Control BitTorrent downloads from Facebook with Mo

Note: As always, we do not encourage illegal downloading of files transferred via BitTorrent technology.

While the same results could be had by accessing your home machine using a remote access service like LogMeIn, I dig the fact that Morrent makes whatever you’ve downloaded, or are in the progress of downloading, available for others to see (privacy nuts can turn this option off too). This can turn your Facebook network into a great way to see which files are hot without relying on a third-party torrent-tracking service.

(Via TorrentFreak and Lifehacker)

Aimed mainly at folks who want to check up on their downloads at work or away from their primary machines, Morrent is more than just a convenient status window–it doubles as a remote control. You can pause and re-prioritize downloads. You can also start downloading new torrents by uploading them back to your home machine.

So much for Scrabulous being an end-all diversion on Facebook. Try Morrent instead, a simple tie-in to the popular BitTorrent software uTorrent that runs right in Facebook (read: sans software) and lets you monitor your torrent downloads and uploads from wherever.

(Credit:
Morrent)

Keep track of BitTorrent downloads in Facebook with Morrent. You can even upload new torrents from wherever you are.

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Netflix issues mulligan on profiles, won’t elimina

The people have spoken: Netflix will not be eliminating user profiles, the account feature that lets you split movie rentals among separate queues for a household. The company had announced the removal of profiles earlier this month, much to user dismay.

When Netflix opted to eliminate profiles, the company said that the feature was only used by a small sliver of its member base. It was a vocal sliver, however, and a thread on customer service forum Get Satisfaction revealed a host of angry users, ranging from families who wanted to keep parental controls on separate queues for their children to spouses who didn’t want to bicker over disparate film tastes.

“As someone who enjoys helping his 4-year-old daughter manage her one-DVD-at-a-time, G-rated sub-account, I identified with these thoughtful pleas to maintain Profiles,” a Netflix product manager identified only as “Todd” wrote on the company’s blog. “Because of an ongoing desire to make our website easier to use, we believed taking a feature away that is only used by a very small minority would help us improve the site for everyone. Listening to our members, we realized that users of this feature often describe it as an essential part of their Netflix experience.”

With members threatening cancellation or–shudder!–a switch to troubled rival Blockbuster, it clearly wasn’t a great move on Netflix’s part. Response to it had been overwhelmingly negative, and the company clearly got clued in.

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CompactFlash revamp aimed at cameras

Camera adoption?
The next question is how CFast will arrive in cameras. CompactFlash today is used in higher-end SLRs from Nikon, Canon, Sony, and Olympus. But camera makers are reluctant to describe particular technology plans, and Nikon didn’t even respond to a request for comment.

CFast cards have a different electronic signaling technology that requires a different physical interface, and cards and sockets are shaped differently to prevent people from mixing the older and newer cards. The new socket is tested for 10,000 insertions, just as with current CompactFlash, Frank said.

Jump-starting the market
If it were up to the camera makers alone, CFast’s future would be more uncertain. But there are industrial uses of CompactFlash, too, for computing devices embedded into all manner of things.

SanDisk, another top flash card maker, was more circumspect than Lexar.

Frank, perhaps unsurprisingly given his leadership at the CompactFlash Association, was the most bullish of all. He said that Canon and Nikon engineers are participating in the CFast specification development and that the first cards likely will hit the market in the second quarter of this year. “Since this affects the silicon (chips) in cameras, expect no less than a year for cameras to appear using CFast,” he said.

The new version, called CFast, has faster data-transfer speeds that could let photographers take more continuous shots without waiting for the camera to catch up, cut camera makers’ costs for built-in buffer memory, and make it swifter to review photos on a camera or copy them to a computer.

“It’s going to end up in the high-end cameras. The reason to move to it is purely for speed,” said John Santoro, senior product marketing manager for Lexar, a flash card maker and Micron subsidiary. He predicts its arrival in 18 to 24 months. “It’s my feeling the camera companies already have this on their road maps and want to start working on prototype samples as soon as the specification is finalized.”

Richard Pelkowski, digital SLR product manager for Olympus America, also wouldn’t commit, but he did acknowledge the general advantage of CFast. “Greater speed and greater capacity–we certainly realize the benefit of that,” he said, adding that card speed not only lets images be written faster, but also lets photographers review them more easily and take advantage of features such as the side-by-side comparison in Olympus’ new E-3 SLR.

