Archive for the 'Reviews' Category

Test Office 2007 Beta 2 Online

July 1, 2006

This looks interesting: test Office 2007 Beta 2 right from your browser. No CDs, no installation. Just go to the Office 2007 Test Drive page and follow the steps. (Be forewarned that the test drive doesn’t work with Firefox, and I had some trouble getting it to work with Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2 Preview.)

I did some testing and was surprised to discover that the test drive actually consisted of remotely controlling a real Office 2007 Beta 2 installation on a Windows XP computer (or virtual machine, maybe). The system clock time suggested that the test drive was hosted somewhere in Europe.

The test drive seemed very, very slow compared to what I’m used to, and it was especially annoying to see all of Office 2007’s fancy eye candy in slow-mo, but I’m guessing that the performance (or should I say lack thereof) is normal for a remotely-controlled computer.

One Office 2007 Beta 2 feature that I found particularly interesting is the ability to post blog posts directly from Microsoft Word. Microsoft Word 2007 includes integration with blogging services such as Blogger, MSN Spaces, and yes, it looks like it’ll be able to integrate with WordPress.

I was about to write a post from within the test drive installation, but I changed my mind when it asked me for my WordPress username and password. I wasn’t too enthusiastic about handing over my password to a third party that is running a test system (with who knows what kind of security) for Microsoft.

But still, I think this Office 2007 test drive is a very cool concept. I really like the idea of being able to tinker with software without actually purchasing, downloading, and/or installing it.

But then again, OpenOffice.org is making the whole Office test drive concept look foolish with its cleverly coinciding campaign called Take the Test Drive – Keep the Car. Clever. :-)

Microsoft Office & Microsoft Word & News & Reviews No Comments

FeedBurner Email: It’s Excellent

May 8, 2006

If you have a FeedBurner feed, you’ve got to check this out: FeedBurner has released a feed-to-email subscription service.

For bloggers and podcasters, a feed-to-email subscription service means you can expand your “push-delivery audience” to readers and listeners who aren’t familiar with RSS feeds.

For readers and listeners, an email subscription service such as FeedBurner Email means that you can sign up to receive emails every day that let you know about new blog posts or podcast episodes. (Of course, if there’s nothing new for a given day, you won’t get an email.) For many people, email subscription services remove the need to remember to visit a blog or podcast site for updates.

My take on FeedBurner Email? In short: it’s awesome.

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Email & Feedburner & Feeds & News & Reviews 2 Comments

FeedFlare? No Thank You.

January 28, 2006

FeedBurner recently released FeedFlare Phase 2. FeedFlares are links that allow blog readers to, in short, do stuff with blog posts, such as email the post to others or find Technorati links for that post. Phase 1 allowed FeedFlare links on XML feeds, and now Phase 2 allows FeedFlare links on blog posts themselves.

At first I put the FeedFlares at the bottom of my post and got all excited. “Wow, that’s awesome.” Then I wanted to tinker with it. I didn’t like those bullet points between the links and wanted to replace them with pipes, ala WordPress style.

However, the FeedFlare code that I’m supposed to put in my blog template is JavaScript, so I can’t customize the HTML directly. Hmm… that means “some CSS modification required.” Well, that’s okey-dokey with me, but this looks like CSS3 modification required, which I am quite certain will not work with Internet Explorer. Though Mozilla Firefox is superior in my opinion, Internet Explorer is what most people use. In addition, the FeedFlares are wrapped around a <p> tag, which will not be ideal for some cases in which I want to use the FeedFlares.

I finally got fed up with FeedFlare and made my own links. :-) Things like “email this post” or “add to del.icio.us” are easy to do. Check my links out at the bottom of this post (assuming you’re reading this post directly at the site). And I recommend you also avoid FeedFlare unless you’re happy with how it looks, you’re willing to use some CSS3, or if HTML to you stands for “Hard To Me, it Looks.”

Blogging & Reviews & Web Development 3 Comments

WinFS Beta 1

January 4, 2006

SuperSite for Windows has an interesting review of WinFS Beta 1, which was given a surprise release in August 2005. Although the fact that it was a “surprise release” seemed to have resulted in not many people knowing about it.

The article says that a WinFS Community Technical Preview is due on February 15, 2006 — coming right up.

