Yearly Archives: 2010 - Page 2

Get more out of Windows Live Essentials : Photo Gallery

I have been using ACDSee for all my lite image editing tasks & management of over 4000 pictures since 2006, when I got my first camera Phone. But, the need for ACDSee reduced once I moved to Windows 7 with an evolved version of Microsoft Paint, a simple yet effective & good enough tool. I removed ACDSee as for my heavy Image editing tasks I already use Photoshop & for image management I now use Windows Live Photo Gallery.

Windows 7 has a simple Picture Viewer application inbuilt which supports basic image formats like JPG & PNG. Nearly four years ago, Windows Vista introduced a modern and extensible imaging framework called Windows Imaging Component (WIC). WIC made it possible for 3rd parties to add support for additional image formats to the operating system, complete with thumbnail views in Explorer, previews and slideshow in Windows Photo Gallery / Photo Viewer and on Window 7 Home Premium and Ultimate, also in Windows Media Centre.

Since I moved from ACDSee to Windows Live Photo Gallery for all my image management needs I was missing the ability to preview Photoshop PSD files. With ACDSee, such codec was already available, but there is no such codec available for Windows from Adobe due to which we cannot preview PSD files in Windows without having Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Bridge.

Preview helps, as most of the time I don’t want to edit the images, I just want to see which PSD is for what. I want a small preview, that’s all. If you have Photoshop installed then by default the PSD files will open in it which takes time to open such a big application & opening it just for a 10 second preview is again, useless. Thankfully, there is a way.

I found that Microsoft Expression Design 3 has the ability to import Photoshop PSD files in it, which means it has a compatible decoder codec. By using a simple trick you can enable preview of PSD files in Windows Explorer & Windows Photo Gallery.

  1. Expression Design 3 comes with a compatible PSD Decoder codec called PSDCodec.dll which can be found in C:\Program Files\Microsoft Expression\Common\Imaging\3.0.269.0
  2. If you do not have expression blend then just download the trial from here. Then Using 7-Zip, open ‘Blend_Trial_en.exe’ and in the ‘Setup’ subfolder, open ‘BlImp.cab’ then extract ‘PSDCodec.dll’. You can also download the codec from my skydrive.
  3. Keep the codec file somewhere safe in your PC. I recommend keeping in C:\program files\Codecs\
  4. Now register this dll by going to command prompt with Admin rights & run command “regsvr32 C:\Program Files\Microsoft Expression\Common\Imaging\3.0.269.0\PSDCodec.dll”. The file path can depend on your installation of Expression Design.
  5. Right click on any PSD file & click on “Open with –> Windows Live Photo Gallery” & check the box below the application selection which says “Always use the selected program to open file of this type”.
  6. Now, when you will double click on the PSD file, it will open with Photo Gallery app & you will also be able to see each layer of the PSD file individually.

If you want even more codec support, consider buying FastPictureViewer Codec Pack 2.1R2

Now, that was just one trick. These days, people use many social networking services like Facebook & Twitter. How about uploading images to Facebook directly using Live Photo Gallery application? You can do that by using Live upload to Facebook. Once you install this plug-in, you will be able to upload to Facebook, by clicking on Publish in the toolbar & then “Live Upload to Facebook”. You will need to authenticate your account though which is a requirement of using Facebook.

ixEdit : jQuery for Dummies

Recently, with the help of my fellow ex-SlideShare buddy Sri Prasanna, I started learning bit of JavaScript for my interaction design needs. JavaScript has always fascinated me & considering in today’s time all the browser vendors out there are trying to make JavaScript compiling as fast as possible, combined with the advent & arrival of HTML5… JavaScript is sure to take on the world.

However, I don’t know JS programming, though I have been reading by the tutorials at Eloquent JavaScript as suggested by Prasanna, but I was still looking for something which will let me do my interaction design, without going into coding. This is where ixEdit hails.

 

ixEdit is a visual JS coding tool. It comes as a JavaScript file package only combined with CSS & works under your browser. You can simply add 2 lines of code to your HTML & rapidly start to design stuff in the browser itself with real time results.

It uses Google Gears to store the changes & JS as you are working, on your local computer only as long as the filename or browser doesn’t changes. This I hope will be changed to HTML5’s “File” feature for local storage.

The best part is, you can make all the interaction, events you want & then just deploy them at which ixEdit will give JS code which you can either put in your HTML file itself or modify to include in a separate JS file.

Vectir : The only remote control you will need

When I had my old Sony Ericsson K750i  it had a feature using which I could control Windows Media Player or any other compatible media player using my phone over Bluetooth. It was quite a useful feature as I didn’t need to buy a Windows Media Centre remote to control the media players. Besides, its just one less device to deal with as K750i used to do it all.

