simple, small utility that allows you to fully uninstall applications on a Mac! (And yes, this IS my first GSotW for Mac!) What do you expect! I JUST got a Macbook Pro, and I am geeking out big time! This is just SO cool! You can tell that I am totally having a geekout!

AppCleaner from FreeMacSoft Software

“AppCleaner is a small application which allows you to thoroughly uninstall unwanted apps.

Installing an application distributes many files throughout your System using space of your Hard Drive unnecessarily.

AppCleaner finds all these small files and safely deletes them.

Simply drop an application onto the AppCleaner window. It will find for the related files and you can delete them by clicking the delete button.”

The Great Ice Storm of 2014!

Well, hopefully all of you survived the Great Ice Storm of 2014. It’s nice to have power back on, because one cannot use one’s neat electronic toys if there is no power! And, of course, I had just gotten in a ton of really cool electronic toys, and was looking forward to using them, when in fact, we lost our power. Of course, we also lost our heat, everything in our refrigerator and freezer was at risk; and I actually thought of that later on! After, of course, fretting over the fact that I would not get to play with my electronic toys!

But, after a night in a nearby hotel, which did have power, and in which I could use my toys, all is well! And, there is some excitement in the fact that when you return home all of the power is on, and life is good! So all in all, an interesting experience, but one I’m not looking forward to experiencing again for quite some time, if ever. In fact, I would be up for just missing it altogether!

So, I trust all is well with our readers, and netcast viewers. I know that not all of you live in the area in which I reside, but if perchance you do, I hope you have power. More power, more power!

I know that there was a report that 50% of all households in our area were without power, and we were among that 50% that had none, but, now we do! Good deal!

Ahhhhh! It’s Here!

My Macbook Pro!

What I have talked about for all these years, dreamed of, conspired about… and so forth! A genuine, official, brand new Macbook Pro! It came in this afternoon, and is SO cool! And, by this weekend, I will have two 8 gig DIMMs to upgrade it to 16 gig! AWESOMENESS!!!!!

I also got a cool stand for my new, cool Macbook as well! Check it out below!

Rain Macbook Stand

Dr. Bill.TV – Video – Placeholder #5

No show this week, but a mind blowing one coming soon!


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Dr. Bill.TV – Audio – Placeholder #5

No show this week, but a mind blowing one coming soon!


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Dr. Bill.TV #328 – Video – “The Wall Street Casino Edition!”

Roku said to be weighing an initial public offering in the U.S. in 2014, LinkedIn gives users ‘member blocking,’ Microsoft is cutting Windows prices to compete with Android and Chrome, GSotW: Volumouse. Is Net Neutrality’s demise slowing Netflix?

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

Volumouse v2.01 – Control the sound volume with a wheel mouse


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
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Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/yBu1YEYzRdk

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/87358420


Dr. Bill.TV #328 – Audio – “The Wall Street Casino Edition!”

Roku said to be weighing an initial public offering in the U.S. in 2014, LinkedIn gives users ‘member blocking,’ Microsoft is cutting Windows prices to compete with Android and Chrome, GSotW: Volumouse. Is Net Neutrality’s demise slowing Netflix?

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

Volumouse v2.01 – Control the sound volume with a wheel mouse


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
clicking on the “Play” Button in the center of the screen.

(Click on the buttons below to Stream the Netcast in your “format of choice”)
Streaming M4V Audio





Streaming MP3 Audio

Streaming Ogg Audio

Download M4V Download WebM Download MP3 Download Ogg
(Right-Click on any link above, and select “Save As…” to save the Netcast on your PC.)

Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/yBu1YEYzRdk

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/87358420


Netflix is Slowing Down… Thanks to Net Neutrality’s Death

I told you. The death of Net Neutrality has consequences! We need a content neutral internet!

Is Net Neutrality’s Death Responsible for Slowing Netflix Streaming?

Latin Post – By Robert Schoon – “In recent weeks, Netflix subscribers have noticed that their instant streaming service has increasingly degraded in quality and load time, even some with hefty broadband connections. The big question on everyone’s minds is: does the slow-down have to do with the recent suspension of Net Neutrality, or something else?

Besides lots of grumbles and conversations on Twitter, Netflix itself has confirmed that speeds have degraded among several big broadband internet service providers (ISPs), including Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T. Here’s Netflix’s data spanning from Dec. 2013 to Feb. 2014. Those three lowest downward sloping lines are Verizon, AT&T, and Comcast. Verizon Fios is the steepest downward slope (the grey line) in the middle.

Specifically, Netflix reports an average of 14 percent speed degradation in streaming speeds on Verizon FiOS in the last 30 days, according to the Wall Street Journal. For a lot of customers, this means HD streaming has turned into regular definition streaming, and some Netflix users are getting stuck on seemingly infinite buffer.