CFast spec almost done; prototypes to come
Last year, the CompactFlash Association began work on the new standard, and the specification is in its final stages, said Bill Frank, executive director of the CompactFlash Association.

Today’s mainstream CompactFlash cards use an interface called IDE or parallel ATA, and a newer generation just arriving use a speed bump called Ultra Direct Memory Access (UDMA) that in practice tops out at about 80GB/sec. The CFast version uses Serial ATA technology, which was announced in 2001 and connects hard drives in virtually all PCs today.

Top-end CompactFlash today cards reach 45MB/sec, a speed rating also called 300x (1x is 150KB/sec). CFast, though, uses an interface called Serial ATA that today reaches about 375MB/sec.

CompactFlash is used in routers, defibrillators, Apache attack helicopters, and General Electric locomotives, Frank said. Some slot machines have two–one for holding the operating system and another for logging transactions.

In practice, today’s cameras can’t keep up with those speeds, and flash card readers struggle when transferring images to computers. But faster speeds are useful in cameras, as newer SLRs show: when data can be written to a flash card faster, it’s easier to design faster burst-shooting modes into camera that otherwise must rely on more built-in conventional memory.

But as with many upgrades, the standard will break compatibility with today’s technology. That means today’s CompactFlash cards won’t work in CFast slots, and CFast cards won’t work in today’s slots.

From there, it’s a matter of jumping to the camera market, where Lexar focuses. “I think it’s inevitable,” Santoro said.

So the more certain you are that you’ll buy a new high-end camera in the next couple years, the more cautious you should be before investing in an expensive collection of shiny new 32GB CompactFlash cards.

“At some point, the industry is going to have to transition to some other type of high-performance card,” said Jonathan Hubert, SanDisk’s director of strategic marketing for flash cards and accessories. CFast is one strong candidate, he said, but then suggested that the SD Card Association isn’t resting on hits SDHC laurels.

“We expect the CFast specification to be published for distribution in the second quarter–hopefully in April or May,” said Frank, who showed off CFast prototype cards and slots at the Photo Marketing Association trade show last month in Las Vegas.

When I asked Chuck Westfall, technical adviser for Canon USA’s professional products marketing division, whether CFast would catch on, he was equivocal. “It remains to be seen. What drives the market is cost and performance issues and availability,” he said. Canon’s caution, for example, meant it only moved its low-end Rebel SLR line to SD flash memory when the card format was very well established.

(Credit:
Stephen Shankland/CNET News.com)

This a closeup of the a CFast-era CompactFlash card. Note that it's got a slot instead of pins and that it's got different ridges called keys down the sides to prevent it from being used in today's style of CompactFlash slot.

Those industrial computing customers, who often don’t suffer the power-consumption constraints of camera makers, are eager for the new technology, Frank said–indeed, they were the first to ask for it. Because they’re using conventional SATA computer chips, it’s not difficult to move to the new technology.

The CompactFlash future in some ways isn’t hard to predict. The technology uses the same interfaces as conventional computer hard drives, and it’s been following that road map with a few years’ time lag.

A speed-boosting overhaul of CompactFlash memory technology could start arriving in cameras next year, but it’s incompatible with the version used in today’s higher-end models

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Amazon criticized for deranking ‘adult’ books

On Amazon.com two days ago, mysteriously, the sales rankings disappeared from two newly-released high profile gay romance books: “Transgressions” by Erastes and “False Colors” by Alex Beecroft. Everybody was perplexed. Was it a glitch of some sort? The very next day HUNDREDS of gay and lesbian books simultaneously lost their sales rankings, including my book “The Filly.” There was buzz, What’s going on? Does Amazon have some sort of campaign to suppress the visibility of gay books?

Of course, being delisted from the rankings doesn’t mean that the book giant has stopped selling the title; it just means that the title won’t show up with a public sales ranking or in the best-seller lists–often a factor in how shoppers make their purchases.

Author Mark R. Probst wrote on his blog Sunday that he noticed the change a few days ago:

The petition supporters note that the following titles with gay and lesbian themes are no longer ranked on Amazon:

Probst, the author of a novel with gay characters in the Old West, said he was perplexed by the move and used his status as a publisher to contact Amazon for an explanation. He said he received the following response from an Amazon Advantage service representative:

As a heterosexual, happily married adult female, I am deeply offended by this decision. As a customer, I am angered enough to take my business elsewhere, and I’d like a refund on my Kindle since, despite reports that your database sweep was not complete, you have decided to limit my ability to purchase books — from literary classics like Lady Chatterley’s Lover to newesque titles like Tipping The Velvet and Running With Scissors.