Reviews & Windows No Comments

The Legend of Microsoft Hover

December 29, 2005

Probably few of you know that Windows 95 came with an entertaining 3D hovercar “capture-the-flag” game. It was called, appropriately, “Hover!” In the game you drive your hovercraft around (named, not surprisingly, the “Hover 950″) and try to capture the AI’s flags while guarding your own flags from the AI.

Hover was not installed with Windows 95 by default, but rather was buried on the Windows 95 CD-ROM. Much like Microsoft’s Backup program is buried in the Windows XP Home Edition CD-ROM.

Thankfully, at the time when our family had our Windows 95 computer, I had enough computer knowledge to take the program off of the CD-ROM and save it. I don’t even remember how, when, or why; so long ago it was (5+ years ago). I’m just glad I did, considering our Windows 95 CD has long since been lost.

Hover has been passed down our lineage of computers and I still have a playable copy today (Figure). It appears I’m really lucky to have a copy; I did a Google search and it looks like there are a lot of people that want one. (No, I’m not going to give a copy to anyone that wants one. The game was included with Windows 95, so I don’t think that it would be legal for me to distribute a game that was included with a commercial operating system. If you own a Windows 95 CD, do a search for “hover.exe” to find it. If you don’t, you can buy a CD on eBay for under $10; make sure it’s not an upgrade CD.)

I find it very amazing that this game works on both Windows 95 and XP, and probably all operating systems in between. So that means I can still play it! :-D

Anyway, enough with the fond memories. Let’s play the game!

When I first start the game, it gives me a nice warning — complete with a Windows XP exclamation icon — that my 16-million-color display just won’t cut it. I need 256 colors (Figure). Yawn. Couldn’t those Microsoft people just have used the >= operator instead of == when they were programming? :-P

The splash screen, shown at the top of the post, looks pretty cool, although the image quality isn’t the best (Figure).

After the splash screen is finished splashing — that is, after it goes away — the Quick Help dialog appears (Figure). After that, I’m ready to start (Figure).

Naturally, I start out at level 1, with mountains rising above a maze that looks as if it were set in the Medieval period (Figure). Although the mountains look quite pretty, to tell you the truth I didn’t even notice the mountains until I started taking screenshots for this post.

Level 1 is complete with stairs (Figure) and platforms (Figure). There are special squares that you can run over (Figure), some of them good and some of them bad. There are also floating bubbles (don’t know what else to call them) (Figure), that when run into, can do one of several different things: temporarily speed up or slow down your hovercraft, temporarily remove any effects that special squares have on you, or give you a special tool: a wall (a temporarily-existing wall that can be used to block enemies), a spring (used for bouncing, of course), or a cloak (makes your hovercraft temporarily invisible).

Soon I spot one of my automatically-positioned red flags (Figure), but an enemy hovercraft (Figure) hones in and swoops it away. Darn.

I moved on to level 2. Though I didn’t take the time to finish level 1. I used Hover’s “Start At” dialog box (Figure) to jump ahead.

Level 2 is set in a busy-city setting (Figure). After that comes level 3, set in an enclosed aquatic-themed environment (Figure).

When you get to level 4, it’s the same medieval-themed maze from level 1 (Figure). And the levels keep cycling through the environments, unless you set the “maze type” setting to “random” instead of “sequential” in the “Customize Game” dialog box (Figure).

I checked the default high scores list (Figure) to see if there were any special names in the list. Nope, no “Bill Gates” entry in sight.

However, I found something else that was very interesting and rather amusing. The “About Hover!” dialog, accessed by clicking “About Hover!” on the Help menu, says that Hover is part of Windows XP! (Figure) Hover obviously utilizes the same “About” dialogs that other Windows utilities did (in 95) and still do (in XP).

Still on the topic of “About Hover,” I also took a screenshot of the “Version” tab in the Properties dialog for the hover.exe file (Figure) .

The Help menu (Figure) gives a slew of options. However, the Help Topics dialog doesn’t have a lot of documentation, though it has a fair amount (Figure). And the “How to Use Help” (read: “Help on Using Help”), which I would assume would help me to use the help system, opens help documentation in the help system! (Figure) Not very helpful. No sir.

