Some Beta Programs Work Well. Others…Not So Much
By Cate Eales
Appeared July 6, 2006 on castanet.net
It has been an exciting couple of
weeks at Real Life Internet Solutions. Google released a new Beta version
of Picasa2 which is very much fun. And I've been testing a new, free
firewall that gave me a headache.
Beta software is far from a final version, so you know there are going
to be shortcomings. But some things are more trouble than others.
Picasa2: Now with Web Photo Album
Picasa2 is a free download from Google. It will help you find, organize,
and even edit the photos on your computer. It's been around for some time
now, and I've recommended it before. It takes a little getting used to,
but once you do it's a very helpful tool. You can get the stable, non-Beta
version here.
Now, the Picasa2 folks have released a Beta version and added a couple of
really neat features, including the ability to upload your photos to an
online photo album, much like
Flickr.
I downloaded and installed the Beta software. That went well. The new
version recognized my photos and kept my settings from the previous
version. And now there's a new button that says Web Album. I selected the
pictures to upload and clicked through a wizard that let me name and
upload the photos to an online album. Cool! I made the album "Public"
which means that anyone can view it. I'd send you there except…I don't
know how to do that yet. Hmmm. I can invite specific email addresses, but
I don't know how the public would stumble on that album. Oh, well. If you
like the version of Picasa2 that you have and want to be able to put your
photos online and invite friends and family, this is a good way to go.
You can get an invitation to the Picasa2 Beta from your gmail account. If
you don't have a gmail account and you want one without having to provide
a cell phone number, send an email to
cate@rlis.com. I still have some gmail invitations left.
But Wait! There's More!
Besides the Web Photo Album feature, the Picasa2 Beta will let you link
photos to Google Earth.
So if you vacation somewhere exotic and you end up with digitized photos,
you can create a file for Google Earth users that will pinpoint the
location of your photos, and link to them. Apparently. I have ALMOST got
that part figured out.
And speaking of Google Earth, someone has uploaded the route for the Tour
de France, including all the waypoints. And someone else has uploaded a
file that will show the live progress of each stage. The
Google Earth Blog has more information about this. (HINT: Turn off the
live tracking when the race is over, or your Google Earth will continue to
refresh itself every 20 seconds. That can be annoying.)
Beware the Beta Firewall
A couple of weeks ago I installed Comodo Personal Firewall, which is in
Beta. I wanted to see if it's as good as or better than
ZoneAlarm Free, which currently has some issues with McAfee
anti-virus. You can read more about Comodo
here.
I do not recommend it at this point. It's still in Beta, and it's not for
the faint of heart.
CPF installed without incident, and immediately started asking me
questions about programs I ran that were trying to access the internet. It
passed the tests for inbound and outbound effectiveness, and it's kind of
pretty. That's all good. Then the bad things happened.
It killed my email client,
Mozilla
Thunderbird. I checked the Comodo Personal Firewall discussion forums
and found that this was a known problem and implemented the workaround.
After that, the mail worked fine.
A few days later, after an update, it killed my internet connection.
Windows reported the connection was fine, (it just didn't work!) and
eventually I narrowed this down to a problem with
DNS.
I did all the geeky things you're supposed to do, like shut down the
computer and start over, make coffee, check that the DNS service was
running and then flush the DNS cache, and none of it worked except the
coffee. Finally, (ah ha!) I remembered that the firewall had updated
itself, and I had a look at what it was doing. Somehow it had created (or
had allowed me to create?) a rule where everything was being blocked from
my wired network adaptor. Interesting. You have to love a firewall that
will let you do that!
I fixed that, too, but over the next week the doggone thing just got
stupider. It forgot rules. It kept asking me about the same programs I'd
already authorized. It interfered with my
AVG anti-virus
updates. It gave me an impressive headache.
I uninstalled it and put my ZoneAlarm Free back into service. It may not
be pretty, but at least it remembers what I tell it! I hope Comodo
Personal Firewall improves, because ZoneAlarm is trying to become a
"Security Suite" instead of just a hard-working firewall. But I wouldn't
advise anyone who is prone to headaches to try Comodo right now. It's not
as hard-working as I was.
Thank you to everyone who emailed with questions, comments, and keyboard
shortcuts. I'm through fighting with the firewall, and I promise I'll pass
on the information soon! Don't forget you can browse the archives for this
column 24/7 at
http://rlis.com/column.htm.
Links:
Wikipedia definition of Beta software:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_stage#Beta
Picasa2 (non-Beta, stable version)
http://picasa.google.com/
Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/
Google Earth
http://earth.google.com/
Tour de France on Google Earth Blog
http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2006/05/tour_de_france.html
Comodo Personal Firewall
http://www.personalfirewall.comodo.com/
Zone Alarm
http://www.zonelabs.com/store/content/home.jsp
Mozilla Thunderbird
http://www.mozilla.com/thunderbird/
Wikipedia article on DNS
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name_system
AVG Free anti-virus
http://free.grisoft.com/doc/1
Getting Along With Your Computer Column Archives
http://rlis.com/column.htm
Get Cate's column by email
http://www.feedblitz.com/f/?Sub=20618
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Cate Eales has been helping people make online computing safe, accessible
and fun for over 20 years. She lives in Kelowna with her husband, Eric,
and her dog, Sandy. Cate is a partner in Real Life Internet Solutions,
helping individuals and small businesses with virus, spyware and malware
eradication; personal computer training and management; digital image
management; music transfer; and website design, hosting and management.
Email Cate at cate@rlis.com with your
comments, suggestions, or questions. To browse the column archives, visit
the Real Life Internet Solutions website at
www.rlis.com.
©
Cate Eales 2005 – All Rights Reserved
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