Certainly, one could make an argument that deranking titles with “adult” themes would make a reasonable policy for a site that attracts a wide range of the Internet population. But as demonstrated by an online petition that has already attracted more than 4,000 signatures, the policy appears to be biased against books with gay, lesbian, and transgendered characters.

It’s unclear what–if any–impact this backlash will have on Amazon, but certainly many are troubled (and should be) that the bookseller is apparently trying to make certain books harder to find.

An Amazon representative characterized the move as a mistake but declined to elaborate.

• Radclyffe Hill’s classic novel about lesbians in Victorian times, The Well of Loneliness, and which contains not one sentence of sexual description;
• Mark R. Probst’s YA novel “The Filly” about a young man in the wild West discovering that he’s gay (gay romance, no sex);
• Charlie Cochrane’s “Lessons in Love” (gay romance with no sex)
• “The Dictionary of Homophobia: A Global History of Gay & Lesbian Experience,” edited by Louis-George Tin (non-fiction, history and social issues)
• “Homophobia: A History” by Bryan Fone (nonfiction, focus on history and the forms prejudice against homosexuality has taken over the years)

Here’s a sampling of books titles that the petition’s backers noted are still ranked in the listing system (all notes and descriptions on the titles are supplied by the petition supporters):

The move has raised the ire of heterosexuals, including Kassia Krozser, who wrote an open letter to the online retailer:

Amazon.com recently delisted from its sales ranking system gay and lesbian book titles that it deemed “adult,” raising the ire of some who characterize the move as online censorship.

“Essentially, there’s a glitch in our system and it’s being fixed,” Amazon spokesperson Patty Smith told CNET News.

• “Playboy: The Complete Centerfolds” by Chronicle Books (pictures of over 600 naked women)
• Rosemary Rogers’ “Sweet Savage Love” (explicit heterosexual romance)
• Kathleen Woodiwiss’ “The Wolf and the Dove” (explicit heterosexual romance)
• Bertrice Smal’s “Skye o’Malley,” (which are all explicit heterosexual romances)
• Alan Moore’s “Lost Girls” (which is a very explicit sexual graphic novel)

In consideration of our entire customer base, we exclude “adult” material from appearing in some searches and best seller lists. Since these lists are generated using sales ranks, adult materials must also be excluded from that feature.

Somehow, the brain trust of your company has decided to protect the “entire” Amazon customer base by restricting access to content that someone (who?) decided was offensive. In your zeal to protect me from myself, of course, you managed to leave content that I find singularly repulsive online (really, exploring the human condition is bad, but Mein Kampf is just fine?).

Updated at 7:15 p.m. PDT with comment from Amazon.com.

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Sex ads on Denver Craigslist spike with Democrats’

Perhaps universities are back in session, or it’s warmer or colder out. Perhaps loyalists of another political party are intentionally posting fake advertisements in hopes that the Democrats will be blamed. Perhaps the thousands of journalists in town are seeking extracurricular activities. Make up your own mind. And yes, we’ll be paying attention to what happens during the Republican convention as well.

DENVER–An unusual phenomenon has recently appeared on Craigslist’s Denver Web site. Sex-wanted ads spiked this week, which happens to coincide with the Democratic National Convention.

(Technical details: We saved headlines for the posts of each day in August into a text file, and ran the Unix “sort” and “uniq” utilities on each to eliminate duplicate headlines. Also, we noticed that the posts-per-day can vary over time, as posts are deleted once someone’s needs are met, making this analysis something of a moving target. The outlier in the chart–a one-day lull–on August 10 seems to have been caused by a previously reported outage.)

Other days showed the same week-over-week jump. Monday increased 77 percent over the average of earlier in the month; Tuesday increased 69 percent; Wednesday’s increase was 74 percent.

On average, 425 posts on Craiglist’s “Casual Encounters” area appeared on the first three Sundays in August. But this Sunday, when tens of thousands of people had arrived for the convention, 763 posts appeared–an 80 percent increase.

