Adobe Photoshop Elements Tries To Find Pictures On Ipod

I had recently installed Photoshop Elements. The next day I plugged in the Ipod and Photoshop Elements automatically opened up to try to find pictures on the Ipod.

I really don’t want this to happen. The reason it happens is that Photoshop Elements sees the Ipod as a card reader or a USB device.
In the preferences for Elements click on “Camera or Card Reader”. Uncheck the box that says “Autolaunch Adobe Photo Downloader On Device Connect”. Then click ok.

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Apple launches iPhone

Today apple announced the “Apple iPhone”. This story reported that Apple could not call it the iPhone since Cisco was using that brand name to market their IP phones. We’ll see is there any lawsuits.

I will be the first to admit I am not an Apple fanboy but the iPhone looks very cool indeed. The iPhone runs OSX, integrates with Itunes, had a has a 2 MegaPixel digital camera. The price is $499 for a 4Gb model.

I’m waiting to see if Apple ever releases the rumored iPod Video and will it similar to the form of the iPhone. There has been much debate if a touch screen is the right way to go for an iPod Video. And of course it would probably have to be hard drive based since 4G is rather small for a video device.

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Windows Defender Application failed to initialize: 0×800106ba.

I have received the following error message on a number of my computers:

Application failed to initialize: 0×800106ba. A problem caused Windows Defender Service To Stop. To start the service, restart your computer or search help and support on how to start a service manually.

Apparently a lot of people are receiving this error as well when they start their computer. It looks like the license has expired for Windows Defender and we are supposed to install the latest version.

How lame is it that it’s not on autoupdate or the error message give a little more help as to the exact nature of the problem with Windows Defender.

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USB Flash Drive Reviews – Speed Matters

I was at NewEgg looking to buy a USB Flash drive. I never considered doing research or comparing specs since I thought they all were basically the same item with different housings.

I was aware that certain drives were U3 compliant which means they will allow you to run certain application directly from the USB drive itself. One popular U3 application is Firefox. It is prety cool to plug in a flash drive into any computer and run Firefox. To learn more about U3 check out the official site.

So I was searching for USB drivea at NewEgg and I was basing my choice on price and style. A comment in one of the reviews caught my eye. It mentioned that a certain model was “slow”.

I never considered read and write speeds when choosing a flash drive. Well after a few hours os research I have learned quite a bit.

Apparently there are different types of technologies to manufacturer flash memory chips. One is SLC (Single-Level Cell) and the other is MLC (Multi-Level Cell) Flash technology. SLC chips are faster. I almost never saw SLC or MLC mentioned in any specs, so the it’s pretty useless knowledge.

One item you will mentiones in flash drive specifications is transfer rates. There are usually differences between read and wrote rates but I’m going to assume it’s all the same. The slowest USB drives transfer data between 3-6Mbs. The fastest can approach 20Mb/s and even higher. Keep in mind that USB 2.0 is specifies a max transfer rate of 60 MB/s but I have never seen that rate approached by any USB device in the real world.

If you are simply storing word documents or a few music files then the speed won’t really matter to you. However I plan to transfer many files that can easily use up a Gig of space. There is a pretty big difference between taking 50 seconds versus 200 seconds to transfer data.

So which drive am I going to buy ?
As of right now I am looking to get a 2GB drive. I reviewed test data at Toms Hardware and then cross checked this info with prices at NewEgg

I have narrowed it down to the following choices.
Corsair 2GB Flash Drive @ $35
Transcend JetFlash @ $39
OCZ Rally 2GB @ $35

The Corsair has many great reviews, it looks cool and has a rubber casing to help protect it better. However it is a little bulkier because of the casing. There are times when space is an issue when plugging in the USB drive to a port.

The Transcend and OCZ drives are speed demons and a little smaller.

I probably will be a total geek and carry the drive on my keychain so the Corsair is looking like the drive of choice for me.

The plot does thicken a bit if you consider ReadyBoost when choosing a USB drive. ReadyBoost will be a technology available in Windows Vista which will aloow you to use your USB Flash Drive as RAM to boost system performance (in theory at least). I have no intention on upgrading to Vista in the near future so ReadyBoost is not a consideration at this time for me.

In order for a USB drive to be used with ready boost it must meet certain requirements that rae tested when you plug the USB drive into your Windows Vista computer.

-The USB Key must be at least USB 2.0
-The device must be able to do 3.5 MB/s for 4 KB random reads uniformly across the entire device and 2.5 MB/s for 512 KB random writes uniformly across the device.

Now just because your USB drive’s specifications says it can perform 10Mb/s transfers does not meant it will work with ReadyBoost. The 3.5 MB/s is for random reads. Most manufacturers sates transfer specs for sequential reads rates.

Many reviewers mentioned that the OCZ Rally did pass the readyboost test. I suspect the Transcend JetFlash would work as well since it has a very random access time compared to other USB drives.

Apparently Microsfot is working with manufacturers to help them test their devices so they can label their USB Flash Drives as “ReadyBoost capable devices”.

Here is a nice ReadyBoost FAQ

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Sneakers with GPS

According to CBS News a company is ready to launch footware with embeddded GPS technology. The inventor is Isaac Daniel.

I think this is a pretty cool use of GPS especially for concerned parents or hikers. The shoes start at about $350. This is a nice step up from the Digital Angel RFID chips. It looks similar to the Global Pet Finder technology only for sneakers. Cool.

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Itunes 7.0 with multiple Users On Windows XP

6 months ago I had 3 Ipod users in my household. There were two Nanos and one Ipod Video. I installed I tunes 6 and was hoping that each user on Windows XP could mangae their own Ipod and playlist. Needless to say it didn’t go very well and I pulled my hair out.

This Christmas we updated one of the Ipods to an Ipod 5.5 30G, which requires Itunes 7. I waited till I had a few days of free time to attempt the upgrade based on my past experience. I backed up all three playlists for each user and then crossed my fingers as I installed Itunes 7.

I’m happy to say it all worked perfectly !

All three users sharing the same Windows XP computer can manage their Ipods.

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