Chrome users, looking for that great band? |
- Chrome users, looking for that great band?
- Karaobird brings karaoke hijinks to YouTube
- Chrome extension forces secure Google searches
- Thousands of Evernote users affected by data loss
Chrome users, looking for that great band? Posted: 09 Aug 2010 05:45 PM PDT Originally a Firefox add-on, FindThatBand has gone Chrome. Instead of hopelessly searching for music within the endless black hole which is the Web, Google Chrome users can now find their favorite bands by highlighting text. To find the band, simply highlight its name and hit CTRL twice. A pop-up will instantly appear with a list of 11 music resource sites. This list consists of MySpace, Last.fm, Pandora, Wikipedia, Hype Machine, Amazon, iTunes, Discogs, allmusic, iLike, and Grooveshark. (Last.fm is a CBS site, as is CNET.) Between all of these sites, it is highly likely that you will find what you are looking for, even if the band is on the more obscure side of the musical spectrum. Clicking on any of these choices will automatically open a new tab with the artist's page on the corresponding Web site. Sites like Grooveshark and Hype Machine play full song playlists at your disposal, whereas Pandora and Last.fm will play radio stations based on your artist. The add-on's functionality is identical to its Firefox counterpart when it comes to searching for bands within the site list. However, the loading time for the extension is slightly faster in Chrome and no right-clicking is necessary. There is also a FindThatBand icon added to the top right-hand side of the address bar. Within this settings menu, you can include or exclude certain Web sites that the extension navigates through. It is also possible to rearrange the order in which the sites show up in the search list. As far as aesthetics go, the Chrome version is slightly foxier. Unlike the Firefox version, where users have to navigate through a short menu of right-click options, one rectangular menu appears instantly after the double CTRL push. With no clutter and no submenus, the simple list of Web sites looks sleeker in Chrome. Visit the extension's Web site for a full list of updates and information on this useful tool. |
Karaobird brings karaoke hijinks to YouTube Posted: 09 Aug 2010 05:32 PM PDT Remember a few weeks ago when YouTube made a big deal about its new music video page that sorts out every single music video that's hosted on the service? You can now put it to far better use with a new Firefox extension called Scrolling Lyrics Player (SLP) that turns each video page into a honest to goodness karaoke player. Once installed, SLP will sit just to the right of any YouTube video and do a search for the lyrics of whatever music video or song recording you're watching. It then syncs that up with the timing of the video, which I might add, is nowhere near to being an exact science. What's nice is that you can adjust the start time of when the lyrics begin, so if you're watching something that does not time up to a song's lyrical timeline, it's as easy as scrolling your mouse wheel up or down to get it in sync. It also does not enable itself on what it perceives as a non-music video, leaving the normal YouTube UI entact. SLP has been built using Karaobird. Songbird users will remember that name from the Songbird add-on which does the same thing when playing music tracks from within Songbird's music player. In my brief time with this add on I ran into quite a few troubles with it recognizing obscure songs, but it did a great job with popular content. While it may not have any reduction technology to get rid of existing vocal tracks, or per word following like you'd get with proper karaoke software, it's great if you want to turn your laptop or media center PC into a makeshift party machine. Originally posted at Web Crawler |
Chrome extension forces secure Google searches Posted: 09 Aug 2010 03:20 PM PDT Google now offers an extension for Chrome that automates the process of adding the secure Google search site as a search engine to the Chrome 6.x branch. Google SSL Web Search is an extension, still in beta, that works with Chrome 6.0.419.0 and later on Windows and Linux computers. (Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET) First released in June 2010, installing the extension opens up a configuration window with a single button that will open Chrome's "add search engine" window. Here, you can set a keyword to speed up your use of Google SSL Web search. There are also instructions on how to set the SSL Web search as your default search engine, which is a simple procedure. Right-click on the Omnibox, Google's name for its location bar, choose Edit search engines, find Google SSL Web search, and set it as your default engine. Google notes on the extension's install page that it doesn't work on Macs because "the Mac UI of Chrome for handling OSDD entries is not yet implemented." The extension is a simple way to streamline a task that's not particularly complicated to begin with--that of adding a search engine and making it your default. It would be more worthwhile if it did automatically make Google SSL your default search engine, yet it doesn't. The real utility of the extension is to highlight the fact that you can now search Google securely, something that you've been able to do since May 2010. Related: |
Thousands of Evernote users affected by data loss Posted: 09 Aug 2010 01:32 PM PDT Online note-saving service Evernote on Monday acknowledged that it had suffered a hardware fault at the beginning of July that resulted in potential data loss for more than 6,000 of its users worldwide. The issue was first reported by blog Techwave, citing a report from Japanese newspaper Mainichi Shinbun. In a Monday note to Evernote users on the company's blog, Evernote CEO Phil Libin explained that the loss stemmed from bad server hardware: "Every user's data is stored on a 'shard.' A shard is made up of a server together with a redundant fail-over server. If there is any problem with a server, the system automatically fails over to the second server in the shard. We currently have 37 shards. Shard 22 was the one that had problems last month." Evernote's back-up system stores user data in up to six different places using both on- and off-site servers as well as locally on the user's copy of the software. Though in the case of the problem, which lasted four days, user data was simply being overwritten due to one of these systems not having a working failure routine. "Basically, the shard kept failing over back and forth between two servers over the time period causing some of the data created during that time to get overwritten," Libin explained. (Credit: Evernote) In a call with CNET on Monday morning, Libin said that of the 6,323 users affected by the outage, approximately 70 percent were able to get their data back. Evernote's software saves a copy of a work in progress before syncing it up with whatever was stored online, so the company was able to pull the complete copies of various files once the problem had been addressed and fixed. However, those who had been working purely on Evernote's site, and whose work was being stored on the faulty shard, had no such protection. As an apology, Evernote has provided affected users with a free year of the company's $45-a-year premium service. Those who were already premium subscribers get an extra year. As for whether this could happen again, Libin said it's extremely unlikely."This was a freak of hardware failures. But we've changed the fail-over process so it won't happen again." Data loss on large-scale Web services is uncommon, but can be extremely hard to recover from. In 2009, social-bookmarking site Magnolia suffered a massive data corruption that resulted in the loss of all its user data. It has since started from scratch with a new version of the site. Prior to that, one of the most high-profile outages was a multi-hour downtime for Amazon's S3 cloud storage service, which many sites use as their built-in storage solution. At a press conference three weeks ago, Evernote announced it has reached 3.7 million users since launching in June of 2008. In that time, its users have saved 145 million notes, which Libin said works out to 312 new ones every minute. Evernote says affected users received the below e-mail from company CTO David Engberg, and that if they didn't receive it, they were not one of the 0.2 percent in the problem group.
CNET Editor-at-Large Rafe Needleman contributed to this report. Originally posted at Web Crawler |
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