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July 4th, 2009

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TubeMaster++ Update Makes Grabbing Videos and Music Easier


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Windows only: Last year we shared TubeMaster Plus with you, an extremely handy program for downloading videos and music from streaming sites. TubeMaster++ has been released and comes with a slew of new features.

TubeMaster++ makes grabbing streaming videos and music incredibly simple. As long as TubeMaster++ is running, it will grab nearly every kind of media you watch over your internet connection thanks to its ability to scan the incoming data and not rely on the browser itself. Whether you’re watching a video in Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Opera, as soon as you start watching it, TubeMaster++ will begin capturing it.

You can save files, play them back right in TubeMaster++ and convert them. What formats can you convert into? A better question would be what formats can’t you convert into. You can convert audio formats into WAV, MP3, OGG, and AC3, among others. Video can be converted into dozens of formats and presets for mobile devices including the Creative Zen, iPod, Blackberry, PSP and PS3, various mobile phone sizes, and more universal formats like AVI and MPEG4.

TubeMaster++ does lose one feature from its predecessor: because of dependencies it has on installed software it is no longer portable. The trade off will be more than worth it for most people however as the new version is more stable, offers more features, has a built-in video and music search engine, and has dropped the upgrade requirement to download from adult video-sharing sites. TubeMaster++ is freeware, Windows only, and requires Java Runtime Environment and WinPcap (both of which are included in the installation if you don’t have them.)

Written by Maaruthi on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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GFI Backup is an Easy to Use, Free Backup Solution


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Windows only: Backup and Synchronization utility GFI Backup is an easy to use, full-featured package for keeping your collections of files safe and secure.

Using the software is easy, with a wizard-based setup for new backup tasks and lots of options to choose from. GFI Backup can do AES encryption, incremental or differential backups, notifications, or file synchronization—and it can backup your data to local folders, FTP, network, or even removable flash drives, making it worth a look for anybody seeking a free but powerful backup solution.

GFI Backup is a free download for Windows, email registration required to download. For more, check out our five best Windows backup tools, our five best file syncing tools, or just check out previously mentioned DropBox for instant file-syncing anywhere.

GFI Backup

Written by Maaruthi on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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Firefox 3.5 Portable Available for Download


Windows only: Firefox lovers have no doubt already updated to the recently released Firefox 3.5 for its amazing new features, but if you’re more the portable type, Firefox 3.5 Portable Edition is officially available for download.

This portable version comes to us from the reliable folks at PortableApps.com, makers of the popular, previously mentioned Portable Apps Suite, and brings all the goodies of Firefox 3.5 to your thumb drive. You may still need to perform a little about:config tweaking to get your extensions working with Firefox 3.5, but apart from that the portable version looks like it’s ready to go.

Mozilla Firefox, Portable Edition

Written by Maaruthi on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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North Downs Way


I haven’t written anything since I got back about my sojourn across the North Downs, a 132 mile hike from Farnham in Surrey to Dover in Kent via Rochester and Canterbury. The biggest reason as it stands has been my:

  • Very busy couple of weeks since I got back
  • The depressing fact that a year on I have still to pull my finger out and finish writing about the South Downs Way which I did almost a year ago now.

But there have been other reasons. When I started the South Downs Way I knew and still will produce a photo book on the South Downs Way but the flaw was trying to shoot it all in ‘one-sitting’ and whilst this is true to the journey, it has produced some of my favourite photos but also some that I am less than enamoured with. The upshot is that I’m going to need to re-visit the trail and photograph it again. Not exactly a bad thing in my book! So this project whilst very much swept aside for me to get on with impression:mk is alive and I am sticking with it. I just have to get these things right and there is no need to rush (unless of course I die tomorrow in which case i need to get a shift on!)

The other reason is a biggie, but that hasn’t stopped me getting on with it in the same way that say my birthday, barbeques, the pub (a few times admittedly!) and doing some extra work outside of the day job has done. But it has made me stop writing about it in yet another diary like fashion. Why?