Hover is a cool game, with graphics that were certainly exceptional for its time, but I’ve been thinking: Why did Microsoft hide Hover on the Windows 95 disk? And why did Microsoft not include Hover in any future Windows versions?

Hmm… the unsolved mysteries in the Legend of Microsoft Hover.

History & Microsoft & Reviews & Windows 11 Comments

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

December 27, 2005

I have four words to say: “That movie is awesome!” Here are some things I really like about the movie The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe:

  • Follows the book very closely.
  • The beavers in the movie add a great sense of humor to the story.
  • Really good music.
  • Good acting especially by the actor playing Lucy and by the actor playing Jadis (the White Witch).
  • Beautiful Narnian environment.
  • Nice visual touches here and there that really add to the story.
  • Great visual effects; computer-generated characters are quite realistic.

After seeing the movie, I’ve decided that I would really like to read the Chronicles of Narnia books again. I also left feeling excited to see the next movie, Prince Caspian.

I think that if there are any noteworthy flaws in the movie, it would be flaws of omission; that is, things that could have been done to make the movie better.

But despite that, I think this movie is excellent! It’s one of the best movies I’ve seen. I’d probably give this movie 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Rating: 4.5 Stars 4.5 Stars

Movies & Reviews 2 Comments

Vista December 2005 CTP Review

December 24, 2005

SuperSite for Windows has posted a four-part review on the lastest Windows Vista preview release: December 2005 CTP, also known as Build 5270. The site has given the release a rating of 5 stars, compared to a 4 star rating given to both Windows XP and Mac OS X 10.4.

There are going to be a lot of cool new things in Vista: a calendar application, a digital photo management application, new Smart Fetch technology that lets you expand your computer’s RAM via USB, and lots more.

Here are the links to the different parts of the review:
Part 1: Setup and User Interface
Part 2: Bundled Applications
Part 3: New Features
Part 4: Wrapping Up

Reviews & Windows Vista No Comments

Windows Vista vs. Mac OS X

December 20, 2005

The SuperSite for Windows has some interesting articles that compare Windows Vista Beta 1 with Mac OS X “Tiger.” The site has part 1 and part 2 of the review so far. I’m looking forward to the yet-unpublished part 3, where the author will “declare a winner, of sorts, at least until we have a more feature-complete version of Windows Vista to evaluate.”

Mac OS X & Reviews & Windows Vista No Comments

First Impressions: Firefox 1.5 vs. 1.0.7

December 14, 2005

After three release candidates, Firefox 1.5 is finally released! I downloaded Firefox 1.5 and, even though I was expecting it, I was surprised to see that at first glance it looked identical to Firefox 1.0. Except for one thing I noticed right away on which I could not seem to put my finger. I finally figured out that the menu and toolbar styles were a tad different. Slight, but noticeable.

Menus and toolbars in Firefox 1.5:

And in Firefox 1.0.7:

In addition, after some browsing I realized that the Live Bookmarks icon has moved. Firefox 1.0.7 featured it in the status bar:

… While Firefox 1.5 puts it in the Location Bar (i.e. the address bar):

On a different note, several of my extensions that did work in Firefox 1.0.7 didn’t work with Firefox 1.5, but thankfully none of the incompatible extensions were used by myself very often anyway. One of them that didn’t work was a tab-reorganization extension, obviously due to the fact that tab-reorganization is now native to Firefox in version 1.5.

I’ve also noticed on a site that I made that Firefox now displays it slightly better than version 1.0.7 did. Of course, probably only I would notice this detail, since I made the site. But this is a visible sign to me that the rendering engine has undergone improvement.

If I find anything else worth noting, I’ll let you know. You can download Firefox 1.5 here.

Firefox & Reviews No Comments

Windows Vista Build 5219

September 20, 2005

SuperSite for Windows recently published a review of the latest Windows Vista beta release: build 5219. And some of the new features made me say, “Oh, sweet.” To list all of the features and improvements would mean a humongous blog post, but one that’s really worth mentioning is the ability to increase your system’s available RAM by simply inserting a memory stick. That’s right: stick in a 1GB keychain memory stick and you get another gig of RAM and an instant speed boost; an “external RAM upgrade.” Sweet.

News & Reviews & Windows Vista 1 Comment

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