‘PC’

Sync All Your Media With Your Motorola Smart Phone Super Easily October 30, 2010 No Comments

Motorola has released a new version of its Media Link Software, and its actually surprisingly nice.  Media Link, with its iTunes-like interface, serves basically the same purposes as Apple’s iTunes does for Apple devices, but for your Motorola ones, including the Droid, Droid 2, Devour and Backflip.  Just plug in your device and the software takes care of the rest.

With photo, video, and music syncing, Media Link takes care of all the media you want on your device, and helps you to organize it.  It even includes the ability create custom ringtones, and while iTunes does this as well, it does have iTunes beat on one cool feature. Media Link allows you to crop and edit photos right in the application, making it perfect for quick improvements to those mobile photos.

Media Link is available now for Motorola smart phones at the link beloew, but unfortunately is currently Windows only, meaning Mac users are still left wanting.

Do you know of some good syncing software for Macs?  Let us know below!

Source – Motorola

ItsTechKnowledgy.com Recommends! October 8, 2010 No Comments

You may have noticed a new link at the top of the page: ItsTechKnowledgy.com Recommends is the latest feature from ITK making your life easier.  You read previews and reviews on ItsTechKnowledgy.com every day, so why have to go over to another site to actually buy the products?  From now on, you can get the highest quality products that we write about right here at ITK through ItsTechKnowledgy.com Recommends.  We will only provide links to high quality tech products at the best prices through our partnership with Amazon, and we hand pick every product we sell through the store.

Check out ITK Recommends for the best tech at great prices, and shop with the confidence that all the products you’re choosing from come highly recommended by ItsTechKnowledgy.com!

iTunes 10 with Ping Review September 9, 2010 2 Comments

iTunes 10 is great.

Ping however, is all but useless.

The idea behind Ping is a social network for music.  At first I thought I could get behind it.  I guess I thought I’d be able to do normal social networking things…”Like” stuff on Facebook, share quickly and easily with friends through Twitter and other services, you know…Social network type stuff.  But for several reasons, some more obvious than others, that’s not the case.

You sign up for Ping through iTunes 10.  No other way.  You can’t access it on your phone unless you’ve got an iPhone, and you can’t access it over the web.  Now I love iTunes, but frankly, its a resource hog, particularly on Windows, and you really don’t want it running all the time.  For most people, they start iTunes when they want to listen to music…If that.  Lot’s of people use other applications or web services for listening, so where is their incentive to use Ping?

One thing I thought could be cool was the Follow feature, and the fact that you could follow your favorite artists to find stuff they’re in to.  Of course though, this too hit a pretty major snag.  There were, being generous, maybe 100 artists you could follow.  I liked 5 or 6 of them, and frankly, was stretching with a couple of them.  I wanted to jump on, follow Jay-Z, Jimmy Eat World, and Muse, and Muse, of all of the big bands I like, was the biggest I found.  Oh and Linkin Park was on there.  I like them too.  Just not enough to make opening iTunes worth it though!

While Ping was supposed to be launched with Facebook support, which might have given it legs, they failed to make that happen.  On top of the lack of cool, tight Facebook integration, it actually doesn’t work alongside any of the other social networks either.  It might have taken off, in my opinion, had it launched and been all over people’s Facebook feeds the next day.  But now, with the hype over, and Facebook support still not added in, the window of opportunity for Ping to be a major success is likely gone.

Ping was a cool, but poorly executed idea.  What Apple should have done was waited a few months before announcing it, got another hundred (at least) artists set up to follow, and finalized plans with Facebook to have everything working in sync.  What we’ve got now is an extra iTunes feature to slow down an already sluggish application, that after a few major revisions will probably end up removed.  Don’t get me wrong, I like iTunes and its ecosystem, and I would love for Apple to prove me wrong with Ping, but in its current iteration, I just don’t see it happening.

Do you love Ping and think I’m dead wrong?  Would you use it if it were better integrated, or do you use a different social network for music?  (Heck, that’s basically what MySpace is these days.)  Tell us in the comments!