I have long shrugged off or indeed acknowledged/struggled to find that any work of mine (photographically or written) has a philosophy, there is one but it’s not exactly obvious and probably still isn’t to me. But I do know what I am interested in and I’m now old enough to not give a damn about whether people think it’s odd, weird, deranged or obsessive. Which is a good start because there is nothing wrong than wanting to say photograph in black and white maybe the underside and underbelly of industrial Birmingham with its urban motorways and canals and decayed industry and social housing but not being able to do so because you’re worried a friend or all your friends are going to look dimly on it. Now, the latter is also something I will do (when I get time) but I’ve completely got over the whole keeping up appearances for friends, I am what I am and if you don’t like it do yourself and me a favour and kindly show yourself the door darling.

But behind this in the things I have attempted to write, and the things I do photograph of my own volition have been informed by something, or a series of somethings that are never entirely in isolation but do quite often float in the ether encapsulated all by themselves. Quite often these things are entirely subjective, subvocal, hidden and emotional and its hard to explain them except through a photo, or a sentence/paragraph that forms part of that overall patchwork of experience which describes where I am at this time, and what has gone before to bring me here in this frame of mind.

Without drifting needlessly into the obtuse, walking has always given me the freedom to think clearly. Whether that’s drifting around London or Brighton, or out in the wilds of the Downs or indeed the North Downs it hasn’t really mattered. The car, and to a lesser extent the train give you a sense of movement and an interesting perspective on how the landscape and your viewpoint shifts with that movement, but it’s nothing like the view you get when walking, which awakens and feeds that curious appetite. The bus for me does none of these, there’s no romance or emotion in that transport. It’s as utilitarian as a girdle (unless you have a girdle fetish, not that I am suggesting bus buffs are… Someone help me out of this hole!)

Walking this time seemed to sew up some kind of philosophy, it’s very quirky but it makes some sense. And so rather than write just a series of daily diaries of each day on the North Downs Way I’ve decided to work it into a wider remit on photography, subjectivity and philosophy of an art form and indeed maybe even a little of life. It’s hard to explain succinctly otherwise there would be no point in writing a book but it’s non-fiction and most definitely not a Kerouac-inspired journey dialogue. It is really a photography book, it might not be “Mastering Photoshop CS4’ or ‘The Dummies guide to Digital SLRs’ (I have no idea if those books exist but I bet they do, and I bet they are really really boring, bit like what I write then *chuckles*) but it’ll be interesting none the less.

The photo that summed this up for me is one I am still waiting back for, but maybe that’s it, a photo can make sense even with it not present if the thought behind it is sound. I was sat at Gatwick Airport station, on the final leg back home to Worthing, Day 14 of walking and I had done it, I had walked every inch from Farnham to Dover. And I was sat on the floor of the platform in the sun, it was nice to stretch out the legs but you get interesting perspectives on different levels. Ahead a lady, perhaps a flight attendant still dressed up glamorous strolled down the platform towards the incoming train and ahead a train was moving north to the far-side platform, the sun was bright. And it was hot (never start a sentence with a conjunction – except when it works for effect.) Long shadows carrying the cerebral and emotional baggage we all hide following in tow and the sky was pitch perfect blue. The departure board scrolling across for the Brighton 1842 or something like that fringed by its bright yellow metal armature which burst out uncontrollably against the navy skirt-suit of the what I have now decided is most certain an air-hostess. And in that pitch perfect blue sky a plane is coming into land taking people back from their escape, and the train is here to carry some away too on a hot Sunday noon. Why and what is all this for, each little step and snatched glance, with every uttered word what are we doing it for. Are we always In Search of Sunrise?

And photo sums it up for me what this book is about and that’s the book concept/title too, In Search of Sunrise. It’s a quirky idea but it makes sense. It’ll be a good antidote to ‘1001 Digital Photography and Adobe Lightroom Skills: The Ultimate Guide to everything.’