After buying my Nokia N79, I was missing this feature a lot & was looking desperately for some application which could give me this or similar feature. I tried various application for my N79 but either some of them refused to connect or just didn’t work. Few days ago I tried Vectir & to my surprise, it worked flawlessly with my N79 & Windows  7.

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Vectir works by installing the application on your system  & installing a small Java based app on your mobile phone. All you have to do is to start the application on your PC and then start the application on your phone. Once the Phone app has started, it will search for your computer, after which you can connect either automatically or if Bluetooth serial port service is not installed in the computer then by setting a COM Port manually.

It also supports connecting via WiFi but this I wasn’t able to test as I don’t have a WiFi card in my desktop.

Once configured, you can also change the keypad shortcuts to your liking. This I liked as now I have almost same keypad shortcuts for both Windows Media Player & Media Centre.

What I like about Vectir is that it doesn’t come in your way when using. You just start the application on your computer & it can continue to work in the background. I would have appreciated if it could run as a service, as once configured, we don’t need to see the configuration part again.

Since Vectir is still quite new & considering Windows 7 was jut released, I hope the developers do decide to include some features like jumplist support in future as the entire right click menu of Vectir tray icon can come in a jumplist.

A more native UI to Windows 7 would also be appreciated though its not as important currently because once running, users will hardly see it again as it runs completely transparent in your system. The entire UI of Vectir is made in WPF & being a .net application, not only it is fast but also secure & efficient on RAM.

Currently Vectir runs with any mobile phone supporting Java based apps whether it is normal keypad based or Touch Screen. It is one app which you should sure try before buying a Media Centre remote for your PC.

You can download a trial and check how good it works for you.

TeamViewer 5 : Better & easier than Windows Remote Desktop

I was in need of a software using which I can access my family’s laptop at home in Lucknow over the internet to make changes or do regular maintenance. Windows has such a solution called Windows Remote Desktop, but frankly, I never understood it to configure or maybe I just never paid attention.

Few days ago, I was talking to my friend Mayank Dwivedi who is working with Microsoft Desktop support team. He told me about TeamViewer saying its easier & no-nonsense solution for what I am looking for, so today I tried it and he was correct, it is indeed good solution.

TeamViewer 5 is available free for home & personal use on both Windows & Mac OS. I haven’t tested it on Linux though using Wine.  It is much easier to use compared to something else free like UltraVNC

When you start TeamViewer app, you have an option whether to install it or run as you do not even need to install it, just run it directly. Once started, it will give you the choice depending on whether you want to connect to another PC/Mac running TeamViewer or whether you are waiting for someone to connect to your PC & work as shown in the screenshot above.

When I have to connect to the laptop at home,  all I do is tell someone there to turn on the PC & start TeamViewer. They don’t even have to install as they can also use TeamViewer Quick Setup which runs without installation. Then, they tell me the ID shown there & password which I enter in my TeamViewer & I connect to that PC instantly.

I configured TeamViewer here on my PC & exported the settings, mailed it to my sister & now TeamViewer is also configured there too so all I have to do is to start my TeamViewer here & start working on that PC. It also gives me the power to remotely reboot & login to the other PC. It also allows me to transfer files back & forth between both the computers or setup a VPN

I don’t know about the server or headless host controlling part, but as far as simply connecting to your other computers are concerned, TeamViewer free is a good solution.

Using Windows 7: The GX way

As some of you know, When Windows Vista was released, I wrote an article Using Windows Vista: The MVP way which was praised by many & was even selected to be printed in Digit Magazine. Now, Windows 7 is released & I have been using it for some time so its kind of update to the original post, just in a different manner for Windows 7.

When Vista was released, till Service Pack 1 it was plagued by many problem specially the now in-famous File copy bug but after Service Pack 1 & then SP2 this all changed. Vista is not a slow snail now & is infect a fast cheetah. Windows 7 is all what Windows Vista was not, even in my usage I can say that Windows 7 is Vista fixed. One thing I can say is that in Windows 7, feature 1, 2, 3 & 4 work fine.

Now, no operating system is good by default. You have to make it work the way you want it to work. With Linux we get all customisations we can imagine of but this usually in a complex manner. Linux does gives lots of possibilities & they are slowly but surely gaining momentum. Mac OS X by default is made to discourage customisation. All Mac should look same as El Jobso wants, you cannot run a Mac your way, you can run it the way Apple wants you to use it.