Ads seeking casual sexual encounters through the Denver Craigslist site increased an average of roughly 70 percent to 80 percent over the same days of the week earlier in August.

This is where we insert the disclaimers. Mere correlation does not imply causation: other factors could explain this rise in advertisements.

"Casual encounter" ads spiked the week of the Democratic National Convention. But correlation does not, by itself, prove causation. The vertical axis is posts-per-day, and the horizontal axis represents every day of August to date.

The general content is what you might expect. Posts suggested “Here 4 DNC? Come get sexual with me”; “Does the DNC make you hot?”; and “Looking to service a young Democrat.” (Most are far more explicit, but unsuitable for our upstanding, discriminating readers. Use your imagination.)

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CyberLink’s media playback software goes Linux

CyberLink PowerCinema Linux, on the other hand, is an all-in-one media player for the Linux operating system that can handle DVDs, video files, music files, photos, and even manage portable and plug-in devices. The application supports a wide range of video formats, including ASF, WMV, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, DAT, and AVI.

On Thursday, however, CyberLink announced to extend the realm to support Netbooks and Nettops–the budget laptop and desktop computers designed to run the Linux operating system. The new Linux software applications include PowerDVD Linux and PowerCinema Linux.

(Credit:
CyberLink)

If you purchase a DVD or Blu-ray internal optical drive for your desktop, chances are it comes bundled with PowerDVD from Cyberlink. The company’s media playback software has been popular in both desktop and laptop PCs running Windows.

PowerDVD Linux is derived from Cyberlink’s movie player, PowerDVD, and supports DVD Video playback with menu navigation, subtitles, and video rewind and fast-forward. PowerDVD Linux incorporates CyberLink TrueTheaterT Lighting for automatic video lighting enhancement, and support for CyberLink TrueTheaterT Surround and Dolby audio technology.

The two new applications will be made available via OEM licensing. Currently, it’s unclear if they will be available in retail versions.

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I wonder. What would Eric Schmidt say, post-Androi

But you did file an application with the FCC, didn’t you?
Imaginary Schmidt: Glad you noticed.

Since Eric the Silent rarely talks about what really goes on inside the inner sanctum, I’ve saved you the trouble of the guesswork and conducted my own imaginary Q&A:

Wasn’t there at least a chance this could serve as a launching point for a new business out of Google?

Imaginary Schmidt: What are you smoking, pal? Our business is solid. We’re all about developing apps, making money off of advertising, and causing Steve Ballmer agita. Bear Stearns or no Bear Stearns, we’ll still make a bundle. Now, you explain to me why we should even consider taking on the expense of becoming a wireless operator.

I just wanted to go back to the reasons behind the original decision to bid the minimum $4.6 billion…
Imaginary Schmidt: Let me stop you there. It’s very simple. The future’s all about open-device and open-application rules. Steve Jobs may not understand that. I can tell you that Sergey, Larry, and I do.

So, you’re still feeling OK even though Google didn’t win any licenses?
Imaginary Schmidt: It’s all good.

What a magnificent bluff! After hearing about the outcome of the FCC’s wireless spectrum auction (click for PDF), I have to marvel at the poker face Eric Schmidt assumed throughout the course of the last several months.

In a way, though, you also opened the door for your rivals in the mobile business to make a big splash in mobile search and online advertising.
Imaginary Schmidt: We don’t talk about the competition.

It never entered into your thinking?
Imaginary Schmidt: Come on. Do you think we’re so insane as to want to butt up against AT&T or Verizon?

Yes, but you know the list–Microsoft, Yahoo, AOL…
Imaginary Schmidt: We’re done here. Unless you wanna talk about health care.

(Credit:
Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

When they look back at the last year, do you think people will say it was all a smoke screen?
Imaginary Schmidt: No. Maybe we could have leased spectrum to other service providers and let them build services. But who needed the headaches? Doesn’t really matter what Verizon does with the C block. As long as it remains open to devices running the Android mobile platform, everything’s cool.

Android is such a cool name.

Last year, when all this first broke, your lobbyists went to Washington and pressed the FCC to make sure there was open access. But you only convinced them to accept one of your proposals. Can you comment?
Imaginary Schmidt: Sure, we still came out ahead. The regulators required the winner–in this case, Verizon–to let any device (or app, I should add parenthetically) to connect to a network using this spectrum.

