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Happy Father’s Day!
On my first father’s day (as a father) I felt it only appropriate to give a shout-out to the old man who got me interested in all this computer nonsense in the first place. A truly inspirational individual – even if he doesn’t know it – my dad’s responsible for who I am as a father, a man, and… well… a technologist! We ran our first bulletin board service (BBS) on the Commodore 64 twenty-some odd years ago on a 300 baud modem (then 1200, then 2400, then 9600!) using Ivory Joe’s 6485/Ivory BBS software. Which we eventually got the BASIC source for and hacked up ;) From that moment on (sometime around 1986) I knew what I wanted to do with my life. Cool, eh? At some point I’ll write something up that’s a more complete history… because a lot of what my dad taught me about over 20 years ago set the stage for what I’m working on right now. We had IM, forums, email, page designers / homepages, and all that jazz back then! Thanks Dad! Happy Father’s Day! Windows Live Writer Technical PreviewHello? Anyone out there? ;) I know it’s been a while since I’ve posted anything of substance. Certainly longer than I’ve gone with respect to blogging since late 2004. Again, I expect I’ll be posting just as sporadically in the future as I am now given my “life priorities” and how they’ve expanded since welcoming a baby girl into the world back in October.
I did want to spend a minute or two giving folks an FYI post on the latest release of Windows Live Writer (Tech Preview). If you’re a blogger and you’re NOT using Writer… well, you should be. The new features include new formatting for photos, inline videos, word count, auto linking, and more. It’s really a solid, solid product and one that makes the life of a blogger a lot easier. Check out this pic of Stella using the new tilt + “reflection” features of Writer for photos: Cool. Interested in doing this yourself? Get the Technical Preview of Windows Live Writer Live MeshNot too long ago (Jan 07) I blogged about wanting an Exchange Server for the rest of my life. This week, something similar was announced called Live Mesh. Yes, I know I'm days late to the party - but participating in blog chatter isn't top of mind for me anymore ;) If you haven't been following the buzz around Live Mesh, here are some links to catch-up: In short: this is one of the most ambitious platforms I've seen come from Microsoft since Silverlight or the original .NET Framework. It has serious, serious potential to redefine computing. The concepts resonate with me in a way few things do, particularly because they aren't an either-or approach (cloud vs. client). Only time will tell. Leaving Mozy, testing CarboniteAs usual, Omar is a couple weeks ahead of me here. But Mozy has been an absolute dog for me over the last few weeks, and it's time I move on. Of course I'm going to wait until I'm completely backed up elsewhere before ditching Mozy - and I've "sold" Mozy to a number of people, all whom I now have to cross my fingers and hope they're not having the same problems. To sum it up, look at this one screenshot: There are like 4 “bugs” in that one screenshot.
I'm not patient enough to deal with customer support - there are just too many problems here to deal. So I'm going to give Carbonite a go. PS. Yes, I know. My blogging is slow. But I warned you ahead of time a little while back! Just subscribe to my RSS feed and don't bother checking back regularly; that way quantity or frequency of posts don't matter at all. Remember The Milk + Exchange = My Tasks Super SystemI've been playing with Remember The Milk quite a bit this week, all the while wondering how I could fit it into my task/to-do workflow without complicating my life more than I need to. It's dangerous when you spend too much time in the "meta zone", thinking about how you're going to complete your tasks instead of actually completing them. So I gave myself a deadline (today) to figure out if and how Remember The Milk was going to work for me... and this is what I came up with. <If you don't know what Remember The Milk is, check it out at www.rememberthemilk.com. It's an impressive service for task management/getting things done. I'm going to refer to it as RTM from now on.> Since I rely heavily on Outlook + Exchange for work, any solution that took my tasks out of Outlook would be a non-starter. I need the ability to attach PDFs and (more importantly) emails to tasks for quick follow-up and I need them in my face all day long. At the same time, there are aspects of RTM that would make me more productive on a day-to-day basis so I wanted to find something that would work across both systems. So I started with this:
And this is what I'm now doing a little differently:
