Koolwire converts files by e-mail

If you’re away from your home computer and need to open a file on a foreign computer that doesn’t have the program installed, there are a few options. For one, Gmail converts several file types so they can be viewed right in the browser, including PDF, PowerPoint, and Microsoft Office documents. However, it’s not nearly as helpful for music files, as its only able to make a few listenable. Enter Koolwire, a simple no-frills service that converts several popular file formats under 10MB through e-mail.

Besides taking any Word, PowerPoint, or Excel document and turning it into a PDF, it’ll also convert any PDF file to a Word document. Likewise, WAV files will be converted to MP3s and visa versa.

Here are the addresses for the different conversions. Add them to an e-mail address book to keep them handy, or create a group in Gmail (kind of counterintuitive since Gmail converts some files):

From word, ppt, excel to PDF: pdf@koolwire.com
From PDF to Word: doc@koolwire.com
From WAV to MP3: mp3@koolwire.com
From MP3 to WAV: wav@koolwire.com

The process takes a few minutes to convert the e-mailed files. Recipients will get the file attached to an e-mail message, along with some sponsored links in the message body that keeps the service afloat.

While Koolwire is handy, a far more powerful solution is Zamzar. It will take nearly every file thrown at it (up to 100MB), and churn it out into nearly 70 different formats for pictures, music, video, and Office files.

More: continued here

If you’re new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting Web 2.0 Portals!

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Firefox Mobile could be invisible

Firefox Mobile prototype 2-7-08

A few days ago, two prototypes of Firefox Mobile, the latest bun in Mozilla’s oven, made it onto the Mozilla wiki. Today Firefox Mobile product manager Doug Turner released two more designs.

Turner’s team didn’t scrap the toolbar entirely, but based on user feedback, they did make it much less intrusive. Why look at the buttons when users really want the Web, they reasoned. Letting the toolbars dissolve away when they’re at rest is one method for making the most of the screen. Tapping a translucent icon (shown solid here) could bring the command buttons back.

Related story:
Will Opera perform for free?

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

FixMyMovie gets an overhaul, premium service forthcoming

Having recently compared a small handful of video hosting services, it’s fun to come back to FixMyMovie, a service I checked out back in September. Since launching at DEMOfall, FixMyMovie has been making tweaks and improvements. With a 15MB file size limit, it’s a far cry from some of the heavy duty video file hosting services that let you upload files of nearly half a gigabyte. However, FixMyMovie holds true to its roots of attempting to make crappy camera phone videos look watchable on larger screens.

Earlier this week I got to chat with CEO Sean Varah about the site’s new features, which soft launched Monday morning. The most interesting one? Cross pollination to other video sites, starting with YouTube. Users who have uploaded their video either on the Web, or from their phones (using MMS and now e-mail), can push it directly to YouTube without having to do any file jugging on their end. In the months ahead, Varah and company intend to add other video hosting services to the list, including Facebook, MySpace, and Google’s Blogger. They also plan to give users the option to automate the entire process for each time they upload.

Take video and push it to other services once it's been enhanced. First on the list is YouTube, with others to come.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Speaking of uploads, adding videos to the service has been significantly improved. Uploaded videos are available for viewing right away, including those sent in by e-mail. A new feature that manages to work given the small video limits. The enhanced version then goes up in its place, as soon as it’s done. Previously users were only given a small bit of the unenhanced video and had to “order” the full version. Varah says tweaking that bit taxes the servers more, but takes seven steps out of the equation for users who want to put their videos on the service. He also notes the video you see playing in the Flash player is not the true quality of the enhancements, and to really see it in full effect, users should download the H.264 Quicktime version, which is sized to play on iPods and iPhones.

The premium version of FixMyMovie is scheduled to be released in about two months. Premium users will be able to do a little more with their videos, including grabbing super high quality JPEG files from a few seconds of a high-resolution video clip. Varah notes that MotionDSP (parent company of FixMyMovie) has been doing this for a few folks, and it’s becoming very popular for filmmakers when they want to blow up a still from an action shot. Varah wouldn’t say anything about size limit increases for premium members, or give a price, but Varah wanted to stress that the service isn’t a “destination site” like YouTube, and that if enough users are running up against the limit they might increase it later on.

Related:MotionDSP promises better photos and video.

Click the picture to see the full-quality screen capture.

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Interactive map of Springfield (the Simpsons one)

Excccccellent.

(Credit: CNET Networks / Jerry Lerma and Terry Hogan)

Here’s an oldie but a goodie if you’re a Simpsons fan. It’s an interactive map of Springfield, the fictional home of The Simpsons that has been painstakingly recreated based on various appearances throughout the show’s 19 seasons.

The map was drawn using locations that were featured on the show, as long as they appeared more than once. Some of the spacing was determined using recent aerial shots (there’s a listing here).

The map was started in 2001 by Jerry Lema and Terry Hogan. The current version is about four years old (so there are no marks from the dome featured in the recent film). In addition to a quadrant view, designer Adrian Noterdaem has put together a slick Flash-based version that lets you zoom in and out. There’s also a PDF and printed version of the map residing in Harvard’s map collection.

I’m still waiting for the Google Earth layer.

Related:‘The Simpsons’ avatar creator: A marketing site done right.

