Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Six Best MP3 Tagging Tools

mp3 tool A well tagged MP3 collection makes everything from organization to playback easier.So some mp3 tools which may help you tagging your songs are:


TuneUp

tuneup

TuneUp is a music cleaning addon for iTunes. TuneUp's simple drag and drop interface combined with an extensive database of more than 90 million acoustic fingerprints makes cleaning up your music a breeze. You can drag hundreds of songs onto the TuneUp sidebar in a single go and let it chug through the pile. When it's done, you'll have a list to approve with any tricky songs or albums flagged for your approval before the tags are altered. The same drag and drop system works for cover art; you'll be presented with a list of available cover art for coverless albums. The free version of TuneUp is limited to 100 songs and 50 album covers per month, the Gold version is unlimited.

MediaMonkey

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MediaMonkey is a popular iTunes alternative among Once you have your music collection imported into MediaMonkey, you can automatically update tags from Freedb and update cover art from Amazon. MediaMonkey has a very strong focus on tag-based organization and support for user scripts to speed up the process. If you dump a bunch of music into MediaMonkey and that music has incomplete, corrupted, or mismatched ID3 tags, MediaMonkey automatically flags them and puts them in an Edit/Unsynchronized node on the program's file navigation tree, making it extremely easy to find the bad apples in your music collection and fix them. Once you get your tags in order, you can use Media Monkey to automatically organize your music into folders using the ID3 tags as a guide, creating directories based on artist and album names.

ID3-TagIT

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Although development was discontinued on ID3-TagIT in 2007, it still has a base of happy users. It isn't the most spartan or automated entry in the Hive Five, but it does offer an extremely granular amount of control over even the most minute details of tagging. If you're not interested in digging into the more obscure tags, the app's quick edit box handles basic changes. Like MediaMonkey, the program will query the Freedb to help you out.

MusicBrainz Picard mbp

MusicBrainz is an enormous user-maintained metadatabase of album information. Their popular iEatBrainz music tagging tool has been replaced by the cross-platform Picard Tagger. On top of using available information, like file names, to suggest changes to your tags, Picard also uses Acoustic Fingerprints of songs to semi-automatically identify songs in your collection. Once Picard finishes scanning your collection and checking it against the MusicBrainz database, it flags the tracks with a green, red, or orange flag to indicate how close of a match each file is to a fingerprint in the MusicBrainz database. From there you can check the suggested changes against your existing files side by side before approving them. Picard has an extensive drag and drop feature list, and almost every type of dragging and dropping within the interface does something useful. Dragging a file from the browser pane onto an album for example, prompts Picard to check the file against that particular album. Picard is open source and scriptable, leaving it wide open for tinkering to suit your needs.

Mp3Tag mp3 tag

Mp3Tag is a an MP3 tagging tool with a rather spartan interface which lends itself to easy use. You can batch edit your MP3 tags, including iTunes specific tags like media type or TV Show settings. If your MP3 files are named with tags in the file name like band-album-track-title.mp3, you can tell Mp3Tag to convert the naming convention of your files into the actual tags. You can also go in the opposite direction, renaming your files to reflect their tags. The latter trick is handy if you'd like to make the file name easily recognizable during searching and also have a backup of sorts should the ID3 tag become corrupted or overwritten with an incorrect tag. Mp3Tag also supports expression-based renaming, allowing you easily reformat the naming convention or formatting style of your files. Mp3Tag supports multiple online databases such as Freedb, Amazon, Discogs, and more for easy tag importing.

Foobar2000 foobar

Foobar2000 is a music player before all else, but it does have some basic tag editing functionality built in. foobar2000 can query the the Freedb, and the basic tags like artist, album, genre and such can be edited quickly. If you really want to see what makes foobar200 special, take a look at how to roll your own killer audio player with foobar2000—or just head straight to our foobar2000 screenshot tour, in which we feature the impressively varied world of reader-submitted foobar2000 customizations.

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Monday, May 25, 2009

10 most beautiful Computers

They ended their lives as museum pieces, aquariums, couches, and even at the bottom of the sea. But these are the ones that stay with us.

ZX Spectrum

1

Flashes of prismatic color on Clive Sinclair's tiny ZX Spectrum mark the original from its vast army of clones.

Cray 2

2

A vector supercomputer designed by the legendary Seymour Cray, its distinctive cooling fountain gave it the nickname "Bubbles.

PDP-10

3

Designed in the 1960s, the control units for DEC's PDP series of minicomputers came in bright colors like fuscia and cornflower blue.

Antikythera Mechanism

4

A ruined mechanism, found strewn over the sea bed near Antikythera, took a century to puzzle out. A complex analog computer dating to about 100BC, it is on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.

ZX80

5

Sinclair Research's ZX80 brought home computing to the British public in 1980 at a low price: just £100. It had 1 kilobyte of RAM.

G4 Cube

6

Jon Ive's award-winning Power Macintosh G4 Cube, a predecessor to the popular Mac Mini, suffered from functional flaws and a high price. An example was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art.