Written by lilserenity on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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Installing Firestarter

No, we are not installing a copy of Drew Barrymore’s early work. We are installing one of the most essential parts of a sound computer security plan, the firewall. Over the years, the term “firewall” has been misunderstood by some. It is sometimes defined as a tool that restricts access to certain web sites. Although some firewalls contain such content filters, this is not the main purpose of a firewall. A firewall is a tool that restricts access to a computer system or network by controlling access to a computer’s ports, which serve as endpoints to data connections. In Ubuntu, the default installation does not open any ports on the computer. Most computer systems have no need for any ports to be opened, so opening no ports during installation does not hinder the performance of the computer.

If Ubuntu does not open any ports at installation, why do you need a firewall? Good question. Although you have no open ports on your computer from the start, you may decide to open certain ports later for features such as remote access, or to host a web server. In any event, when a port on the computer is opened, you need a firewall. If you decide to keep the installation as is and not to open any ports, a firewall can still provide you with important security information. When running a firewall, you are provided information about other computers that are scanning your computer for open ports. While most of these scans are just random, should you see that a particular computer is continually scanning your computer, you may have a problem that you need to contact your Internet provider about. As you become more comfortable with Ubuntu, you may want to set policies on Firestarter. Policies are the rules that the firewall must abide by and are broken down into inbound and outbound policies. By default, Firestarter adheres to the following policies:

• New inbound connections from the Internet to the firewall or client hosts are blocked.

• The firewall host is freely allowed to establish new connections.

• All client hosts are allowed to establish new connections to the Internet, but not to the firewall host.

• Traffic from the Internet in response to connection requests from the firewall or client hosts is allowed back in through the firewall.

Installing Firestarter is simple. Start by going to the Applications menu, and then go to Add/Remove. When the Add/Remove tool is launched, search for the term “Firestarter” in all available applications. Now go through the normal application installation procedures as you have in the past. Once the software is installed, you will need to go to Applications | Internet | Firestarter to launch the program. Once you do this, you will be asked to provide your password. There’s that security at work!

When you click Forward on the welcome screen, you are brought to the Network Device Setup screen. On this screen, you will see the device that allows you to connect to the Internet. Most people will see Ethernet Device (eth0). If you have something different, that is okay. Ubuntu and Firestarter have worked together to determine the network device your computer uses to connect to the Internet so you would select whatever the Network Device Setup screen provides for you. The next part is important. If you did not give your network device an IP address, check IP Address Is Assigned Via DHCP. If you do not remember if you gave your device an IP address, then check this box. Most people will wind up with this box checked. Now you can click Forward.

If you selected IP Address Is Assigned Via DHCP in the previous screen, leave this screen blank and click Forward. Although you may be sharing an Internet connection at home, the Enable Internet Connection Sharing option has a different meaning. This is for computers that allow other computers to connect through their device. It’s unlikely anyone reading this book will need to select this, but if other computers connect through your computer, then check this box. You’ve reached the final configuration stage. Make sure that the Start Firewall Now box is checked and click Save.

Once you click Save, the Firestarter window opens. You can take some time to look over the different options that the firewall has, but don’t change anything, especially the policies. You could disable your ability to get onto the Internet if you set this improperly. Although policies are beyond the scope of this book, the Ubuntu forums provide plenty of information regarding Firestarter. Again, this is one of the benefits of using Ubuntu-supported software! Now, if you want to see Firestarter actually do something, leave this window open, and then open the Firefox web browser. Surf to a couple of sites, and then go back to Firestarter.

Note that the Received and Sent fields have changed. That is because this firewall will log the amount of data transferred on the network device that is active. This information can be helpful because if you are not on the Internet and you notice a heavy amount of traffic on your network device, someone or something may be transferring data without your knowledge.

Once you have familiarized yourself with Firestarter, notice the blue circle with a black arrowhead in your top toolbar. This is an icon to open the Firestarter window and lets you know that the firewall is active. If you click this icon, the Firestarter window will disappear, but the firewall will still protect your computer. If you close the Firestarter window, you will close the program and risk running without firewall protection.

Written by magakos on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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