As you can probably tell, the killer feature for me is the fact that all of this stuff is talking to each other. Everywhere I am (web, PC, Mac, phone) I'm working against the same task list. As I add a task in one place (even via voice using Jott), it's available everywhere. So basically, I have RTM and Exchange in sync using my phone (running both ActiveSync and MilkSync) as the sync hub. It isn't the perfect solution, but it's working well. And yes, I realize I'm a little "over the top" when it comes to time management! But maybe one person will get value out of this post ;) Pay-as-you-go TV getting closerBack in September 2006, I wrote about moving to an ala carte model for television instead of relying on the increasingly expensive and unreliable cable companies to provide content for us. With each passing day, I get more anxious about the fact that we're not doing this in our household - because we watch even less TV now than we did before, and we're still paying Comcast monthly for the privilege. I just looked at my Comcast cable bill. We have HD support but none of the special channels like HBO or Showtime. $68.23 + $6.80 taxes & surcharges (approximated since my Internet access is on this bill too). Add $10.75/month for Tivo (annual prepay) and you have an astounding $85.78/month just to watch TV. If I were to translate that into iTunes or Xbox LIVE purchases, you're talking an average of about 42 television shows/month for that price. Yet I think we watch about 8-12 shows monthly depending on the month (Smallville, The Sarah Connor Chronicles, The Office, and maybe a few others). Seriously, why in the world are we paying $85/month when we could just drop $2-3/each to watch the shows we want to watch when we want to watch them? How could things NOT be moving in this direction over the next couple years? The catch for me is that sports content isn't available through either iTunes or Xbox LIVE - which means I'm either relegated to watching baseball on my laptop through MLB.TV or not watching it at all. Neither is acceptable - so until there's a solution to this problem (and I suspect it will be in the next 24 months somehow) I won't be able to switch completely. And of course, neither iTunes nor Xbox have Smallville... and iTunes doesn't even have TV shows in HD yet :( So the dream will probably be on hold for a short while. But I'm really looking forward to the day when I'm not paying $85/month for less than 8 hours of television watching. Ugh. Mint.comI've been giving Mint a try over the past few days. It's not quite feature-rich enough for me to switch from MS Money Plus just yet, but I do see a day when 100% of my banking and financial management moves to the web. I've been waiting for this day for about a decade, so it's a long time coming. Mint is unbelievably friendly though and has a great UI for getting up and running in less than five minutes. And it tells you things you sort of wish you didn't know. Like this: Great. Photo organization - more on tagging, folders, and captionsIt's been a few months since I last posted about photo tagging and asked "how should I use metadata on photos?" There were some great responses, both in person as well as in the comments, and I filed that task away for a future project. Well, the future is now. We took over 1700 photos in the last couple weeks alone (having an 11-week old will do that to you) and our "filing system" is starting to show its age. Not having things like ratings, dates, or even the basics like "this is a picture of Stella and Mike" is starting to bug me since I'm spending a few hours each week just dealing with photos. So this is what I'm going to do with our entire gallery, starting right now:
And finally: 10. Apply tags to all the photos! Talk about tedious :) I realize that a few months ago I said "I'm not going to go crazy with this and spend hundreds of hours applying tags to previous photos"... but I rethought that [I know Jay is laughing right now thinking "I knew you would"]. But the photos we had pre-baby are all actually pretty easy to apply metadata to, and being the neat freak that I am I knew I wouldn't want to have half of my photos cleaned up and the others just sitting around unusable. So I came up with a very basic tagging scheme based on what I've seen others do online. I'm going to use hierarchical tags (even though most apps including Windows Live Photo Gallery don't visualize them like this) and I'm going to use capitalization and spaces in the tags. This is the basic format I'm going to use:
To perform all of the steps above, I'm going to use Adobe Photoshop Lightroom since bulk edits like these are cake in that tool... and any changes I make, including applying tags, will immediately appear in Windows Live Photo Gallery for basic viewing/editing. As I get more serious about photography (and trust me, I'm really not that serious) Lightroom is becoming an essential part of my workflow. I love how I can use Lightroom to do all of this and not only does my desktop software (WLPG) pick up the changes immediately, but Media Center does as well! To illustrate how slick this is, soon I'll be able to pull up pictures of any family member sorted by date in 3 seconds on the HDTV in my living room thanks to Xbox 360 and Media Center. Love it! It's like magic. Of course, this is going to take me quite a while. But just like I did when I ripped 900+ CDs, I'm going to take it week-to-week ;) I'll spend about 30 minutes each Sunday working through 5-10 folders until I'm finished with everything. It should