Windows is a hybrid here. It lets you mould your OS the way you want, & also makes it not so tough to customize it. In my experience you can customize Windows about 90% to make it look & work like something completely different.

In the leadership of Steven Sinofsky, Microsoft started to listen what customers wanted from Windows instead of making what Microsoft wants. Microsoft has recently started the Ad campaign with catch phrase “I am a PC & Windows 7 was my idea”. Its actually true, Windows 7 is a the idea of a user, its his OS  running on his PC so shouldn’t it run the way the  user wants… well, Windows 7 does that fine.

The way I use Windows 7 is to use as much default application as possible as neither they bloat the system nor they create confusion. I customised my installation of Windows 7 the following way which includes some of the applications I use & the way I configured the PC.

Note : In case you are installing Windows 7 on a Netbook or something with a CD Drive, then you can use Windows 7 USB – DVD Download Tool

User Interface Customisation

The first thing I do after installing Windows is to customize the look & feel the way I want. he default UI & UX of Windows 7 is already good due to which you don’t require much customization but still I changed some themes, sound pack etc. This is how my typical Windows 7 desktop looks like.

 

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The visual style I am using is called Soft7. I like dark coloured themes on my OS so this with a custom Window Glass colour of black does the trick. To change the default Visual Style on Windows you need a patched uxtheme.dll which was the usual case with Windows XP & Vista but thanks to the efforts of the guys at uxstyle.com, you no longer have to do this. Just download the application & after installation it will run in the background letting you install custom unsigned themes with ease. In case you don’t like it, just disable or uninstall it.

If you still like to patch the uxtheme.dll in Windows 7, you can download Universal uxtheme patcher from here.

To add something to any application as a jumplist item, just drag it to the apps icon in taskbar.

Browser

I use Firefox as my primary browser on Windows 7 due to the sheer level of customisation it provides with extensions. IE 8 is good, but Firefox is faster for me although it is indeed a big memory hog.

Mozilla is changing the way Firefox looks & behaves for Windows 7 with Firefox 4 but you can get most of it right now too using an amazing theme called Strata40 from SpewBoy. Now this is one reason to stick to Firefox despite of its shortcomings as a software. This is how my Firefox 3.6 beta 1 looks like, because this is the first version of Firefox which provides support for Aero Peak. Firefox 3.7 beta supports jumplists too but right now its not stable for my use at least.

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Entertainment

Windows Media player in Vista was actually better then the one in Windows 7 as far as UI is concerned. The previous glass themed Media Player looked way better then the current all blue version. Microsoft did something wrong here as it even changed the ability to change colour of WMP12.

Applications

In the year 2009, no one is using Operating systems anymore, we use applications. When you open your system, you start using the applications you use & not the OS due to which OS is completely transparent. This is why no matter what OS you use, Whether it is Linux or Mac OS or Windows, everything works fine for you if you know how to use it properly.

Windows Live Essential

Windows 7 comes without any Mail client or chatting application unlike Vista which used to come with Windows Mail & Windows Live messenger. This is actually good as this way Microsoft is giving users an option to either install Windows Live Essential suite or whatever else they like. The OS is less bloated now. My primary mail client is Windows Live Mail desktop & I use Windows Live Writer for my blogging needs. I don’t use Windows Live messenger though as Digsby does the work fine for me. You can download other apps included if you like Windows Live photo gallery or Movie Maker too.

Picture & Image Editing

For managing pictures & editing photographs I use ACDSee Pro 3. Its has been my favourite picture manager & editor for years as it does all I need from pictures taken from my digicam or Nokia N79 just fine. Photoshop isn’t required for these basic tasks now. ACDSee even supports uploading directly to Flickr. The dark black theme matches the way I like an app to look like too.

Although for home users, even this is not required. They will be happy with Windows Live Picture Viewer which now supports integration with image sharing services.

Media Playback & management

For all my Media needs, I use Windows Media player as now it even supports playing mp4 files automatically. Though I still install Windows7 Codec Pack by Shark 007 to play any & all media files I can find.

WMP12 also syncs with my Nokia N79 by default so I don’t even need any PC suite software to transfer music. When copying a video or Audio file, WMP12 automatically converts the file in suitable format so that my Nokia N79 can play the video or Audio just fine.

When I am watching a movie or just want to listen to music while lying on my couch, I use Windows Media Centre 7 which I can control using my Nokia N79 & Vectir. No need to even buy a Media centre remote. In case you still want buy a proper Media Centre remote then you can either buy a Hauppage or LeadTek WinFast T.V Tuner card or Remote 300 from Genius Peripherals which is now becoming a known brand in Indian Market.

It received some facelift in the new version which is welcome. It supports integration with SkyTV, netflix which I wish was available in India too.

