Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Review - VLC v1.1.5

Do you find yourself installing more and more CODECs to simply play a video file you have been sent or that you've just downloaded from the web?  Need another program to find a needed CODEC and hopefully guide you to the right website to get it from?

In comes VLC (videoLAN client), a video player that comes with many popular CODECs included so that you can start watching your videos and movies right away.  It has good performance and some nice features too.  It even comes with built-in streaming support, conversion, subtitle support, DVD playing, simple bookmarking to resume playback where you left off, and even a quite different setting to replace your desktop wallpaper with a video.

Worth checking out to save yourself trouble later on, to save yourself repetitive calls for help by less computer savvy family and friends or even to use as a multimedia player with its audio file support.

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URL: http://www.videolan.org/vlc/

 VLC

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Review - Chromium v10.0.626.0

What makes a good browser?  Is it increased security?  Really good performance?  Regular updates and bug fixes?  What if I told you that Chromium is all this and more?

Now here is a browser with very nice startup time and a welcomed different look to it.  It does away with extra menus and tons of buttons that are always in the way even if you rarely ever use them.  They've even thought of using the title bars wasted screen space to place the browsers tabs.  No wasted screen real estate.  You can't customize it as much as Firefox, and the extensions (add-ons) are more limited, but I for one have gotten used to it quite quickly.  I prefer safety and security to flashy browser changes and these days I'd rather have a program that just works out of the box instead of having to tweak it over and over to get it just right.

The browser is more memory-intensive than others since it runs each extension and every website tab in its own process, separate from the others so that if one crashes it does not take down the entire browser or mess with other websites.

You've surely heard of google chrome by now.  Well chromium is what it the former browser is based on.  Think of it as chrome but without the privacy concerns.  Both browsers are known for their great JavaScript and website performance, and their extensions run smoothly too, being made with HTML, CSS and JavaScript.

In conclusion, on modern computers that come with a minimum of 2 to 4 gigs of RAM and fast processors, who can't afford some extra security and advanced features?

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URL: http://build.chromium.org/f/chromium/continuous/win/LATEST/


Chromium

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Review - foobar2000 v1.1.1

Staring back with Windows 98 I used to be a diehard winamp user.  I loved firing it up into windowshade mode and listening to some MP3s and streaming radio online.

In later years however I had sadly noticed it was getting slower, more resource intensive and bloated.  It started including random junk that I did not want nor need.  This was something that I couldn't accept in a simple program used to just play some music.

I had started to read more and more about another player rising in popularity named foobar2000 and decided to give it a try.  It not only had a basic look to it (which I admit took me a while to get used to) but was also made by a former winamp programmer who left the former project after the winamp 3 flop.

I noticed how foobar2000 came installed with many popular formats support built right in, but would also startup quite quickly and was really light on RAM (using up 8 megs instead of winamp 5s 32 megs on startup without any music loaded and playing).  You can also use some handy extensions and heavily customize it for your needs if you'd like.

From basic users to the more advanced music fans, I recommend checking out this great audio player.

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URL: http://www.foobar2000.org/

foobar2000

Monday, January 3, 2011

Review - filehippo.com

I remember just a few years ago waiting impatiently for the programs that I would use to include update-checking to save me from having to track down all their websites (some long gone, others moved causing 404s) just to see if a never version had come out.

Later on many if not most of the programs on my hard drive had updating included, but having to run each one, one at a time, was still rather tedious.

Many mass-updating websites have come and gone, but one still remains: filehippo.  Now this website hosts some great freeware, along with some open-source and trialware programs.  What more, it would be hard to miss an update since the site offers many ways to notify you: A news feed via RSS, updates via twitter and even a very nice update-checker that will scan certain folders on your hard drive and show you any available updates that you can then read up about on filehippos website and download right away.

Last point for this review is that software on a computer should always be kept up to date.  You not only get new features here and there, but you also get bug fixes and therefore increased security and productivity.  Newer versions are sometimes not better however, there may be features that you would use that have been removed.  You could either write the programmers to ask them to include them once again, you could find a new program that does what you'd want it to, or you could download a earlier version of the one you now use which is also available on filehippo.com.

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URL: http://www.filehippo.com/

filehippo