only take a few months provided I'm disciplined about it. And then I'll never have to do it again; it just becomes about new photos at that point, which is much, much easier. And if it's anything like my encoding all of my music, it'll be boring and tedious... but I'll be pretty thrilled when it's all done. Just in time for CES 2009! Speaking of CES, be sure to watch Bill's keynote at 630 Pacific at www.microsoft.com/ces! This is my favorite time of the year - CES and MacWorld... geek heaven. Amazon MP3 DownloadsWhere will you soon be able to get music from all of the major labels, without any DRM restrictions, at moderate bit rates? Amazon MP3 of course. Fantastic. Sony BMG has finally entered the fold. I've spent years berating DRM and buying nothing but CDs, which feature both higher quality sound and zero restrictions on how they're used. But Amazon's MP3 Downloads have me slowly thinking about sacrificing a little quality (most songs are 256kbps variable rate) for convenience [of course, I do wish they would support lossless formats]. I'm not sold on the design of the store - it feels a little bit too much like Amazon.com and not enough like a fun place to hang out (see Zune for this) - but all things considered, it's the best store on the block. As their catalog grows, I can't see anyone favoring the current iTunes model over straight cheap, DRM-free MP3s. The subscription model is still a better value (and I expect music junkies will still use that to sample music) but for ownership, Amazon is doing a fantastic job. Windows Vista: Speech and Touch InterfacesI just spent 30 minutes playing with Windows Vista's speech recognition while I was feeding Stella (and therefore armless). It was pretty amazing, to be honest. I think I've blogged in the past with how impressed I was with the speech recognition and yet I'm still impressed a year later. It's one of those technologies that you just expect to suck - and when it works this well, it's pretty cool. It makes you feel like we're actually making progress with the whole natural interface thing. Check out this (old) video from Long Zheng which gives a quick overview of some of the capabilities:
And another thing I didn't even know Windows Vista did (I don't have a tablet anymore) is support touch natively. There aren't any great videos of this, but this one gives a bit of an overview of one of the features. Unfortunately, it doesn't really show "touch flicks" which let you navigate by flicking, writing with your finger tip, "pen flicks", or any of the cool ink features. It's always fun to learn about "new" things your year-old OS is capable of though. Can you tell I'm on a Vista kick? Automatic hibernation & rebootI learned a cool little Vista hack this morning while skimming this book: To cut down on energy bills - but still have my computer available when I need it - I'm now automatically hibernating my desktop PC every night, and then forcing a reboot in the morning to wake it up and "flush the system" so it continues to run smoothly. I shouldn't have to force a reboot - and the reality is, I don't need to reboot daily by any stretch - but it's nice to know the machine will be in the ideal state every morning. There are three tasks I have running on a schedule that I had to work around: OneCare tune-up, Windows Update, and SyncBack automatic backup. So this is what I'm trying:
And my computer will hibernate between 12am and 8am everyday and then reboot. I know I'm going to have to tweak these times to get it just right. Here's how I set that up.
That should do the trick. [One thing I love about blogging is that just by publishing this to my own blog for you to read, I make sure I don't lose it or forget how to do it!] How I use Windows LiveUpdate (11/23): I somehow left out Windows Live Photo Gallery which I use just about everyday. So I added it below. This post started out as an idea for a screencast months ago in preparation for our release, and I'd still love to do that someday, but I'd probably need a lot more dedicated time to do that how I'd want to. I plan to take paternity leave sometime next year so I'm bunching up a few projects (some involving screencasting) to tackle during that time. Naturally, I'm going to spend the vast majority of that time with my daughter who is the most incredible human being ever. Really, I wanted to document how I use Windows Live because, as you might expect, I do try and use it to its fullest. In fact, my PC at home could easily be the "reference machine" for the Microsoft lifestyle since I run mostly Microsoft software on it. I do still use my Mac quite a bit too, and while I still use non-Microsoft software on my PC, I do my absolute best to "eat the Microsoft dogfood" when I can. It gives me a good split between using the competition's products (Google, Firefox, Mac OS X, iPhoto, etc.) and using ours. Aside from the Windows Live client suite, I'm also running Media Center (as part of Vista Ultimate), Zune, Office 2007, Visual Studio, Office Communicator, Expression Studio, and Money 2007. The only non-Microsoft software I'm running regularly: Mozy for online backup, SyncBack for local