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Webware, Web

Meeting Ticker Puts a Price on Wasted Time

Meeting Ticker Calculates Money Wasted on Meetings
Have you ever wondered how much money is being wasted at those lengthy company meetings that never stay on topic? You get ten people in a room to discuss some new project, but spend half the time discussing last night's game or the latest celebrity sex tape.

One way to keep everyone on track is to visualize how much money the company is paying for its employees to sit around chatting. The Meeting Ticker, a program written by Toby Tripp, Lydia Tripp, and Roy Kolak, is a simple Web app that keeps tabs on the cost of meeting time. Enter the number of attendees, the average hourly salary, and the start time of the meeting, and it starts counting up the dollars and cents wasted on what was likely an unnecessary gathering. Just fire it up on your laptop, turn it around for all to see, and watch your manager start to sweat. [From: Meeting Ticker]

Computers, Windows Software, Webware, Web

Microsoft Debuts Office 2010 and Free Web Apps

With all the chatter surrounding Windows 7, Chrome OS, and the recent release of Firefox 3.5, it's easy to forget that there is another major software release approaching: Office 2010. Sure, Office may not be loaded with the flash of Windows 7 and it lacks the mystery of Chrome OS, but it is still one of the world's most popular suites of publishing, spreadsheet, and presentation software.

Yesterday, Microsoft showed off the latest version of the standard bearer of cubicle software at its Worldwide Partner Conference in New Orleans. Powerpoint gets nifty new image and video editing features for crafting multimedia, and Outlook will include conversation style views (similar to Gmail). The e-mail app joins the rest of the Office family by getting a "ribbon" interface of its own (ribbon being the new menu system introduced with Office 2007 that changed based on the task you were performing). Office will also come in both 32-bit and 64-bit versions, a first that will lead to speed improvements on 64-bit operating systems, like MacBook Pro or PS3.

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Computers, Webware

Thief Uses Google Earth to Spot and Plunder Lead Tile Roofs



Tom Berge, a builder from Sutton, England, has been using Google Earth as a treasure-seeking tool, of sorts. While other Google hunters before have claimed to find lost ships or even Atlantis, Berge pursued a more tangible type of booty.

Using the popular map application, Berge would canvass nearby areas and identify buildings whose roofs consisted of valuable lead tiles. An unidentified friend of Berge told The Telegraph, "he could tell the lead roofs apart on Google Earth as they were slightly darker than normal." After locating the lead roofs, Berge would climb the building, remove the tiles, rappel down and then sell the material to scrap metal salvagers.

Police arrested Berge in February after he allegedly accumulated approximately $200,000 from his plundering, which included a church, a museum and a girls' school. Berge received an 8-month suspended sentence for his 6-month spree, after which lead investigator Detective Sergeant Chris Grant said, "he was a prolific offender up until the time he was arrested. Since then our crime figures for theft of lead have reduced significantly." [From: The Telegraph]

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Computers, Webware, Reviews

Make Online Slideshows Without the Making




Do you like making stuff, but absolutely hate the idea of putting any effort into it? Well, we have just the thing for you.

Essentially, Animoto is a Web app that produces videos from photos and music that you upload to the site. It analyzes the data and automatically generates a slide show, pieced together with crazy cuts and visual transitions. It's sort of like a movie trailer, but with pictures of your cat sleeping and your car sitting in the driveway.

Supposedly, the engine even takes into consideration the rhythm, genre, and tempo of the music you insert and makes cuts appropriately. As a result, no two videos are ever the same. Even cooler, you can just point the service to your online photo collections (on Picasa, Flickr, etc), and have it use those for content, rather than having to upload images to the service directly. [From: Animoto]

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Google, Webware

Google Earth Turns Heart-Shaped Island Into Tourist Destination



Thanks to Google Earth, and a fortunate, cardioid shape, the tiny Croatian island of Galesnjak has become a lover's escape for couples worldwide, reports the Telegraph.

The owner of the island, Vlado Juresko, told the Telegraph that, though he has always been vaguely aware of the island's shape, its uncanny resemblance to a cartoonish heart didn't dawn on him until he was bombarded with booking requests from intrigued couples, who had found Galesnjak via Google Earth.

"It has been incredible. We think it is the most perfect heart-shaped island in the world," he said of the 130,000-square-yard uninhabited island, which sits in the Zadarski Kanal.

There is no word about whether or not Valentine's Day is yet booked, so you adventurous, amorous types had better go ahead and get on it. Tell ol' Vlado that Switched sent you. [From: Telegraph]

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Cameras, Computers, Google, Downloads

Google's Picasa Gets Face ID Update

Picasa Gets Updates, Knows Who Your Friends Are
Google was not resting on its laurels earlier this week. First, it announced its corporate video sharing platform, then it unveiled Chrome, and towards the end of the day rumblings of a vastly updated Picasa started to come out.

