The security suites to beat |
Posted: 21 Sep 2010 07:38 PM PDT "Most impressive" is one way to describe the latest Norton updates from Symantec. After three years of progressively better versions and significant improvements, Norton Internet Security 2011 and Norton AntiVirus 2011 look incredibly sharp. Gone are the days of crippling system behavior and debatable security efficacy. Instead, Norton gives users blazing installs and Quick scans, useful system-managing tools and security extras like scanning your Facebook wall for malicious links, and most importantly, extremely high ratings in threat detection and prevention. With a 30-day trial that has no other restrictions, anybody who's willing to pay for Windows security should check out these two suites. Read CNET's full reviews for Norton Internet Security 2011 and Norton AntiVirus 2011, and let us know what you think. |
VLC Media Player comes to iPad at last Posted: 21 Sep 2010 09:24 AM PDT If you were excited last month by the arrival of CineXPlayer, which lets you view Xvid-formatted videos on your iPad, you'll love this: uber-popular open-source video player VLC is now available for iPad as well, meaning you can now watch just about any video in any format. Indeed, as the developer's fractured-English description notes, "It comes with support for nearly all codec there is." And based on the dozen or so sample videos I threw at it--Divx, MKV, Xvid, etc.--that seems to be the case. As with CineXPlayer, you copy videos to VLC by way of iTunes' File Sharing feature: connect your iPad, click the Apps tab, scroll down to the File Sharing area, and then choose VLC. Click the Add button and find the video(s) you want to load up. Easy-peasy. Unlike CineXPlayer, which displays only a text list of your videos, VLC Media Player uses thumbnails. On the plus side, each thumbnail shows a little clock icon indicating how much of the video you've already watched (the app remembers your place, of course). Weirdly, however, the icon is backwards: the "hands" go counter-clockwise. There's not much else to say about VLC Media Player. It's free, it works, and it opens the door to countless videos you wouldn't otherwise be able to view without first converting them. In that respect, it's a must-have app. And a surprising arrival, I must say. In the past, an app that lets users watch videos not purchased from iTunes would have been strictly verboten, but Apple seems to be honoring its newly relaxed developer guidelines. Which begs the question: what other previously unthinkable apps would you like to see? Originally posted at iPad Atlas |
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