 

Windows 7 Media Center

Communication

For communicating with friends, I no longer use multiple chat clients such as Yahoo Messenger or Google talk, instead just one client to rule them all, Digsby. It provides integration with Yahoo, Google talk, Windows Live, Facebook & twitter. It even notifies me of any new Email on supported networks. In case a friend of mine is offline, I can even Email him from Digsby itself.

To make Digsby look native to Windows 7, it now includes a theme called Windows 7 by default but its for the buddy list only. To make the message window look native to Windows 7, you can use a theme called 7 for Digsby. It doesn’t support aero peak yet which is a very required feature considering just one button shown in taskbar for many chat windows by default. A fix is to use tabbed window for conversations

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PDF

The de-facto document sharing format out there. I prefer to use original Acrobat Reader 9 to read PDFs & Bullzip PDF printer to print whatever I want as a PDF file.

For my Nokia N79

Although I don’t use it much, for syncing my E-Mail or SMS or contact lists with Windows 7’s inbuilt contact feature or Outlook, I use Nokia Ovi Suite. Its a completely new suite from Nokia replacing there old Nokia PC Suite. It now supports integration with Nokia Maps, Nokia Music store etc & you can also sync your phone with Outlook using Ovi Suite. I did a small review few months back when Ovi suite was in beta. Since its made in Qt, it will soon be available for Mac & Linux too.

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Too bad Device Stage isn’t supporting Nokia N79 as Nokia has not released any update for Device stage yet.

I also use ImageExpo in case I need to show the screen of my Nokia N79 on my PC or have to give presentation etc. You can read its small review I did sometime back. Keep in mind this requires Java runtime to be installed.

Widgets

I was and I am still using Yahoo! Widgets as I am just too used to it. The inbuilt gadgets are good but don’t have some gadgets that I need so I use Yahoo widgets.

One thing to notice is that Windows 7 comes with an inbuilt sticky notes application but its not a gadget which is what I wanted.

Download Management

For torrents, nothing beats µTorrent on Windows. Its a very tiny torrent client which starts & stays in the notification area & you don’t even need to see it. I don’t minimize it to notification area though as I just minimize it to the taskbar. Support for jumplists to pause & stop or resume downloads is requested though.

For other downloads, I have switched to Free Download Manager. It does its work without nagging me in anyway. I do hope that it also starts to support jump lists for common tasks such as pause, resume & stop.

Code editing

I use Notepad++ for all my code editing needs. Its good for editing & writing code for HTML, C#, CSS & a lot more. What I like about it is its tabbed interface & since Aero peak is available, multi tab preview just like IE 8 or Firefox 3.6 is most likely to come soon.

Maintenance

Windows 7 does the maintenance work for you automatically, but in case you want to do it, you can use CCleaner. For even more optimisations, you can use TuneUp utilities 2009 or Tweak7 for customising parts of the OS like hiding a drive in explorer etc.

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Reading Comics

If you are like me & into comics, try ComicRack. Its like a real life rack of comics where you can add a folder to watch will have all your comic books & you read what you like. What I like about ComicRack is that its really fast even for high resolution images & created using WPF.

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Libraries

Libraries are a new feature of Windows 7, using which you can see the content of many folders at one folder. It is the next version of Smart folders found in Vista where you can save your searches as folders & use them like any other folder.

Sync between devices & my Lenovo R61

Since I also have a Lenovo R61 laptop, I frequently have to transfer & sync files between my laptop & desktop. If its a big file like a video or many songs then I simply use a Flash drive to transfer files, but Windows 7 is also helping me to create a sync profile between the desktop & laptop due to which I can also share multiple small files automatically. I just shared a folder in both my computers with same folder name & it even works over Bluetooth personal area network.

One thing I would like to mention is Windows Live Skydrive & the new SkyDrive Explorer software. Using this I have my SkyDrive folders available through my Windows Explorer just like any other folder using which I can easily add or remove files.

CD Burning

I tried using CD Burner XP Pro & Nero 9 lite, but couldn’t find a reason to use these software at all. So now for burning I use …

1) WMP 12 for burning Audio CDs

2) Windows 7’s inbuilt Data disk burner for burning simple Data CD or DVD

3) PowerArchiver for burning ISO CD images.

There are many other pro lever applications I use but they are beyond the scope of a normal desktop user for which this post was written.

Now, Windows 7 was just released & its new but its something people are already familiar with due to Vista’s look & feel. There are many other applications available for Windows so the best way is to try few things & see what works best for you. This post was made just to get you started & as time passes, I will be updating this post.

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