Q: Thanks for taking the time, Eric. Did you ever seriously think about building your own wireless network in case Google actually won part of the spectrum auction?
Imaginary Schmidt: Get serious.

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Microsoft announces a pair of Webcams LifeCam Sho

The LifeCam Show is a tiny, 2-megapixel Webcam that offers three magnetized ways to root it in place.

The LifeCam Show offers improved image quality over the last laptop LifeCam that I reviewed, the LifeCam VX-7000. Particularly, the low light performance is improved, though I found that the video is not always smooth at 800×600.

It ships with the same LifeCam app as the VX-5500, which includes the new 3D video effects and video message feature.

If blue isn't your thing, the Microsoft LifeCam VX-5500 can do a quick change to red or white.

Update: Read the review of the LifeCam VX-5500.

Microsoft announced two new additions to its Webcam lineup on Tuesday, the LifeCam VX-5500 and the LifeCam Show.

The new 3D video effects include face tracking technology, so you can conduct video chats with a distorted head or while wearing a funny hat. You can also share video messages via a Vista Gadget, but you’ll need to have a Vista PC and a LifeCam on both ends of the exchange. Maybe Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Gates exchange video messages this manner, but I doubt many others will find this feature all that useful.

My early tests with the VX-5500 reveal the same great performance as the VX-5000 that I reviewed earlier this year. Video at 640×480 looks smooth, and the image quality holds up well under low-light scenarios. Fast movement does cause some stuttering and blur, though the same can be said for all Webcams. Aside from the addition of the new 3D video effects, the LifeCam software remains largely unchanged and in need of an overhaul.

The LifeCam Show ships with three attachment options. Most useful is the laptop clip, which has a round, magnetized button to hold the camera. If you want to make the LifeCam Show a regular part of your life, you can affix a sticker to the back of your laptop; the sticker has the same magnetized button to hold the camera. Finally, a desktop stand is included that lets you connect the LifeCam Show, via a magnet once again, to the top of a plastic pole.

Take the LifeCam VX-5000, replace its Gumby-like rubber tail with a square plastic base, throw in some new 3D video effects and interchangeable faceplates, and you’ve got the LifeCam VX-5500. The camera body and optics remain the same as the previous model, which means the video quality remains very good, particularly for such an inexpensive Webcam.

(Credit:
Matthew Elliott/CBS Interactive)

The VX-5500 will cost $60 when it starts shipping on September 25.

The pricier and smaller Microsoft LifeCam Show will cost $100 and go on sale starting October 9. It features a higher resolution sensor than the VX-5500. The 2-megapixel sensor can capture 800×600 video, 2-megapixel still shots, and–through software interpolation–8-megapixel stills.

While I liked the flexible yet sturdy Gumby stand on the previous model, the VX-5500′s stand provides a solid base whether sitting on a desk or resting on the of a laptop or LCD. And for what it’s worth, you can choose among three included faceplate–red, white, and blue.

(Credit:
Matthew Elliott/CBS Interactive)

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Wii virtual console releases for this week

Yoshi’s Cookie (1992, NES, 500 Wii points): Nintendo really tried to cash in on the whole Tetris era by developing many Nintendo-branded spin-offs. In Yoshi’s Cookie, you’ll take on 100 stages of cookie-themed puzzle action.

Bases Loaded (1988, NES, 500 Wii points): A true classic, Bases Loaded brought arcade-style baseball into the home. Great gameplay combined with innovations, such as the first-ever view from the pitching mound, allow for this game to be fun even when played today.

What games do you think are missing from the Wii virtual console? Sound off here!

Two classic NES games are available for download this week on the
Wii virtual console. Choose between a classic baseball-arcade sim and a puzzler inspired by everyone’s favorite dinosaur sidekick.

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Getty Images goes private in $2.4 billion deal

Getty shareholders will receive $34 per share, and Hellman & Friedman will assume the company’s debt under the deal, the companies said. That price is a 29 percent premium over Friday’s closing price of $24.45; on Monday, the stock closed at $31.67.

Getty’s board has approved the acquisition and resolved to recommend the transaction to shareholders; the deal is expected to close in the second quarter. The Seattle-based company confirmed in January it was “exploring strategic alternatives.”

Hellman & Friedman is acquiring Getty Images for about $2.4 billion in a deal that would make the powerful but financially troubled seller of stock photography into a privately owned company, the companies said Monday.

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