backup, Firefox for the occasional browsing outside of IE7, and Paint.NET - which is built on the .NET Framework, so that may be sort of cheating. I love this PC; it's the Velocity Micro Cinemagix Grand Theater I blogged about back when I discovered the evils of CableCard. One of the things that's become incredibly apparent to me since setting up this machine is that when the OEM wants to, they can make one hell of a Vista machine. This box didn't come with a single byte of crapware code on it, so everything runs exactly how it should. Smooth, fast, and reliable. Vista auto-updates overnight and reports back any failures to Microsoft (so it can get smarter and smarter like the sentient machine it is) and Windows Live OneCare tunes up the disks and keeps the machine free of malware. I feel like a corporate shill saying all this, but the reality is that it's really impressive when you can have an experience like this - it just feels so "buttoned up". Back to the point: Windows Live. I've been working on it since it was codenamed "Longhorn Live" years ago and I think all things considered, it's the best solution out there for me. Windows Live to me is truly what brings Windows to life; it helps me roam and access my files, stay in touch with friends and family, and keep my machine running smoothly. Windows without Live on it feels plain these days - sort of like how Xbox must feel without Xbox LIVE. So how exactly do I use it? Hotmail for personal email with Windows Live Mail as my front door. I store all my personal email with Hotmail and Windows Live Mail provides an "Exchange like experience" on multiple PCs; it connects to my mailbox and keeps it in sync with the service. I keep all my Sent items and I archive everything I receive in a folder aptly named Archive. That's it, it's as simple as that. When I'm away from my desk, I use Windows Live for Windows Mobile to keep the inbox on my phone in sync with the service - and if I have a screen handy, I use the Hotmail web interface to check-in. Messenger for personal IM (and work IM too). Messenger and I go way back; I remember installing the first version the day it came out (I think it was in 1999) - my contact list now numbers in the mid-hundreds. I've turned off all the annoying chimes and pop-ups, but old faithful is still my preferred way to keep in touch with friends and our family on the east coast and California. I also love using Sharing Folders to transfer full-res photos back and forth with family. FolderShare to roam my Favorites, OneCare notebook, and files I'm currently working on across 4 PCs. One of the greatest inventions of all time; every time I notice that my files have synchronized automatically (usually because I'm in a panic and I need to find something) I love FolderShare even more. I've talked a lot about FolderShare over the last year; it's one of my all-time favorite pieces of technology. Windows Live Photo Gallery to organize and edit my photos. Before upgrading to WLPG I was using Windows Vista's Photo Gallery, and I was using Picasa before that (long before Google gobbled it up). I'm still working through a tagging scheme that I like (it's a LOT of work to do it right) but the fact that WLPG lets me also organize by folder, which is how I primarily organize my photos anyway, is great. I also use WLPG to organize my videos - although I have to admit that 99.9% of my videos are still on miniDV tapes. One feature I don't use much yet is "publish to Spaces/Flickr" even though I think it's elegantly designed. I like sharing photos through Messenger Sharing Folders or email (using Windows Live Mail's photo e-mail) and I'm using SmugMug to power a photo site for my daughter (long story on this one - I hope to use Windows Live someday). I'm toying with the idea of using Adobe Photoshop Lightroom for more advanced manipulations, but I haven't been able to justify the steep price tag. OneCare for virus scanning, spyware scanning (with Defender), and tune-ups. I just installed 2.0 yesterday and so far, I'm impressed with how elegant it is. I always have this sense that OneCare is working for me while I'm sleeping - and I love that. Writer for blogging efficiency. Another one of my favorite apps - this thing has kept me blogging over the years. It just works so well! SkyDrive for sharing large files (like video) with people. Spaces for projecting the online "me" - mostly through my blog... but with the latest release, I'm using Spaces more and more to catch up with friends who use it for blogging and photo sharing. Spaces Home gives me a quick summary of what's going on with my friends, and as silly as I think blogging is, I can't keep myself from writing long (pointless?) posts like this one. Having a soapbox as customizable as Spaces is something that was sorely missing for me pre-December 2004. I haven't used Windows Live Events for a real event yet - that's what happens when you have a baby, I guess - but I absolutely plan to ditch Evite for this. I've set up hundreds of test events this year while we were building it, so I can't wait to have a "real" event! And there you have it... Of course, all is available from