Monday, June 14, 2010

Free up PC disk space with Disk Space Fan


Disk Space Fan is a freeware and it is a nice disk space analysis tool for Windows. It helps you to free up disk space by quickly finding and deleting big, useless files. It displays disk space usage with a nice chart. You can navigate the folders easily with the chart. It is also intergrated with Windows Explorer to open, delete and browse files or folders.

Once download and install the utility, users will be brought to a simple interface. On high level, it will display the full capacity, usage as well as the free capacity of the particular drive. In order to figure out the details, just select the desired directory such as C:\ or specific folder by browsing directly followed with a single click on ‘Scan’ button to activate the scanning.

Features:-

Scans directories and drives to find out the useless and larger files.
Diagram of a flower show in the form of free disk space
Browse/open/delete files on ringschart
Preview a picture on ringschart
Support for Unicode
Save scan history
Network path support
Full compatibility with 32 and 64 bit Windows

DOWNLOAD HERE

Project Natal Officially Renamed “Kinect”


Microsoft’s upcoming motion control peripheral, once known as Project Natal, is now to be officially known as “Kinect”. An advertisement for an unannounced redesigned Xbox 360 has appeared online, according to reports. The ad also acknowledges that the final name of Project Natal will be Kinect. The ad also says that the new Xbox 360 “Slim” is compatible with “Kinect”. This is now confirmed to be Project Natal according to USA Today. They also confirm five games for the Kinect and a mention of more upcoming.The USA Today also mentions a few titles, including Kinectimals, Joyride, Kinect Sports, Kinect Adventures, Dance Central, and properties based on Star Wars and Disney characters.

Apple unveils iPhone 4 with clearer screen

Microsoft Office Web vs Microsoft Office


Till recently, the only way you could legally use Microsoft Office applications was to buy the software and install it on your desktop or laptop. But that's changing now, with the release of the new Office Web Aps — a free, online version of the Microsoft flagship titles. Office Web, as it is called, includes online editions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint. So how does one access the Office Web ? If you have a Windows Live or Hotmail account, you will notice a link to "Office" at the top of the screen after you log in. Otherwise, sign up for an account. The files will live in a Web-based "SkyDrive" tied to the account. Here's how Office Web differ from the offline version of Microsoft Office.


Word





The most fully featured of the apps. You can type, check spelling, set headlines, create tables and insert pictures.

You can't tweak the margins, create columns, or access footnotes or comments, though you can view all these features in a "Reading View" if they've been added in the desktop programme.

Note that unlike the other Web Apps and Google Docs, Word Web App does not automatically save your document as you work, you have to hit the Save button.

Google Docs' word processor is more fully featured, but fancy stuff, including footnotes, doesn't work well when imported into Word.


Excel







You can enter data and formulas in spreadsheets and have them calculated correctly.

You can't adjust the layout of the sheet or create pie charts or other graphics. Oddly, you can't move cells or columns around: You have to cut them out, make space for them somewhere else, and then paste them.

You can't open some spreadsheets that have "comments, shapes or other objects."

PowerPoint





You can edit text and add slides, but you can't adjust graphic elements.

If you have an arrow pointing the wrong way, you can delete it, but you can't make it point the right way. You can create a presentation with pre-formatted boxes and diagrams, but your options are very limited.

The Web App is mostly good for minor edits or last-minute changes.

OneNote




Microsoft's sleeper Office app, designed to help you collect information and notes in one, easily searchable place.

The Web App lets you paste pictures into your notes, but the more useful features of the desktop program, like inserting PDFs and clippings from Web pages, are missing.

The app is supposed to be able to send notes to the desktop program and vice versa, but this didn't work — I got error messages instead.

A Microsoft representative said this may be a symptom of the flood of users trying the Apps this week.

Browser compatibility


If your computer is on the old side, or a low-powered one like a netbook, you'll want to avoid using the Web Apps with Microsoft's own Internet Explorer.