The Picasa news was clearly overshadowed by Chrome, but the new features are nonetheless impressive. Most dramatically, Picasa's Web Albums will allow you to tag people in a photo, automatically. Facebook, MySpace, and Flickr may let you tag photos, or people in photos, but they make you do it manually, which can take quite a long time. The revamped Picasa doesn't just search all your photos for faces -- it also compares them and tells you which ones it thinks are the same person, thus allowing you to tag a person in several different photos in one step.

In our brief hands-on, Picasa performed quite admirably, even recognizing a few partially obscured faces correctly. It wasn't perfect and incorrectly identified a few photos and failed to identify others at all, but we were still able to tag an album of 40-plus photos in under 10 minutes.

The Picasa desktop application also picked up a few new features this week, including a movie editor, a touch-up tool for clearing up skin blemishes and red-eye in photos, and a synchronization mode that lets you alter and tag photos in your Web album even if you've uploaded them from somewhere else.

Picasa is getting a little long in the tooth, Google shows it is serious about staying in the digital photo market with these updates. [From: CBS]

Computers, Google, Windows Software, Downloads

Google Launches Chrome, a New Web Browser

Google Throws its Hat Into the Browser MarketThe world has been speculating for years that Google would eventually release its own browser, one that would, of course, be finely tuned to run Google services and other rich Web apps. Well, the day has finally come: In a surprise Labor Day announcement, Google announced Chrome, its new browser project.

The Windows PC version of Chrome is set to become available for free download sometime today, with Mac and Linux versions forthcoming in the next few weeks.

Though Google used some of the code in both Mozilla's Firefox and Apple's Safari to build its browser, it looks like Chrome is otherwise an entirely new beast. Google's browser uses its own JavaScript engine, called V8, which the search giant claims is dramatically faster than other engines, and provides new features and abilities that will "power the next generation of Web applications that aren't even possible in today's browsers." In other words, Chrome should runs significantly smoother and faster than other modern Web browsers when running multiple Web applications at once (say, a chat program on one page, Internet radio on a second page, and a photo-editing app on another)

Google also puts security and stability at the forefront in Chrome. Each tab is run as a separate process, so that if one site you're visiting crashes, it doesn't bring down the entire browser. Each tab is "sandboxed" (cut off from other tabs and underlying system components), which promises to keep your computer safe(er) from malware.

From the screen shots that have been circulating, we can tell that Chrome's tab bar will be at the top of the window, as opposed to under the location bar as it is in most other browsers (including Firefox and IE). We've also seen a start page that has thumb-nailed links to nine of your most visited Web pages for easy access.

Google is, as usual, making Chrome open-sourced so that others can borrow and modify Chrome's code at will. Expect to see some of its innovations working their way into the next versions of Firefox, Safari, and Internet Explorer. And therein lies Chrome's true purpose, not to snatch large swaths of market share from IE or Firefox, but to make sure the groundwork is laid for Google's next generation of Web apps. [From: Official Google Blog, TUAW and Download Squad]

Computers, Google, Webware

Drunk Guy Passed Out on Curb Shows Up on Google Street View

Street View Launches Down Under; Drunken Aussies Protest
Google Street View has certainly made a name for itself in the U.S. by catching some interesting situations, such as people braking into houses, a kid wiping out on his bike, and even a marriage proposal. The service has now launched in Australia and, go figure, is already getting itself in trouble down under, this time catching a drunk passed out on the curb after an all-night bender.

The man, who isn't releasing his identity, went on a crazy night out to drown his sorrows over the loss of a friend. He passed out after getting out of a cab and the Googlemobile happened to drive by as he was still sleeping it off. Thankfully, Google is being good about removing such sights from its sites, and has already banished the offending picture from the Aussie Street View. Something tells us it won't be the last. [From: The Daily Mail]

Computers

Web App Brings the Internet to the Blind


The Internet is supposed to be the great equalizer. Race, color, creed, class, and physical handicap are supposed to of no impediment on the Web. Unfortunately, the blind face great obstacles in getting online, especially from public computers, like those in a library or Internet cafe. Screen reading software is rarely installed on these PCs, and portable options are often prohibitively expensive.

A new Web app from a graduate student at the University of Washington aims to help break down these barriers by bringing screen reading technology to any Web-connected computer. If the user can navigate, or have someone navigate, to http://Webanywhere.cs.washington.edu/ they'll be able to launch an in-browser screen reader. The reader, called Web Anywhere, will work on any computer with any modern Web browser, such as Firefox or Internet Explorer 7.

The reader is still in early development and needs some tweaking, but it looks to be a potentially revolutionary tool for the blind. You can check out the video above for a demonstration of how the Web app works. It's nice to see someone using the powerful tools made available via the Web to build something that does more than let you share photos and 'poke' friends. [Source: Yahoo! News]

Computers, Google

HealthMap Tracks Outbreaks With Google Maps

HealthMap Tracks Outbreaks with Google Maps

There are plenty of tools out there to track disease and infections, but only HealthMap.Org uses Google Maps to give you a frightening visual of outbreaks around the world.