http://get.live.com if you want to try it out for yourself. Time Management: Randy Pausch Many of you may have heard of Randy Pausch from his fantastic "Last Lecture" or his recent visit to Oprah. For anyone as interested as I am in time management, this talk he gave in 1998 is an almost perfect treatise on how to manage your time effectively. It's especially fun to hear him talk about "electronic mail" and "world wide web pages" or about how storage is cheap because he just bought a computer with 16GB (!) of hard disk space. One of the things he discusses is how little stress he has in his life because he archives all of his email as sort of extended memory - he knows that if he ever needs to get to anything, he can just search against it. He goes into detail on how cheap it is to store text in the cloud and how once people realize that, they'll be storing everything there without second thought. He uses his Dad's WebTV as the example (which used Hotmail as the backend). Foreshadowing at its best. It makes you wonder if he could have had a second career consulting for Gmail or Hotmail, which didn't truly figure out email archiving and search for 5-7 more years. Or working with David Allen on Getting Things Done, as a lot of his tactics fit that mold. Randy should have written that book first! Zune 8 is fantasticI've spent the last day and a half playing with my wife's red Zune 8 (with a burning heart tattoo on the back) and I love the thing. Yes, I know it's technically my wife's and not mine (I'm holding out for the 80GB) but she's letting me play with it since I ordered it and set it up for her. Yesterday we held the Zune up to my year-old iPod nano which I was so excited about last October, and the difference is remarkable. The iPod with its arcane menu structure and tiny little screen seemed just as outdated as iTunes does compared to the Zune software these days. Granted, the new iPod nanos aren't last year's model... but all things considered, I think the Zune 8 is a much better value, better device, and better looking than the "small, fat" new nanos. I've always been a fan of the candy bar design. The things that have impressed me so far:
All in all, I'm really impressed with the new Zunes. Unlike last year, no one can argue that they aren't a viable alternative to the iPod this holiday season. They have a ways to go in terms of mindshare, but this is a huge leap forward with respect to capabilities, brand, and design. A lot can change in one year. Amazon Kindle - a revolution?The Amazon Kindle was announced today and to me, the most important news isn't the E-ink support or the fact that you can store 200+ books on the device. It's the use of Sprint's EV-DO network as a utility that you don't have to pay for (directly). Whether or not the Kindle will be successful, it's a fantastic example of a standalone device with a backing service, available from just about anywhere. I love the idea of the cellular networks "renting" out their services to devices like this without requiring a separate $49/mo data plan. I'm sure Sprint gets a cut of the books sold since they provide the transport - and they're likely to be cash flow positive in the process. Win-Win for everyone if the device is even mildly successful. The model is actually in pretty stark contrast to Apple's iPhone which requires a Wi-Fi hotspot to purchase and download songs. That thing has a cellular radio and a very expensive data plan, and it can't even connect to its own music store. Crazy. I really do think that 5-10 years from now, we'll all look back at the Kindle as the first device that made the "network in the sky" obvious. It's just so futuristic ;) So far, I'm really liking what I'm seeing with the Kindle. The price is still way too high (as was the price of the original iPod) but the promise of a 10 ounce device that can store 200+ books is really... well, promising. I likely won't jump on this bandwagon until the DRM scheme is ironed out though - the last thing I want to do is spend a bunch of money on "books" that are tied to one device. One cool thing they're doing is associating the purchases with your Amazon ID which means you can re-download any book if you lose or upgrade the device. Digital books are the future. Just like I've cleared my home of all CDs and gone 100% digital, I can't wait to do the same thing with books. It's the side of me that just hates having "stuff" everywhere. When given the option between a physical artifact or a bunch of bytes, I almost always choose bytes. But until Amazon promises that the books I buy from them can be read on my PC, Mac, or a device like the iPhone or Sony Reader, I'm not sure it's worth it to invest in the Kindle. Make this one a no-brainer; I want to *own* the books just like I do now with paper. By the way, I totally predicted this release back in July and as usual, I have to point that out :) "The hardware will be much more appealing to book worms - possibly with digital pages that actually flip - and the fonts and rendering technology will be wondrous. The dedicated device will be connected to the net for instant download (via an iTunes-like store, probably provided