In my test on a computer that's seen four or five summers already, typing in the Word Web App using Internet Explorer 8 was painful.

The text took too long to appear, and the sentence wavered up and down as if I were hammering on a mechanical typewriter. The app simply overloaded the PC's processor, and it was unable to keep pace with the typing.

I didn't have the same problem when using Internet Explorer on a new, faster laptop, nor was it a problem when I used the Firefox browser on the old PC.

Google Inc's Chrome browser did an even better job of keeping the load on the processor light, though an add-on program that makes it easy to send Web documents to the desktop version of the Office program does not work in Chrome.


Microsoft's newest Office goes on sale Tuesday


The next version of Microsoft Corp.'s Office software will be available to consumers and small businesses starting Tuesday.

Office Home and Student 2010, the most basic bundle of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote, will cost $150. The programs can be installed on as many as three home computers.

A $280 version also includes the Outlook e-mail program. A $500 bundle adds Publisher, a desktop publishing program, and Access, a database.

Those prices are for traditional packaged software. People can also buy licenses, called product key cards, to download the same sets of programs for $120, $200 and $350.

For the first time, Microsoft is also launching free Web-based versions of the four core Office programs. They will have fewer features than the desktop software.

Microsoft makes big push for new game audience

To appeal to families ready to graduate from the Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Corp. wants to build on the success of the Wii's motion-capture wand — by getting rid of the wand entirely.

On Monday, Microsoft detailed its new Kinect game technology, coming this fall for the Xbox 360 game console. Once known as Project Natal, the Kinect system recognizers users' gestures and voices, so you can control on-screen avatars in racing, action and sports games just by moving your body. Microsoft showed off a "Star Wars" game, coming in 2011, that will use Kinect to let players swing virtual lightsabers from their living rooms.

Kinect's voice feature also means you can say "pause" or "play" when watching a movie on the Xbox instead of reaching for the remote. And it has a video chat function that can connect people from different sides of the country, as Microsoft demonstrated Monday at the E3 Expo in Los Angeles, a video game conference with 45,000 industry insiders.

Kinect will launch Nov. 4 in North America, Microsoft said. Prices were not disclosed, and it's not clear whether Kinect will come with new Xboxes or only be sold separately. The technology works with existing systems, including a new version of the Xbox console that goes on sale next week. It's smaller, sleeker and comes with built-in Wi-Fi and a 250 gigabyte hard drive. The new Xbox will cost $299, which previously got you a hard drive with half the capacity.

Until now the Xbox has been mainly known as the device to play hard-core shooter games such as "Call of Duty" and "Halo." Microsoft ranks second in console sales to Nintendo, just ahead of PlayStation maker Sony Corp.

Since the original Xbox launched in 2001, the video game system has been part of three money-losing divisions. Microsoft doesn't break out results from the Xbox, but in total, the divisions that housed the game unit reported operating losses of about $7.45 billion from fiscal 2002 through 2007. The past two years, the group that now includes Xbox, Zune media players, Windows phone software and the touch-screen Surface table computer finally was profitable, with operating earnings of $497 million in fiscal 2008 and $169 million in fiscal 2009. The most recent figure was still less than 1 percent of the company's total operating income.

Though it is working to broaden its reach, Microsoft is still trying to nurture its loyal gamer fans, who reliably buy sequels to blockbusters like "Halo" and "Gears of War." To that end, the company announced an exclusive deal Monday with Activision Blizzard Inc., the maker of the "Call of Duty" games, that will bring downloadable content known as "map packs" to the Xbox first (and then the PlayStation 3) through 2012. Such extra content is an increasingly important business for video game makers because they can extend the life of games.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

2010 FIFA World Cup Windows 7 theme


Football fans that are running Windows 7 can grab a 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa theme from the Windows Personalization Gallery to help them tailor their desktops to the sporting event of the year. Bring the excitement of the World Cup to your desktop with this Windows 7 theme, featuring stunning graphics from the Electronic Arts 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa game.

DOWNLOAD HERE