The beta version includes a small sample of Pokkies for your taskbar.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Eddie Cho/ CNET)

Let’s face it; your daily routine of checking Facebook, browsing RSS news, writing e-mails, sending tweets have evolved into quite the laundry list. Sweet Labs just released Pokki to sweeten up the task.

Pokki,  not to be confused with those delectable Japanese snacks, is a compact HTML5-based framework that allows users to view commonly used Web APIs in a pop-up shell.

As Web 2.0 continues to gain traction, companies are pursuing new ways to bridge the gap between the web app and the native desktop application. Sweet Labs has recognized that as simple and sleek these Web apps may be, many users still hold a strong bond with their desktop environment to run their applications. Many developers have already attempted to make the two worlds play friendlier, such as SeesmicAdobeand Mozilla. Sweet Labs, however, seems to be on the right track from an integrative and design standpoint.

Pokkis display feed updates in real time.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Eddie Cho/CNET)

Each Pokki resides in the taskbar. Clicking on a Pokki pops open a small window with the selected application. Although still in beta, Pokki includes limited numbers of popular apps like Facebook, RSS readers, Gmail, LivingSocial, and Twitter. Unlike a standard window application, Pokki’s pop-up windows can neither expand nor be moved.

Quickly view, add, and remove RSS news feeds on the fly.

(Credit:
Eddie Cho/ CNET)

In fact, Pokki feels very much like thumbing through apps on a smartphone: although it doesn’t quite offer the full, grandeur access to, say, Facebook’s social options or Gmail’s interface, it does pack the most critical functions into a compartmentalized design. Each icon displays a bubble indicating the number of updates or messages. Clicking on a feed or link opens up the respective app in a browser as well.

As the current release is still in beta stages, Pokki offers a sample model of what developers can do with the released SDK (I can already smell cloud-serviced music players brewing away).

What Sweet Labs has cooked up is a product that quickly feels native and strikes a nice balance between multitasking and simplicity. It’s already reduced the hassle of opening several tabs, logging into various accounts and tab-scrolling in my daily routine by integrating essential Web apps into bite-sized complements to my workspace.

If you have a sweet tooth for social networks, news, and daily bargains, come take a bite and try it out for yourself.

 

The Las Conchas wildfire, a 92,735-acre blaze extending around the community and national laboratory of Los Alamos, N.M., often moves faster than the officials who monitor it. That can be frustrating for people who want to see where the fire is burning.

But NASA has an automated answer for the impatient: the MODIS satellite. It records fire data, and the U.S. Forest Service packages it up so Google Earth users can get a rough but useful view of the fire’s behavior.

Here’s how to take a look. But first, I’ll share a sobering NASA photo taken from the International Space Station on Monday, the second day of the fire.

An International Space Station crew member took this photo of the Las Conchas fire near Los Alamos, N.M., on Monday, June 27, the fire's second day. The green mountains to the left (west) are the Jemez Mountains, a large volcano featuring a sunken ring-shaped caldera left from its last massive eruption 1.1 million years ago. The city of Los Alamos s just above the edge of the smoke where the green Jemez forests fade to a more arid brown. The Rio Grande flows from near the upper right corner to the lower left.

An International Space Station crew member took this photo of the Las Conchas fire near Los Alamos, N.M., on Monday, June 27, the fire's second day. The green mountains to the left (west) are the Jemez Mountains, a large volcano featuring a sunken ring-shaped caldera left from its last massive eruption 1.1 million years ago. The city of Los Alamos is just above the edge of the smoke where the green Jemez forests fade to a more arid brown. The Rio Grande flows from near the upper right corner to the lower left.

(Credit:
NASA)

It’s a daunting image for anyone like me who knows the area and the scale involved. There are 752 people fighting the fire right now, including four bulldozers, 28 fire engines, and five helicopters. Since the Cerro Grande fire of 2000, which burned hundreds of Los Alamos homes and thousands of acres of Los Alamos National Laboratory property, the lab has taken new fire counter measures including more forest clearing and automatic fire-suppression systems. So far today, physical risks to the lab are lower than earlier in the week, LANL Director Charlie McMillan said.

OK, so here’s how to get the live fire data. First, you’ll have to install Google Earth. If you’re not familiar with this software, it’s basically an interface to look at the planet through satellite photography. It’s got lots of overlays, some such as 3D buildings and geographic place names from Google, and countless others added by third parties that have a desire to show geographic information.

One of these third parties is the fire data. It’s stored in a file format called KMZ, which is a compressed version of the KML technology. (Historical aside: KML began its life as Keyhole Markup Language, and Keyhole was the company that developed Google Earth before Google acquired it and turned KML into an industry standard.)

Anyway, next go to the Forest Service’s Active Fire Mapping Program Web site.

Down toward the bottom, underneath the map, click on the “Download KMZ File” link and save the file in a place you’ll remember. I give it a filename that records the date and time–”MODIS fire 2011-06-30 1442MDT.kmz”–because later you might want to compare snapshots from different times.

Click the "Download KMZ File" link.

Click the "Download KMZ File" link.

(Credit:
screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)

Next, switch over to Google Earth and select File, then Open. Open up your KMZ file. You should see a red rectangle appear around the United States and a bunch of yellow, orange, and red dots scattered where there are fires.