by Amazon.com and B&N) of new books, magazines, newspapers, and other types of content." I've been saying for years that this is the next step for Amazon. They were beaten to digital music, but books are their domain to own. Read more -> Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device: Kindle Store Things rarely "just work"We have a long ways to go... as much as I love technology - and trust me, I really do - I spend a good 20-40% of my time "dealing" with it instead of having it just work for me. Before haters jump on me and say it's because most of my stuff comes from Microsoft, that isn't the case at all. This entry is actually about Comcast, NetGear, Motorola, and Tivo, but it could just as easily be about how my MacBook Pro keeps bugging me about some ridiculous EFI firmware update and a 131MB update to OS X. Then again, it could be about how OneCare tells me I have 3 viruses on my machine, fails to quarantine them, and then doesn't let me see which files they occur in ;) That one I haven't figured out yet. Anyway, this is story is a comedy of errors. I will try and keep it as short as I can because even thinking about it makes me want to throw my new Tivo off my balcony. It all started with the latest Comcast DVR box - my fourth one - which was recently updated from a horrible OS to an even more horrible OS. The second the update happened, we started having even MORE problems with the thing - and this is after YEARS of dealing with botched recordings. Three times in recent weeks fast forwarding through recorded TV would crash the device. But the kicker was when watching Smallville the other night, the audio track just randomly turned off. So no sound at all. [luckily I recorded it as a backup on my Media Center upstairs, so I used Xbox 360's Media Center Extender to stream the show to my TV downstairs - but having a backup plan for a DVR is ridiculous] After the latest debacle, I decided to just bite the bullet and get a Tivo HD now that it's priced reasonably (unlike the Series 3). A few hours later, a Tivo HD was ordered and a few days later, it arrived. I budgeted a few hours on Saturday to return the Comcast DVR, get a multi-stream CableCard, setup the Tivo, get it on the Wi-Fi network, and adjust the universal remote to work with it. A few hours, HAH. I unbox the Tivo yesterday and plug it in - which alone took about 30 minutes because of all the cable routing you have to do. "Welcome - powering up!" shows up on the screen. This'll be EASY I'm thinking. After a couple minutes, the screen goes blank and the TV says "Video input unavailable" or something. After another 30 minutes messing with the cables to make sure they're placed right, I call Tivo Support. The first person I talk to BLAMED COMCAST and said that Comcast is sabotaging Tivo by keeping HDMI from working correctly. She recommended I get the Series 3 or just use composite cables permanently. She wouldn't accept a return or exchange. Huh?! I just paid almost $300 for this thing and the HDMI logo is ON THE BOX and on the front of the device; it better work! I was totally civil and spoke without raising my voice once - and she HUNG UP on me. I called back and spoke to someone else who was some help. He had me plug in composite cables temporarily to see if we could pinpoint it to the HDMI. This worked - but once we went back to HDMI, it failed to "project" again. So I kept the composite cables in just to get into Settings and see if I could play with Video settings. This is where things got funny. In order to setup a Tivo, you need a phone line or an Internet connection. I don't have a landline, so I had to set the Tivo up on my secure Wi-Fi network before I could get into the Video settings. I load up my NetGear router's config to add the Tivo's MAC address to the allow list. The router crashes. When it comes back online, it's restored to factory settings. Again, HUH?! I have to set my wireless network up again, security and all. Once it's up and running, I realize it isn't getting an IP from Comcast. Turns out my Motorola cable modem "forgot" how to talk to the router. This took me another 40 minutes to figure out - which basically meant unplugging and plugging in the router and modem about 10 times in various orders until the router got an external IP. Frustration. I was incredulous at this point. I go back to the Tivo, get it on the network, mess with the video settings. Nothing. HDMI just doesn't work. So I went to Best Buy, picked up another Tivo HD, brought it home and set it up in 20 minutes. I just had a defective box (despite what their support staff tried to tell me). But the fact that the Tivo crashed my router, which in turn crashed my cable modem, is laughable. For hours I didn't have television or Internet despite all these "magical" little devices. And of course, once the Tivo was setup, my universal remote "forgot" how to turn off my stereo receiver. So I had to spend another 20 minutes in advanced settings making sure it was sending the right infrared signal. How do non techies do any of this? As an industry, we have to do better than this. Zune software - gorgeous!OK, I take back every dis |