The service uses a complex algorithm that searches Google News, World Health Organization alerts and other online news and discussion groups for reports of outbreaks. The algorithm is able to distinguish between articles about cases of illness and reports of vaccine availabilities or other general health alerts by parsing the language used by reporters. It is even able to detect and filter out duplicate reports of the same outbreak from multiple news sources. The reports are then listed as points on a map grouped by either country and state or province.

Though the site is aimed at health professionals, the information is freely available to the public. So tracking the latest outbreak of salmonella-tainted tomatoes should be much easier. [Source: ABC News]

Computers, Google

Google's Lively Is 'Second Life' for the Web

We've reported on many of the ups and downs of online virtual world 'Second Life' over the years, and while it continues to be a fascinating experiment in a number of ways, it hasn't exactly found much in the way of mainstream popularity. Undaunted, Google is trying its hand at the concept, launching 'Lively,' an online virtual world in which you can jump into 3-D rooms and chat with others visiting the same pages you are.

Like 'Second Life,' in 'Lively' you create an avatar to represent yourself in the 3-D world, then roam about the room and chat with others. It is, as of now, a rather more limited experience than its predecessor, as you can't customize items, clothing, or locations to the extent that you can in 'Second Life,' and the overall environments are much smaller. But thanks to those limitations it's also a lot simpler to get into than 'Second Life,' and presumably will be a little bit friendlier too -- at least for a little while. [Source: Google]

Computers

Privnote Lets You Send Messages That Self-Destruct

Privenote Lets You Send Messages that Self Destruct
Have you ever wanted to feel like a secret agent and send a message that self-destructs? Well, now you can: Privnote lets you send messages to friends, family, and colleagues that destroy themselves after they've been read. It's good for a joke, and great for information you want to share, but don't want to have archived and held against you later (we bet the White House was wishing it had this).

Sending a Privnote is simple. The site requires no registration, and doesn't collect any personal information of any kind. Simply enter your message and click 'Post It.' Privnote then gives you a link to the message for you to share with someone. Once the message is read, it is erased from Privnote's servers and rendered inaccessible. You can also elect to receive notification of when your message has been read so you know when your minions have received their orders. [Source: ReadWriteWeb]

Audio/Video, Cameras, Computers

Free Photoshop Express Gets Updated, Adds Slideshows



Adobe has launched a new version of its free, online version of Photoshop, which is called Express. When we reviewed it earlier, we were impressed with the app's ease of use and speed, considering the program runs within a Web page. Also, the two-gigabytes (GB) of storage and integration with Picasa and Facebook was handy.

This new revision adds the ability to interact directly with photo-sharing community Flickr, letting you pull photos from your account into Express, tweak them a bit, and then export them back over in a jiffy. Also, the new version enables the creation of animated slide shows such as the one pictured above, which you can then embed anywhere you like. And, finally, you can now easily save a copy of any photo you edit, making it easier to get the original back should you mess with it a little too much -- a feature that was curiously missing from the first version.

Here's the beauty part: Since it's all online, there's no patch or software update to download or install. Just log in and you automatically have the latest version. And, while the enhancements aren't exactly mind-blowing, you can't argue with the price -- it's free! [Source: USA Today]

Computers, Celebrities

How to Deface Web Sites Without Getting In Trouble


We're sure many of you have dreamed of becoming accomplished graffiti artists. However, the sad truth is that you're a little scared about the whole law-breaking thing and can probably barely draw a stick figure.

But emo-hip hop crew Atmosphere, as part of a promotion for its new album -- of course -- are letting average-Joes deface property on the Internet. The Web-based (no download necessary) tool gives you virtual markers, spray cans, and stencils to help you create your masterpiece.

Sure, the Tag the Web tool won't suddenly make you as cool as Banksy, but it's fun to use, and once you're done you can share your creation with others on the Internet. Don't miss the the 'Tag the Web gallery,' where you'll find some truly impressive renditions of Web pages augmented with virtual spray-paint and stencils. [Source: Paint That Sh*t Gold, Via: URLesque]

Cameras, Computers

Hands-On With Adobe's New Free, Web-Based Photoshop Express



Today, Adobe launched a beta version of Photoshop Express. Aimed at anyone who wants to do quick edits of pictures, this new flash-based version of Photoshop is totally free and runs right in your Web browser -- perfect for anyone who doesn't want to clog up their computer with a full program installation or drop hundreds of dollars on the regular version of Photoshop. The service also allows you to manage and share photo galleries with friends and family with at very own yourname.photoshop.com.

Photoshop Express gives you 2 gigabytes of online storage, and allows you to connect, edit and share your photos directly with Picasa, Photobucket and Facebook. We gave it a quick spin today and are impressed with the program's slick, clean, and easy-to-use interface, but this is definitely not a Photoshop replacement. While you can clean up your pictures and easily share them with friends, you won't be able to "photoshop" images like this.

That said, Express lets you make a range of basic photo edits -- red-eye correction, exposure changes, cropping and more -- that will be more than enough for most non-professional photographers. Also, we were impressed with the app's speed, especially considering the Web-based nature of the site. Ready to try it out? Sign up here.

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CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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