When you want to hide earlier satellite data, uncheck its check box in Google Earth.

When you want to hide earlier satellite data, uncheck its check box in Google Earth.

(Credit:
screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)

Of course, you have to zoom in to the area of interest yourself with the zoom slider to the upper right of the map view or by using a mouse scroll wheel. It’s faster, though to type “Los Alamos, NM” into the search box in the the upper left corner of Google Earth. Typing the “87544″ ZIP code will get you a broader view of the whole county.

When you get close, you’ll see yellow, orange, and red squares. You might think the color coding corresponds to fire intensity, but that’s only indirectly the case.

In fact, the colors correspond with how recently the satellite recorded fire in a particular area. Red means within the last six hours, it gets older from that until yellow, which is more than 24 hours.

If you download a new file later, you’ll get a lot of visual clutter, because the old information is underneath. To hide the older layers, uncheck them in the “temporary places” folder underneath the “Places” section on the left of Google Earth.

You might also want to save the files. When you quit Google Earth, the software will ask you if you want to save your file to your “My Places” folder. You can, but you can also let the software forget it; you can open it again if you want to as long as you don’t delete the original KMZ file you downloaded.

Below is a view I just created. You can of course use this to view any other fire data in the country, too.

A view of the Las Conchas fire activity at 2:30 p.m. MT as seen with MODIS data in Google Earth.

A view of the Las Conchas fire activity at 2:30 p.m. MT as seen with MODIS data in Google Earth.

(Credit:
screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)

Originally posted at Deep Tech

 

Final Cut Pro X
(Credit:
Apple Inc.)

As many probably know, Final Cut Pro X–Apple’s professional video-editing software–was recently released to mixed reviews.

For our CNET review of Apple’s Final Cut Pro X, we decided to try something different. Normally our Download.com staff reviews software from a consumer perspective. This time, we called in a pro user from our offices in New York. Our very own Wilson G. Tang is a CNET and CBS producer, who has directed, shot, and edited award-winning pieces. He also hosts a daily technology and culture show on CNET called The 404. As a video and film professional, he has had almost a decade of experience with Final Cut Pro and other nonlinear video editing software on a day-to-day basis. In addition, he has had extensive experience in the field, using everything from film cameras to new digital cinema video cameras that shoot to memory cards.

As a professional in the field, Wilson reviewed the software from a professional’s perspective. He compares the rebuilt-from-the ground-up Final Cut Pro X with former versions, pointing out in intricate detail the ways in which the new software is different (and not always better) than its predecessors. He was careful to point out to us that he likes the new version overall, but thinks that some professionals will probably be frustrated with many of the new changes. But he also said that those who are new to film editing might have an easier time learning the ropes, not having learned and internalized the ins and outs of previous versions of the software.

Check out CNET’s full review of the new Final Cut Pro X.

 


(Credit:
Rdio)

Rdio, the popular on-demand music-streaming service with apps already available on most major platforms (Download: Mac | iPhone | Android), has just invaded Windows desktops. Now, desktop listeners can access their Rdio accounts without having to fire up a browser or log in. The new native app offers all of Rdio’s basic listening and social discovery features, plus a couple of nice conveniences that you’re sure to appreciate.

First, the new app can be controlled via media keys on a keyboard. These days, a lot of Windows peripherals come outfitted with Play, Pause, and Skip Track keys, and the app lets you take advantage of them to ease your listening experience.

Second, the app has a Match Collection function, which uses the metadata found in your iTunes or Windows Media libraries to populate your Rdio collection. It’s a great way to jump-start your listening experience right after downloading.

Rdio for Windows is available now, free on Rdio.com, and is compatible with Windows XP, Vista, and 7. After a seven-day trial, Rdio Unlimited is $9.99 and Rdio Web is $4.99.

 

Apache is very flexible, and it's easy to configure Apache to handle several domains even when your Web server only has one IP address to share between them. You can use this to host multiple sites, or just to provide a sandbox for development rather than making changes on your live site. This weekend, we'll learn how to create virtual hosts with Apache.

 

Rolling out new servers is a big part of system administrators’ jobs, so any software that can simplify server installation and configuration is a welcome tool. We sat down with OpenLogic’s Senior Content Manager Brad Reeves to talk about Chef, an open source systems integration framework built to bring the benefits of server configuration management to an entire operating infrastructure.

 

Nortel has announced that it has sold its pile of patents for $4.5 billion. "The sale includes more than 6,000 patents and patent applications spanning wireless, wireless 4G, data networking, optical, voice, internet, service provider, semiconductors and other patents. The extensive patent portfolio touches nearly every aspect of telecommunications and additional…

 

Now Ubuntu One users can upload, download, share and manage their files from their Android phones … and get their photos backed up at the same time…

 

While there isn't an over-abundance of quality native games right now for the small Linux gaming market, it looks like a new web-based Linux game store is launching next week. It's called Gameolith, but will it be anything special?..

 

LibreOffice 3.4.1 closes a number of outstanding bugs, but enterprise deployment of the 3.4 branch will have to wait for 3.4.2 at the end of this month…