Monday, September 29, 2008

Share Files and Remote Control Desktops with Gbridge [Screenshot Tour]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/406456408/share-files-and-remote-control-desktops-with-gbridge


More than a few commenters had questions about the Gbridge tool for Windows we featured last week, which works on top of your Google account to provide file sharing and remote desktop capabilities. Why does it bother using Google accounts? Is it any better or different than LogMeIn or Techinline? Is it secure? We spent some time checking out Gbridge, and came away impressed with its ease of use and nifty features, along with a few answers to your questions and screenshots.

First off, Gbridge uses your Google account username and password in large part to save you and any friends you connect to the trouble of having to create new accounts (and remember new passwords) at Gbridge. It also uses the Google Talk service's authentication, and claims to encrypt all network traffic it passes through GTalk's servers. Furthermore, the app makers state in their FAQ that everything gets encrypted and authenticated between Gbridge clients. That may not be enough assurance for IT managers or anyone backing up super-private files, but if you're still interested, let's check out what Gbridge can do.

Setting up Gbridge and file sharing

After heading to Gbridge's web site and downloading the Windows client, installing is relatively straightforward. All users will see a black-and-white command prompt pop up, which is normal. Vista users, however, may see this dire warning, but Gbridge informs you to let it slide and hit "Allow":

Once you move past the tech! nicals, you'll be asked for your Gmail/Google account information, and to give a host name (of less than 8 characters).

When everything's set up, you're ready to get rolling, but you might want to set up Gbridge on any other computers you own to create a virtual network amongst your boxes. That's right—you can install and auto-start Gbridge on multiple computers, using the same Gmail logon, and it will keep all those computers connected and ready to trade or stream files. In the example below, I used my Gmail account to hook my Vista laptop up to my wife's laptop. Each has a different host name, but they're otherwise linked together.

The easiest way to use Gbridge is to create "SecureShares." Hit the big button for SecureShares at the top on the Gbridge client that's doing the sharing, choose a folder, and choose the people who can access it and set a password. You can allow only your other boxes to grab files, or invite friends also using Gbridge to check out you wares. Those files are shared through a browser link that only works for Gbridge-connected systems. On the sharing page, documents and files are offered up for right-click grabbing, but pictures and music files are available for instant viewing or playing. Streaming my wife's MP3 collection yielded super-snappy playback, and the album cover organization is a slick touch:

Using Gbridge for backup

The browser-ba! sed shar ing is nice, but if you've got a folder full of Word documents and spreadsheets you want to keep synchronized between systems, Gbridge has got you covered. Click "Add EasyBackup" on the computer that's got the stuff to be saved, and you'll be prompted to store it either on your local machine or on a remote system. This can be, of course, either your same-account box or a generous friend's system. If it's a one-time thing, it's an easy move to enter a password and send the files, but you can also set up "AutoSyncs" with custom frequency:

There are more options to setting up backups, of course, but it can also be just that easy. If you need files sooner than your automated backups, just right-click a folder in Gbridge's main "Friends" tree listing, and select "AutoSync Download It."

Desktop sharing

GBridge comes bundled with its own lightweight VNC client for troubleshooting your friends and relatives' PCs, but will defer to your default VNC client or, if you're rocking XP Professional or Vista Ultimate, Microsoft's own Remote Desktop Protocol for the actual desktop viewing. Making a connection requires a Gbridge friend or client to click "DesktopShare," choose to allow DesktopShare requests, and set a password for the connection. The computer being connected to gets a small window that allows it to kill the connection at any time, and Gbridge's connection seemed generally as responsive as a standard VNC hook-up between my household's two laptops.

One more thing about Gbridge: Your standard Google Talk applications and Gmail-based IM will continue to work while you're using the utility, but new chat windows will also pop up in Gbridge's own desktop window. A friend noticed that my reply chat was prefaced with a "Kevin Purdy! is usin g Gbridge" message, but I could've probably avoided that by replying in a standard chat client. Of course, Gbridge also includes buttons to invite your chat partners to download and connect through Gbridge.