Now, if you’re not already aware, in January, a U.S. appeals court struck down the U.S. Federal Communications Commission’s authority to regulate ISPs on Net Neutrality — the rules that previously disallowed ISPs to throttle certain traffic on their networks. And customers of Verizon, which was the specific contender in that FCC case, have been seemingly the most affected since.

Does this mean Net Neutrality’s (temporary?) death is already being leveraged against Netflix? Is the timing too suspicious, or have we all been watching too much House of Cards, simultaneously degrading our own connection speeds and amplifying our cynical paranoia?

The answer to the first question is a tentative no, but a dose of skepticism about ISPs — and Netflix — is healthy. And we have been watching ‘too much’ House of Cards and other streaming content from Netflix, if ‘too much’ means too much for networks to handle under current arrangements.

Verizon has denied throttling Netflix and other services like Amazon Web Services, saying ‘We treat all traffic equally, and that has not changed’ in a statement, but a dispute between Netflix and Verizon is causing streams to slow down — the connection degradation is just probably not where you think it would be.

Net Neutrality doesn’t allow ISPs to mangle traffic on the so called ‘last mile’ of internet tubing between the ISP and your house, but with Netflix streaming traffic (along with others’) at an all-time high and increasing, the way business has usually been done deep in the internet is changing.

According to the Wall Street Journal report, the internet was historically run on arrangements where huge networks agreed to swap each other’s traffic without charge, assuming that it all evened out in the end. But now that Netflix streaming is eating a huge amount of North America’s downstream traffic every evening — nearly a third of downstream traffic as of late last year — those pro-bono arrangements are being stressed.

Netflix, for example, runs through a middle-man network Cogent, whose traffic has quadrupled in the past half year after Netflix began offering 1080p streaming to its customers. Stressing the networks like Verizon and Comcasts’ traffic that much more, those companies have asked Netflix to pay additional fees for its usage — not for the Net Neutral ‘last mile’ but all the way up the pipe. Instead of throttling users’ connections, ISPs like Verizon have delayed upgrading their networks in an effort to get Netflix to foot the bill that it’s largely running up.

Dan Bowman, chief of internet traffic management company Sandvine Corp., told the WSJ that either side of the dispute could give in a little to make streaming connections better. Verizon could go ahead and upgrade its connections for Cogent’s network traffic, and Netflix could distribute its traffic more to avoid data jams.

Meanwhile, if you’re a savvy Netflix customer who’s frustrated by buffering, don’t pay to upgrade your connection speed (assuming you have a decent broadband connection). Instead, you might want to try using a Virtual Private Network, most of which will be too slow, but some of which have proven to de-throttle Netflix traffic.

Or you could join the petition to put pressure on FCC chairman Tom Wheeler to reclassify ISPs as ‘common carriers’ to exercise more control over issues like this.”

Geek Software of the Week: Volumouse!

Volumouse Controls

What a neat idea! Control your PC sound volume with your mouse wheel! Awesomeness!

Volumouse v2.01 – Control the sound volume with a wheel mouse

“Volumouse provides you a quick and easy way to control the sound volume on your system – simply by rolling the wheel of your wheel mouse.
It allows you to define a set of rules for determining when the wheel will be used for changing the sound volume. For example: You can configure Volumouse to use your mouse wheel for volume control when the Alt key is hold down, when the left mouse button is down, when the mouse cursor is over the taskbar, and so on…

When the conditions that you define are not satisfied, your mouse wheel will be used for the regular scrolling tasks, exactly as before.”

Microsoft Cuts Windows Pricing

They are losing market share, so they are dropping prices. Heh, heh.

Microsoft is cutting Windows prices to compete with Android and Chrome OS

Engadget – By: Jon Fingus – “At present, it’s tricky to make Windows PCs that cost as little as basic Android tablets and Chromebooks. While Microsoft charges vendors $50 to use Windows, Google often gives its software away. The crew in Redmond may have found a way to narrow the price gap, though. Bloomberg claims that Microsoft is cutting Windows 8.1’s license fee to $15 for any device that sells for less than $250, letting builders offer very cheap Windows PCs without destroying their profits. The developer isn’t commenting on the reported discount, but this would be a familiar strategy; Microsoft slashed Windows XP’s pricing to wipe out Linux netbooks a few years ago. There’s no guarantee that the company will repeat its earlier success if the lower Windows 8.1 prices take effect. However, it may feel compelled to act when PC shipments are still declining and mobile OS tablets are on the rise — the status quo clearly isn’t working.”

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