Ingraham

7

Jeffrey Stephenson's Ingraham's design is based on a 1946 Stromberg Carlson model 1110H: "American black walnut shell clad to the aluminum body of a Silverstone LC06 mini-ITX case. The back panel is a piece of burl from the same stock".

CPC-464

8

Designed to compete with the Commodore 64, Amstrad's CPC series was popular in Europe in the late 1980s. Like the thing itself, the graphics were colorful and blocky.

Difference Engine

9

Charles Babbage's Difference Engine tabulates polynomial functions. It was the immediate predecessor to his Analytical Engine, a mechanical computer left incomplete at his death in 1871.

Quantum computer

10

D-Wave Systems of British Columbia announced a prototype quantum computer in January, 2007. It can play Sudoku.

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Connect- Facebook’s new module has been launched officially

facebookFacebook has a launched a new module into their system which will allow the users to connect to the popular third party partner websites using their credentials on those sites.The system also fetches updates about what a Facebooker’s friends have been doing on those partner sites and their updates. This module has been called “Connect” which was first announced by Facebook.

This functionality is not new to the users who have been using MySpace for quite a long time. In MySpace it already has this functionality for its users called “MySpace Data Availability”.

In facebook with the help of Connect, user will be able to visit other popular sites who are partner to Facebook and using the same login credentials they can the services that are offerred there and even can use the same set of networks, eg.facebook users and their friends can virtually chat or digg news or can watch videos from one place and even can get updates also. Facebook users don’t have to login to those other sites outside of facebook to do some activities.

Trusted Authentication- If you have a Facebook account then you don’t need to create another account in the partner site. Your facebook data will be ported in their site easily.

Real Identity- Extending as well as leveraging real identity in the Web as a trusted environment

Porting Friends list- Users can port their friends wherever they go.

Privacy- Users can follow the same privacy settings as they have setup in facebook while browsing those partner websites and can use throughout the web.

Real Time updates- Users can share actions or activities in the partner sites to their friends in facebook through feeds.

Presently Facebook has partnered with 24 popular web sites like Amiando,CBS.com,CNET,CollegeHumor,Disney-ABC Television Group,Evite,Flock,Hulu,Kongregate,Loopt, Plaxo,Radar,Red Bull,Seesmic,Socialthing!,StumbleUpon, The Insider,Twitter,Uber,Vimeo and Xobni. So, in near future we’ll expect all social sites will come under one place.

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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Pillete – the world’s smallest Bluetooth headset

 

pillete2

 

It is a really an unbelievable concept, when headsets shrinks down to be a pill size. The Pillete boastly claims to be the world’s smallest Bluetooth headset so far. Capsuled in a form factor that is almost the size of a pill, features high performance microphone maintaining optimal voice quality with a twistable design. This almost invisible Bluetooth headset is turned on when folded in to a ‘L’ shaped ear-bud and returns to the off mode when made straight. The only point of confusion however is that regarding the fittings of this tiny headset. As many of us have comparatively larger ear canal, so it is a matter of doubt whether it fits into your ear properly. For others, it is easy enough to slip into and set in your ear canal

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Smallest Operating System...only 50MB

blog dsl

Damn Small Linux(DSL) is really a damn small linux distribution till date. Amazingly the entire ISO image could fit in a pen drive or in a small compact disk because the total size of theISO is only 50 mb. It acts as live CD meaning that the OS can boot from any system without installing in the hard drive. DSL can even be operated from within Windows also. So you can carry the entire OS with you and it can fit in your wallet also and you can work on any system. DSL not only works as a complete desktop suite but it can be used as SSH or FTP or HTTP(Web) server and that also right off of the live CD.

The developers who are behind this small Linux have chosen all the software very intelligently which are very fast to run but having very small size. The main desktop applications are:

  • XMMS (MP3, CD Music, and MPEG) player,
  • FTP client,
  • Firefox/Dillo/Netrik web browser,
  • Scheme In A Grid spreadsheet,
  • Sylpheed email,
  • Ted - word-processor,
  • three editors (Beaver, Vim, and Nano),
  • image editing and viewing (Xpaint and xzgv),
  • Xpdf (PDF Viewer),
  • emelFM, Fluxbox (file manager),
  • Naim (AIM, ICQ, IRC),
  • VNCviwer,
  • Rdesktop,
  • SSH/SCP server and client,
  • DHCP client,
  • PPP and PPPoE (ADSL),
  • NFS, Fluxbox and JWM window managers,
  • several games and system monitoring apps

As you can see though the OS is made small but the developers have not compromised with any popular desktop applications. Even if you are not impressive with the suite of apps and want to extend the software base, you can do this by mydsl command which parses the distributed dsl packages into the system.

When the linux is first booted it displays the default window manager Fluxbox and all the standard and most accessed applications are displayed as icons on the desktop. Rest of the apps are available either in Right Click menu or in Taskbar menu.

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