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Last Downloaded: Fri, 10 Sep 2010 06:25:16 GMT. |
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Why Podcasts might not auto-erase iTunes doesn't honour autodelete settings for podcasts if you manually download episodes. That explains why episodes hung around when they shouldn't have.
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Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.Recently I wrote How to automatically delete podcast episodes in iTunes, but have been finding that only some of my podcast episodes disappear automatically after being played.
iTunes autodelete.
I’ve also been too busy meeting simultaneous deadlines to spend time tracking down what was going on. So I was thrilled to stumble across this explanation on the TidBITS Talk mailing list:
If you download a podcast manually (clicking Get) it will be marked as Do Not Auto Delete and iTunes will exclude it from the count of podcasts to keep. i.e. automatic deletion only occurs, and counts, those podcasts marked Auto Delete. You can right-click a podcast to change this flag, and next time iTunes does a cleanup it will include it.
iTunes autodelete.
That explains a lot. I have only a couple of podcasts where I automatically download every episode. For most of them I pick and choose individual episodes.
Still, it’s very irritating. I’ve set the podcast as a whole to auto-delete episodes. iTunes should honour that setting.
My thanks to barefootguru for the post on the mailing list.
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Little and often soon mounts up A comment on the MacTips website raised my spirits, and demonstrates the true power of little and often.
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- 200 free MacTips; 40 free tutorials And talking of solitary learning styles … I sent out Tip #200 to my MacTips Mailing list last week, marking 4 years of free weekly Macintosh Tips. If you’d like...
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.Every week for the last 10 years, with very few breaks, I’ve written a Tip for Mac users. I publish all the Tips at MacTips.info. There are almost 600 Tips in the archive now. For a couple of years the Mac Tips and Eudora Tips overlapped, meaning I wrote 2 Tips per week.
Over time I’ve added screenshots and videos, and extended from just ‘Mac’ Tips to include iPhone, iPod and iPad, as well as both Apple and third party software.
No one pays me to write the Tips, and no one pays to read them, though ads on the site do now cover domain name renewal, hosting and now VaultPress backups. Once in a blue moon someone kindly makes a donation and I buy myself a hot chocolate.
At some future time I expect my rate of ‘pay’ for writing the tips may approach 1 cent per hour.
And, since it takes me several hours each week to plan and create each Tip, I sometimes wonder why I do it at all.
This comment today on Sweep your Mac clean answers that question:
An appreciative comment on MacTips.
Miraz, thank you for the tip on OmniDiskSweeper.
I’ve been puzzling over my Incredible Shrinking Hard Drive for awhile now, and this utility very quickly highlighted the culprit: OSX Planet, a defunct desktop picture utility, had been saving a screen capture every 10 minutes — since 2008 — all day every day, into a folder in User/Library/Application Support.
Each file was less than 1.5 MB, but there were over 46,000 files I couldn’t easily find otherwise, and I regained more than 57 GB of a 120 GB drive.
It’s heartening that I could help Dennis free up almost half of his hard drive space. 57Gb is a lot!
It also shows the power of ‘little but often’. 1.5Mb every 10 minutes for a couple of years grew into 57Gb.
Which also means: if we can save a little money every day we can eventually accumulate an amount worth knowing about. And if we save a little bit of electricity, a little bit of water, reduce our rubbish by a little bit every day, it mounts up over a year, and over a population.
We often want instant results, but some things are worth waiting for.
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- MacTips right on target Press release The recent MacTips Survey showed that 45% of those who answered find the weekly Tips Usually useful and the other 55% find them Sometimes useful. That’s a 100%...
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Interesting tech for 30 August to 03 September 2010 25 Tech links I found interesting in the last week. Backscatter x-rays; malware; nanopixels, gecko feet; dry water; facial recognition; RFID kids; baby bag; hemp car; huge CMOS; iPhone stethoscope; social novels.
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- Interesting tech for 23 to 27 August 2010 25 Tech links I found interesting in the last week. Highwire robot; solar house; night vision; probable computers; tweetup; 0.6 litres per 100 km; RFID tags; bird-proof glass; megapixels; DSLRs;...
- Interesting tech for 16 to 20 August 2010 25 Tech links I found interesting in the last week. Giant tide turbine; messages on Google Earth; wound gel; Mecca clock; care hacking; pulsars; killer paint; biofuels; iris scans; plug-in...
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.I write a Tech Universe column for the NZ Herald. This is a fun assignment: Tech Universe brings 5 headlines each day about what’s up in the world of technology. Here are the links from last week.
Tech universe: Monday 30 August 2010
Tech universe: Tuesday 31 August 2010
Tech universe: Wednesday 01 September 2010
Tech universe: Thursday 02 September 2010
- I HEART MY PHONE: The iStethoscope application uses a smartphone pressed against bare skin to record and analyse your heartbeat. Sound patterns can be emailed to and assessed by professionals. If the phone’s been in a pocket, at least it should be warm.
