Saturday, September 26, 2009

Windows 8 Concept Video: Copenhagen

A user on vimeo released a concept for Windows 8, called Concept Copenhagen.
Although the creator is not affiliated with Microsoft, this concept looks very very promising. I really wish that Microsoft hires that person, because he definitely knows a lot about user behaviour and design.

The copenhagen concept is basically all about usability, portable objects, auto-expandable menus and 3D desktops. The 3D desktop could be compared withbumptop .

Bumptop technology:
Windows 8 Concept

It’s pretty difficult to describe it in words, you got to see this:

Copenhagen User Experience from Copenhagen Concept on Vimeo.

Windows 8 Themes

Windows 8 Theme for Windows XP Pro

One theme inspired by Windows 8 has been created by Studio48. You can find the theme preview on YouTube:




3 Windows 8 Themes for Windows Vista:

Windows 8 Pro

Another great Windows 8 theme has been created by mufflerexoz on DeviantArt. He has created a theme for Vista. This one really looks cool, Windows 8 could really look like that one. The theme will change your shell, logon screens,wallpapers,tray icons and some other things. Overall it’s a pretty big theme, big kudos to the theme creator!

Windows 8 Theme for Vista

You can download the Windows 8 theme for Vista here:
Download Windows 8 Professional Theme

Windows 8 7282 RC Theme

Muffler also created some more themes inspired by Windows 8 (for Windows Vista SP1 x86):

Windows 8 Theme
Download Windows 8 Ultimate Theme

Windows 8 Superbar Theme

The Superbar works only for the bottom taskbar. The taskbar also has twice the size and you can preview any windows.

Windows 8 Theme Superbar Vista
Download Windows 8 Superbar Theme

RSS fans rejoice: FeedDemon 3 is out

FeedDemon 3 is ready for public use, after months spent in a beta version that saw a confusing migration from proprietary online syncing to Google Reader.

That rough patch sorted, FeedDemon remains one of the best desktop RSS and Atom feed catchers. This version contains a lengthy list of changes, including greatly enhanced Twitter connectivity, a tweaked interface that's a bit easier to use, and better tagging and sharing.

My Twitter stream in FeedDemon 3.

(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

FeedDemon has dumped its proprietary synchronization site, Newsgator.com, in favor of syncing with Google Reader. New users won't notice, but older users are likely to lose many unread feeds, since Google can't import feeds with more than 10 unread items. Once synced with Google Reader, unread feeds can again include more than 10 items.

There's also a new, persistent ad placed in the lower-left corner of the interface, and FeedDemon's performance could be a lot better--RAM usage was hefty, and 3GB of RAM didn't prevent occasional program hang-ups.

Twitter feed reading has been baked in because FeedDemon supports authenticated feeds. Hyperlinking and short-URL expansion are automatic, and if you use Twitter as a live news stream, FeedDemon's Twitter link sharing should appeal to you. To set that up, you need to subscribe in FeedDemon to your Twitter feed here.

Tagging, tag clouds, and item sharing get a massive overhaul in FeedDemon 3, with all three features added to the item view and a tag cloud added to the Subscriptions Home view. The interface will look similar to FeedDemon 2.8, but there are many little tweaks to improve its usability.

Flags have been renamed Stars for Google Reader consistency, for example, while the Home page features videos, pictures, and content from your feeds. One smart improvement over Google Reader is that you can view your starred feeds in the folders they came from, instead of in a single "starred items" folder.

We'd like to see performance addressed in future versions, but overall, FeedDemon remains a favorite option for desktop feed management. Let us know your thoughts on the new FeedDemon in the comments below.

Disable the log-on screen in Windows XP and Vista

My previous post described how to add information to and otherwise customize Windows' Welcome screen. But maybe you just want to get your PC going without having to log into an account. You can bypass Windows' log-on screen by changing settings in the Windows Registry, as described in a tutorial on the Computer Performance site, but I find it much simpler to use a free Windows-tweaking utility to do the same thing.

The program I used to customize the Windows Welcome screen—TweakNow PowerPack 2009—is the same tool I used to disable the log-on screen on my Vista laptop. Click Windows Secret in the utility's left pane and choose User Accounts. Click "Enable auto log-on," select the account you want to log into automatically, enter the account's password and domain name (if necessary), and click Save. The next time you start the PC, Windows will start and open that account automatically.

TweakNow PowerPack 2009 User Accounts dialog

Set Windows to start logged into a specific account—without having to enter a password—via this setting in TweakNow PowerPack 2009.

(Credit: TweakNow)

TweakNow PowerPack 2009 works with XP, Vista, and Windows 7, but I tested it only with Vista. I didn't need to download the program to my XP test machine because that system already has Tweak UI, Microsoft's free XP-reconfiguration utility that lacks a Vista version.

To set XP to start a specific account without requiring a log-on, open Tweak UI and click Logon > Autologon in the left pane, check "Log on automatically at system startup" in the right window, enter the account's user name and domain (if necessary), and click the Set Password button.

Tweak UI Autologon dialog box

The free Tweak UI utility makes it easy to start Windows without having to log into an account.

(Credit: Microsoft)

In the Set Autologon Password dialog box, enter the account's password in each of the two text boxes and click OK.

Tweak UI Set Autologon Password dialog box

Add the account's password twice and click OK to start Windows without having to log in.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Why bypassing the Windows log-on is dangerous
Setting Windows to open an administrator account automatically is risky, period. Even starting a standard account without requiring a password is dangerous, though less so. There are many very good reasons why Windows accounts are password-protected, and far fewer good reasons for doing without passwords.

That's why I recommend against allowing automatic log-ons in general. But far be it from me to tell you how to use your PC, so if you want to save a few seconds each time you start your system—and you're not worried about somebody doing serious mischief after gaining easy access to your account—it's okay by me.