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Internet Video Downloaded

Google Video Mac

Google is catching up with its promises on coming Mac versions of its free products. Google Earth, and now Google Video are out in native Aqua. The application is slick, and has a very intuitive thumbnail scrubber.

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Now, the only feat left is to find something interesting on Google Video. Mac users won’t be disappointed in the application nearly as much as the variety of videos, but we’ll hope that improves.

googlevideoipod Internet Video Downloaded

Maybe more interesting than the Mac video player, you can now download Google videos in an iPod friendly format. Even if you are pod-less, this is a handy way to save these videos on your drive with good compression and small file sizes.

YouTube to YourMac

Wouldn’t it be great if there was a download to iPod on YouTube? Who knows when their financing might dry up, so download your favorites. How? Find out in this O’Reilly tutorial.

ReelBeen Video Player and Converter

If you are looking for a slicker way to convert video (including streaming content) to iPod format, then ReelBean might be your answer. Provided you are running Tiger, ReelBean will convert and playback all kinds of video (and DVD) in a polished interface. Get it now while its free. Once this bean sprouts, it will put you back $10.

SightSpeed Video VoIP for Mac

sightspeed Internet Video Downloaded

The free VoIP arena is pretty crowded, but there’s room for SightSpeed. This VoIP app includes video as well as audio and sports built-in conferencing and call out. The quality is better than I expected. Its worth the download just to watch the fishbowl.

As always, thanks for joining me. Tune in next week for more fresh freeware.

Brian

Mac Backup, Beyond .Mac Backup

(from Episode #37 of The Lab with Leo Laporte)

We’ve all heard it over and over: you have to backup your data. You really do. Hard drives to not last forever and you have to prepare for the inevitable day when your drive fails. According to Scott Forstall, Apple’s Vice President of Platform Experience, at last year’s WWDC, 74% of users do not backup their files and he admitted that he is among their number. That’s pretty odd considering Apple makes a Backup utility called…well…Backup. Why is he not using the Backup solution offered by his own company?

Many people have beefs with Apple’s Backup utility. The main beef being that it’s only available to .Mac users which puts it $99 further out of reach for many people. The second problem is that the method it uses is confusing and offers you no assurance that you have really protected your data—the files you’ve backed up aren’t files anymore. Apple Backup says you’re protected, but you’re never really sure. And for $99 you should be sure.

What’s the best backup solution? Well, the Sunday School answer is “the one you actually do� because even using Apple Backup is going to be more helpful in a data disaster than having no backup at all. So, if you decide not to follow the advice I’m about to give, at least implement some kind of backup regime. Seriously, it’s important.

The backup solution that I recommend is one by Dave Nanian at Shirt Pocket Software called SuperDuper!

What Dave has done with this application is take a lot of the intimidation out of backup. All backup utilities offer you choices about how you would like to backup: do you want to backup the whole drive? or just you user folder? do you want to erase your backup each time and start over or do you want to merely adjust the last backup with the files that have been added, changed or deleted? Huh? Which is it!? What do you want to do!?! SuperDuper offers those options but explains every step of the way “What’s going to happen� Just read the messages on screen and the program will let you know what to expect.

I asked Dave about what his thinking was behind SuperDuper and he told me, “rather than engineer a solution for the minority, we’re designing for the vast majority who want a program that makes a full, complete backup that they can understand and feel confident about. They don’t need to do a lot of selecting: they just want to click a button and be reassured that their precious files have been taken care of, and that they can recover with a minimum of hassle and inconvenience.� I love that philosophy. Most people don’t want to have to think too much about backup; it’s a chore. Make it easy, or I won’t do it.

SuperDuper! is highly skilled at making bootable accessible backups of your entire drive. It’s just a matter of selecting the drive you want to backup, the drive you want to use to store the backed up files, the backup method you want to use and then you just click “Copy Now.�

The program comes with presets for backing up your whole hard drive or just backing up your user account. I recommend backing up your entire hard drive and creating a full bootable backup. In the event that your computer’s hard drive dies and won’t allow you to even boot the machine to get at your email, much less your data, a bootable backup will give you a drive that you can boot your computer from and carry on with your life while you leisurely comparison shop for a replacement internal drive.

You may wonder how long a full backup of your entire system will take. Well, the first time, it could take well over an hour. But, using SuperDuper!’s Smart Update option, all future backups will only take is long as it requires for the program to determine which files have been created, changed or deleted since the last update and make them match on your backup drive. Smart is right!

There is also an option for making a “sandbox� backup of your system. This feature is probably a bit advanced for some users but comes in handy if you want to be able to restore your system to the state it was in before you installed a flakey bit of shareware or a system update that you were better off without.

Start up SuperDuper! and you will be faced with a screen that starts with the word “Copy…� From the pulldown menu to the right, choose your boot drive if it isn’t already selected.

So, now the screen reads “Copy your boot drive to…� Now, select your backup drive from the pulldown menu to the right of “to.� Simple. It’s like filling in the blanks.

Now the screen reads “Copy your boot drive to your back driveâ€? and on the next line “using…â€? Now choose from the four Standard Scripts the method by which you’d like to backup your drive. For our purposes, you’ll want to stick to the ones that begin with “Backup – “ the “Sandbox – “ scripts are a bit more advanced and you can read SuperDuper!’s User Manual for more information on those. For now select “Backup – all files.â€?

At this point you could just click “Copy Now� in the lower right corner, but instead click “Options…� and check the box beside “Repair permissions on your boot drive�. This ensures that when you make the backup, your files are preserved with the correct permissions. You’ll also want to select “Smart Update your backup drive from your boot drive� from under “During copy�. This saves you time when backing up after that initial big backup has run.

Click “OK.�

Now click “Schedule…� and this will bring up SuperDuper!’s Scheduled Copies window and a sheet that will allow you to program SuperDuper! to automatically backup your boot disk everyday, any day, any time you like. Read the “What’s going to happen?� at the bottom of this screen to make sure SuperDuper! is setup the way you want. Click “OK� and close the Scheduled Copies window.
If you’re ready to go, you can click “Copy Now.�

Then comes the question of how often you should back up. The answer to that question really depends on how drastically your system changes from day to day. If you don’t do a lot with your computer, you could probably get away with backing up once a week.

Personally, I live on my computer. I have two regular backups I have scheduled to automatically occur during the night while I’m sleeping: one that runs every night and backs up the whole system and another that backs up the whole system every week. This gives me a few days to discover that I have lost a file before the next scheduled backup takes it away for good. It also gives me that extra level of protection in having multiple backups. (At work, I even have a third “just in case� monthly backup.)

My official recommendation, start a daily backup routine. Go download and purchase SuperDuper! and every night make sure your computer is on and connected to your backup drive. Setup SuperDuper! to self-activate while you’re asleep and backup your whole hard drive to that second drive. And, make sure it’s a second drive—if you only backup to a partition of your boot drive and it fails, you will have lost your data twice. Backup this way every night and be ready for data disasters when they come.