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Box.net adds group collaboration to personal Web storage

Box.net added a really cool, and useful collaboration feature to its online storage service yesterday. Any user can right click a folder and choose a new collaboration option that lets them invite anyone to gain access to those files, either as an editor or viewer. Box.net has always had the option of linking to the file, or sharing a grouping of files with everyone, or a just a small group of people via its premium service and snazzy widgets; however, this new addition is more advanced.

Shared folders on Box.net show up in a Box.net file space.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Once a user becomes a collaborator, the shared folder will show up in their Box.net storage area. To keep user sanity, the service now includes versioning. This lets users know when the file was last edited, and by which user. If a file that been edited, users will see right away how many times it has been changed. They can go back and either download the old version, or revert it over its current state. This is going to be hugely helpful with image files for which there have been editing tools using Picnik and Snipshot since the launch of OpenBox, Box.net’s API platform back in November.

There are few small caveats to the service. One being that collaborators need to have a box account, and the other that free members can only have up to three shared folders at a time, and don’t get access to the versioning records like premium users do. I don’t think either is a deal breaker (Google approaches collaboration with Docs and Spreadsheets in the same manner).

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

House approves MPAA-backed college antipiracy rules

The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday overwhelmingly approved a higher-education funding bill that includes controversial new antipiracy obligations for universities.

The 354-58 vote to approve the College Opportunity and Affordability Act leaves intact an entertainment industry-backed provision, which makes up just a tiny part of a bill that has ballooned to more than 800 pages.

It says higher-education institutions participating in federal financial aid programs “shall” devise plans for “alternative” offerings to unlawful downloading–such as subscription-based services–or “technology-based deterrents to prevent such illegal activity.”

Leading university groups, such as the Association of American Universities and Educause, and fair-use advocates oppose those requirements, arguing they are overly burdensome, potentially expensive, and, at least by their interpretation, leave the implication that schools risk losing their financial aid for failure to comply.

“We reject the contention that campuses play a disproportionate role in the file-sharing problem,” Steve Worona, Educause’s director of policy and networking programs, said in a statement. “The requirements of the legislation will increase tuition costs and provide no value.”

The bill’s sponsors, for their part, insist that it’s a “myth” that schools will lose financial aid funding if they fail to come up with the requisite plans. But university groups still say that’s not the way they read the bill language, arguing that they find it unfathomable that such requirements would carry no penalty.

Major copyright holders, including the Motion Picture Association of America and the American Federation of Musicians, have applauded the provision.

“Piracy hurts ordinary, working musicians, but it also will hurt our nation’s culture and its music fans if enough talented and hard working musicians cannot survive in the business,” AFM President Thomas Lee said in a recent letter to the committee. “Hopefully, H.R. 4137 will become law and will help educate young Americans about the value and importance of copyright to the artists whose work they love.”

It’s possible that the section opposed by universities could be stripped out before the bill becomes law. The Senate passed a different higher-education funding bill last year, so the two sides will have to reconcile their differences before sending a final measure to the White House for the president’s signature.

The university lobby successfully brought down a more burdensome antipiracy provision in the Senate counterpart bill last year. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid ultimately yanked a proposal that would have required colleges and universities–in exchange for federal funding–to use technology to “prevent the illegal downloading or peer-to-peer distribution of intellectual property.”

University officials don’t object to all antipiracy obligations that Congress has proposed. They support a section, which shows up in both the House and Senate versions, that requires colleges merely to advise their students not to commit copyright infringement and to “report to their students annually on their policies and practices with respect to copyright infringement on campus networks.”

And not all universities oppose the House bill in its current form. In a letter to the House Education and Labor Committee provided to CNET News.com, University of California Assistant Vice President A. Scott Sudduth said he believes the peer-to-peer file-sharing requirements strike “a reasonable balance between institutions’ ability to educate and inform students of their responsibilities regarding copyright law, and institutions’ inability to monitor content or control the ever-changing technologies associated with peer-to-peer file sharing.”

Executives at Educause, which represents college network managers, argue that the additional obligations are “inappropriate” because their research shows that universities don’t actually house a disproportionate part of the piracy problem. Even the MPAA has admitted recently that it had significantly overstated the damage caused by piracy at the nation’s universities.

Update at 4:30 p.m. PST: “Now that the data produced by the MPAA, the lead advocate for this provision, shows that illegal file-sharing by students using university servers is a very small partof the larger file-sharing issue, this provision is the moral equivalentof using a bazooka to kill a fly,” said Barry Toiv, a spokesman for the Association of American Universities.

In an attempt to respond to universities’ concerns, Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) intended to propose an amendment (PDF) to the House bill that would have said no higher-education institution “shall be denied or given reduced federal funding for student loan or other financial aid programs” because of failure to devise an antipiracy plan.”

But Cohen ultimately withdrew that amendment because, according to his press secretary, he was dealing with tornado aftermath in his home district and could not be present during a key procedural vote. His press secretary said Thursday that she wasn’t sure whether Cohen would attempt to offer the amendment when the House and Senate meet to reconcile differences in their competing bills. Educause, for the record, has said that amendment wouldn’t do anything to change its concerns even if adopted.

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

The Convergence of Web 2.0 Mashups and SOA

Enterprise mashups - the convergence of Web 2.0 mashups and service-oriented architecture (SOA) - can create a world of opportunities for enterprises to come up with internal and customer-facing self-service, composite and ’situational’ applications. These applications can be created just-in-time by empowered enterprise business users and by simply combining SOA-enabled information sources and services or SOBAs (service-oriented business application) on the intranet and Internet.

More: continued here

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...