That's our tour of Gbridge's features and functions, but Gbridge's own site has an extensive FAQ and how-to section if you need particulars on setting up and connecting systems. If you've downloaded and tried out Gbridge, tell us all how it compares to other sharing and syncing clients, and what features you'd like to see included for better functionality.


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Firefox Universal Uploader Is Like an FTP Client for Popular Web Sites [Featured Firefox Extension]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/406502645/firefox-universal-uploader-is-like-an-ftp-client-for-popular-web-sites

Firefox only (Windows/Mac/Linux): The Firefox Universal Uploader extension (aka fireuploader) uploads and downloads files to and from popular web sites through a simple dual-pane interface. In essence, the Universal Uploader acts very much like previously mentioned FireFTP—the extension that turns Firefox into an FTP client—but it uploads directly to popular web sites like Flickr, Facebook, Google Docs, Picasa, Box.net, and YouTube. So rather than require you to log in to those sites to upload photos, videos, documents, or other files, you can fire up this extension and simply drag and drop files to the webapp you want to upload to. The extension is a little rough around the edges, but it's a great idea and works as advertised.

Firefox Universal Uploader [Firefox Add-ons]

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Archos 5 unboxing and hands-on

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/406223590/

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The Archos 5 has already been thoroughly torn apart in French by the cats at Archos Lounge, but there's nothing quite like getting your hands on a device for yourself, and while we found Archos' latest to be impressive in terms of raw ability and features, actually using all those features wasn't always smooth going. Although the 800 x 480 4.8-inch touchscreen is laudably bright and clear, it's still a resistive touch panel and feels like one, depressing slightly with each press and reacting a bit slowly in general. We used two different builds of the firmware, and while the second was an improvement, it still hung badly at times and occasionally crashed out hard, requiring a reset. The Opera-powered browser rendered fine, although it scrolled a bit choppily, and the mail client was functional, but obviously not capable enough to be used day-to-day -- it can't delete IMAP emails, for example. We were also a little annoyed by the constant come-ons for accessories and plug-ins -- plugging in the charger pops up an ad for a dock -- and we were left wondering why album art was downscaled so crappily with such a great display available. We also tried out the DVR station accessory, and while it upscaled the interface and content to 720p admirably, we were unable to get it to recognize component video in from a TiVo HD. That's basically the story here: the 5's got terrific potential but nothing's quite there yet -- too much seems missing, broken, or otherwise unpolished right now. There are more firmware updates scheduled, so we'll see how things go, and we may well be singing a different tune entirely when the plug-in enabling the 5g's built-in 3G modem is released, but for now we'd say we're a little disappointed in what should be a kickass little player.


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LG set to release WWAN-enabled X110 Momo netbook

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/406275719/

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LG doesn't look to be pushing the envelope all that hard with its netbook entry -- are you sick of 10-inch screens, 1.6GHz Atom processors, and Windows XP yet? -- but the company's X110 Momo looks to up the ante ever so slightly with a built-in HSUPA modem and a slightly reconfigured keyboard with bigger arrow keys and a full-size right shift key. No pricing or availability yet, but we'll take LG at its word when it says the Momo is "coming soon."

[Via Wired]
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Samsung's 8-megapixel Pixon gets official, ships in mid-October

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/406326269/

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Samsung was content with teasing us all weekend long, but it has finally seen fit to officially reveal its next 8-megapixel handset, the Pixon. Boasting a 3.2-inch touchscreen, 13.8-millimeter thin design and an inbuilt camera with Auto Focus, face detection and geotagging, the handset clearly emphasizes the importance of taking a few photos each and everyday. Sammy has confessed that the currently unpriced mobile will start shipping in around a fortnight for those in France, while most other European / Asian countries will see it shortly. As for North America? Take a wild guess.

[Via PhoneScoop]
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