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Wikipedia Officially Launches Mobile Version

Popular user-edited online encyclopedia Wikipedia has finally released a mobile-friendly version of the web site at mobile.wikipedia.org

Wikipedia Mobile Interface
Wikipedia Mobile Interface

The site offers a trimmed down version of Wikipedia proper, supports 14 languages, and even has a mysterious Spoken Wikipedia setting that—though currently not enabled, may presumably one day read Wikipedia articles to you.

We’ve seen plenty of tools for making Wikipedia friendlier for your mobile device, including the previously mentioned Wikipanion iPhone app, Encyclopedia for jailbroken iPhones, Wikipedia-va-SMS app GoLive Mobile, and webapp SnapAsk, but a lot of people will be thrilled with the official offering. It’s not a terribly advanced mobile webapp at this point, but it does break down Wikipedia articles into a nice, readable format for your small screen, which is plenty as a start. If you give it a go, let’s hear your thoughts—including what else you’d like to see from Wikipedia Mobile—in the comments.

Via: Lifehacker.com

Rip DVD on Mac Using Handbrake (Freeware)

Launch Handbrake, select the DVD you want to rip by clicking Source.
After importing DVD, you will see the figure below.

Setting Introduction

1. Source settings
(1). Title: Handbrake will detect all the titles on the DVD and choose the longest title automatically.
(2). Chapters: By setting chapters’ number, you can rip a specific clip. However, this is not very user friendly, since you will have to remember what is on each chapter. If you could preview each chapter, things would be a lot easier.

2. Destination setting: Choose the folder to save ripped movies.

3. Output Settings: select the format and codec you need.
(1). Video Settings

Framerate(FPS): Select a frame rate that you prefer.

Quality:
There are three options available:
1. Specify an output size and the quality will depend on the specified output size.
2. Select a birate. The higher bitrate you choose, the bigger size the output file will be, and the better quality you will get.
3. Directly select a quality.

Encoder: Select the encoder you prefer.

2-pass encoding(optional): This takes twice as long to encode, but it improves the video quality and doesn’t make the file any larger.

Picture Settings: Here you can set video resolution and crop video. Different players have different resolution specs. For example, the highest resolution supported by the new nano-chromatic is 640*480. The crop function of handbrake is kind of like a decoration here, because it is not powerful or practical. If this function is important to you, you can refer to a different guide.

(2).Audio Settings

In this section, you can choose audio tracks and movie subtitle, as shown in the above figure.
After all settings done, click Start button to rip.

Additional: As a freeware, handbrake is a pretty good DVD ripping tool, but it’s not very stable and has quite a few bugs. If you focus on more powerful functions such as movie length trimming, video cropping, selecting DVD chapters/titles, joining/merging more than one DVD chapter/title, more user-friendly operation, or want to rip DVD’s for viewable on more mobile devices on Mac, don’t mind paying a bit extra money, professional Mac DVD ripper software are definitely worth a try, and you will also get free professional technical support from the providers.

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Top 5 iPhone Task Managers

When the iTunes App Store first opened up to eager iPhone and iPod touch upgraders (and iPhone 3G buyers), one of the first types of applications to show up was the to-do/task manager. From simple check-box lists to voice-transcribing tools, there’s a bewildering number of apps, many of them free, that promise to help you keep track of your necessary actions and projects while you’re away from your computer. Today we’re checking out five of them, all free except for one requiring a “Pro” account, and comparing their features and functionality side-by-side, as well as asking which app you use to keep their busy lives together.

Remember the Milk

Pricing: Free to download, but access requires $25/year Pro account (which also grants access to Windows Mobile/Blackberry app).
Task options: Multiple lists, priorities, due dates, tags, repeating tasks, time estimates, location, URL, and notes.
Organization: Today/Tomorrow/This Week lists, a multi-list view, and sorting by tags or location.
Other features:Can use location awareness to find tasks closest to you; search function; home screen icon updates with tasks due today.
Web syncing: Yes.

Zenbe Lists

Pricing: Free (for both app and web account).
Task options: Basic text and due date.
Organization: Multiple lists, with x/x completed counts and due dates shown in list view.
Other features: One-click syncing to web account; easy e-mailing (of link to web list) through iPhone email.
Web syncing: Yes.

reQall

Pricing: App and account are free.
Task options: Auto-context text—use the phrase “Remember” or say “Tuesday,” and reQall labels it accordingly. Tasks can be sent to contacts from add page.
Organization: iPhone app is laid out onto three screens: “Time,” with item viewing by Today, Soon, or Overdue; “Things,” broken into Notes, Shopping, and To-dos (though any and all of them are technically to-dos); and “People” for shared tasks. All three organizing pages can be flipped to single-page listings.
Other features: Add by phone call (after registering phone number with reQall); Shake the iPhone/touch for a “memory jog” (random task pops up on screen);
Web syncing: Yes.

To Do’s

Pricing: Free.
Task options: Title, notes, and three-step priority (high, normal, low).
Organization: Priority-colored tasks with note previews laid out with checkboxes next to each, with options to sort by priority or date. Click blue arrows to edit or see full tasks.
Other features: Home screen badge can update with just high-priority or all tasks still due.
Web syncing: No (but cited for future).

EasyTask Manager

Pricing: Free app; Online syncing (apparently) requires $19.99 account, which also buys desktop software.
Task options: Very GTD-focused: Action name, project list, context, start date, due date, importance (1-5), and notes.
Organization: Three pages: A “Dashboard” that lists all tasks, sorted by due dates (Inbox, Tomorrow, Next 7 Days, Past Due, Completed); a “Projects” list; and “Contexts” view.
Other features: Online
Web syncing: With paid account.

This was by no means a comprehensive list, as any look at the iTunes App Store will show, but we tried to pick out a decent sampling of the different apps out there—basic checkmarks, phone-integrated, GTD-focused, paid, and a halfway option.

From: lifehacker.com

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