November 16, 2007

New RealPlayer v11 Provides Video Transfers to your iPod

Real Networks today announced availability of its new RealPlayer after a five-month public beta period. The new Real Player got Rave reviews at the "All Things Digital" conference in June 2007 from beta testers and press alike, the new RealPlayer is the first mainstream media player that lets consumers download and record video from thousands of Web sites.

As part of the RealPlayer Plus package, users can now transfer downloaded video content to the Apple iPod Nano, iPod Classic and iPod Video. iPod owners who previously only had access to video content available through Apple iTunes now have access to non-DRM protected videos from thousands of sites on the Web.

Real will extend the popular and simple one-click download feature in the new RealPlayer to the world by the end of November with the availability of localized versions for nine additional languages. In addition, a beta version of the new RealPlayer for Mac users is now available and allows the downloading of non-DRM protected Web videos from thousands of sites for playback online or offline.

"Now consumers can use the one-click download functionality to view Web video offline on their PC or transfer video to popular portable media devices like the iPod," said Harold Zeitz, senior vice president of media software and services at Real. "RealPlayer is one of the most popular applications around the world, and by the end of the month our customers from North America to China will have this one-click video download functionality and the ability to watch videos on the go with their iPods in their own native languages."

"We magically do the video conversion to the right video format and then put them on iPod," Real Vice President Jeff Chasen said.

Real will continue development of the new RealPlayer in the coming months, with plans to add video transfer support for the Apple iPhone and iTouch in early 2008. The new RealPlayer is available as a free download from http://www.realplayer-plus.com. Support for the transfer of video to the Apple iPod is available to those customers who upgrade to RealPlayer Plus at a one-time cost of $39.99.

Facts about the new RealPlayer:

    — In addition to the U.S. version, the new RealPlayer and the ability to
       download Web video for offline viewing is now localized for the
       following languages: French, German, Italian, Korean, Spanish,
       Japanese, simplified Chinese, traditional Chinese, Brazilian Portuguese
       and English language variations serving the United Kingdom, Europe and
       the Asia-Pacific region. These localized versions of the new RealPlayer
       will be available for PC users (Windows XP SP II and Vista compatible)
       before the end of November.

    — The Macintosh compatible beta version of the new RealPlayer is now
       available to consumers in the U.S., supporting Mac OS X v10.4 and 10.5
       with Firefox for the Mac and Safari.

    — Consumers can download multiple videos simultaneously with RealPlayer,
       allowing people to save time and easily multitask. Users can also start
       downloading in the middle of watching a video, and the entire video
       will be captured. (PC version only)

    — Consumers can send links of their favorite videos to their friends with
       a convenient "Share with a Friend" feature.  The link that arrives in
       their friends' email will direct them to the online source of the video
       content. (PC version only)

    — RealPlayer features an improved look and feel, a streamlined
       installation process and faster video playback.

   — View thumbnail images of saved videos.

Get yours now at http://www.realplayer-plus.com.

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November 12, 2007

The 5 Most Unintentionally Hilarious Comic Strips

Sometimes a form of entertainment can become so bad that it transcends badness and becomes something new and wonderful. The world of newspaper comic strips is a gold mine for this, where strips that were built on a shaky premise to begin with run for decades after the writers and artists have long gone insane.

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Is Microsoft Building a Flickr Competitor?

You gotta love job postings. Depending on the description provided, you can often times determine some underlying plans for a company. And the only companies we care about in this regard would be the ones big enough to lend some interesting job postings and descriptions. In this case, WebProNews was tipped off to a posting from Microsoft, and …

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Complete Guide to Zune 2's Software and Firmware

Zune 2 and its batch of new features are finally upon us, bringing new players and an entirely new experience. Read on to find out how Microsoft has managed to change a lot on the one hand, and very little on the other—then see how the Zune stacks up against iTunes and iPod.

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DX10 Fails AGAIN! Lord of the Rings Online Pretty, But Slow as a Dog.

Turbine's DirectX 10 client for The Lord of the Rings Online is upon us. Though company admits that its DirectX 10 offers "minor visual upgrades," we seek to find what kind of performance penalty comes with the new DX10 code. All is not well in the land of Middle-Earth…with DX10.

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Quitting the Day Job: Finding the Guts to Pursue Your Dream by Pro Blogging

For those of us who dream of being able to support ourselves by simply blogging each day. This story tells it's possible, but not overnight.

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Windows 7 "top feature request list" leaked to the public

An internal list of the most popular requests for improving Windows has been leaked, giving a glimpse of what users want in the next version of Windows. Strangely, 'make Firefox the default browser' is not one of them.

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iPhone to gain Apple Spotlight search in 2008

The next significant software update for Apple Inc.'s iPhone handset is unlikely to surface until early next year but will pack a system-wide search feature when it finally does arrive, according information obtained by investment bank Piper Jaffray.

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Next Up for Verizon FiOS: Invading Manhattan, Japan-Like Uber-Bandwidth

You might have heard about Verizon's new 20/20 symmetric FiOS—a sweet 20Mbps upstream and down. But 20 ain't 100, and we're damn jealous of the Japanese, so we got on the phone and asked the guys managing Verizon's tubes what's around the bend. The scoop for citydwellers is that we can expect "not too distant" announcements about FiOS availability

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Petition on Apple's forums: iTunes for Linux or iPod unlock

Are you fed up with Apple trying to prevent you from syncing your iPod nano/classic/touch on Linux machines? Let them know that you want a solution and fast. Either they develop iTunes for Linux, or they unlock the iPod.

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