- BIG PHONE: ViewSonic’s ViewPad 7 is both a phone and a 17 cm Android tablet. It includes twin cameras, Bluetooth, VOIP, and GPS. Now hold that to your ear.
- BIG EYE: Canon’s latest CMOS camera sensor is 20 centimetres square and extremely sensitive to light. Shoot video at 60 frames per second with only 0.3 lux of illumination. The latest spy gadget of choice.
- GRAPHENE ONIONS: And to power the monster camera, perhaps a little onion juice. A new super capacitor uses nanodiamonds between ‘onion’ layers of graphene. An organic electrolyte makes them discharge up to 200 volts every second. The energy could charge a cellphone and be stored in a battery.
- SWIM BUDDY: The Finis Swimsense is a swimming computer. Wear it on your wrist where it captures stroke type and count, laps, calories burned and distance. Upload data after a swim via USB. And remember: don’t be looking at your wrist, just keep swimming.
Tech universe: Friday 03 September 2010
- SOCIAL NOVELS: The PULP platform for creating digital novels provides text, but authors can add other media such as audio or movies, or work as a team. Readers can create profiles, earn badges and connect with other readers. Like.
- CHEAP CHIPS: Rice University’s new computer memory chip uses exclusively silicon. It can be packed much more densely than flash memory and uses hardly any power. The chips are simple to make, scalable and cheap. Supersize it?
- FOLD-UP CAR: Nagoya Institute of Technology prototyped a unique fold-up electric car. The X-Frame changes shape according to the number of passengers and the terrain, then folds up for storage. Short wide parking slots?
- BIOSENSE BABIES: Exmobaby pyjamas monitor baby’s heart rate, emotional state and behaviour and wirelessly transmit data to a nearby computer or cellphone. The software learns and improves over time, in the way voice recognition software does. If you have twins don’t mix up the pyjamas.
- RGB MARS: Google Mars brings us detailed scientific maps of Mars in Visible and Infrared light and by elevation. Locate spacecraft and features such as dunes or canyons. Red, green and blue — they’re all there.
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From black and white to rainbows The pace of innovation is increasing. We can't even imagine today the devices that will be essential in 2015. Our pot of gold is flexibility. We need to be open to the possibilities each new day brings.
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Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.It’s almost 20 years now since I had a job encouraging community organisations to use email. That was even before we started using the Web in New Zealand. In fact, few people had even heard of the Internet then.
The training sessions would start with the words: There’s a thing called the Internet and you can use it to send messages to other people… .
The most common responses were along the lines of Why would we want to do that? We can send letters.
The 90s: computers, faxes and the web
In those 20 years though, we’ve come a long way. Now many community organisations have not only grown used to using desktop or laptop computers, but also often rely on email, and commonly visit web pages. Many also run their own website.
The upheaval of all we know
But now we’re comfortable with the technology of the 90s it’s all gone and changed. In the last 5 years, little by little, we’ve experienced a total revolution.
The boundaries have all blurred; capabilities and features have all leaked out to smudge things nearby.
In the good old days of black and white, just a few years ago, computers were computers and phones were phones. A camera took photos, and a GPS device used satellite signals to tell you where you were and where you were going.
Each gadget had a clear job to do, and it knew its place.
Chips with everything
In the rainbow of 2010 that world no longer exists. Computer chips have found a place in almost everything, along with cameras, GPS, speech and networking features such as WiFi or 3G cellphone signals.
Smartphones include GPS, Internet and cameras, while cameras may include GPS and use the Internet to automatically send photos to a website.
Computers come in all shapes and sizes, maybe including network games, video cameras and the ability to show TV, or video chat with friends and family.
Game consoles may allow you to check in with friends on Facebook, and to play movies.
GPS receivers may display Google Maps and read travel directions aloud.
MP3 players may record and play movies, along with music.
Ebook readers may read books aloud, and download new works directly from the Internet.
Starwalk.
A device like the iPad may allow you to hold it up in front of a constellation of stars at night then automatically sense where you’re looking and display information about that part of the sky. (See Starwalk.)
The pot of gold
There’s a lot of work going on with robots, artificial intelligence, polymers, 3D and energy. It seems pretty clear that gadgets are going to become even more confusing over the next 5 years. The thing is, the pace of innovation is increasing. We can’t even imagine today the devices that will be essential in 2015.
Our pot of gold is flexibility. We need to be open to the possibilities each new day brings.
Written by Miraz Jordan for, and reproduced from CommunityNet Aotearoa Panui, August 2010. This article has been modified for publication here.
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