Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Hands-on with RockMelt, the underwhelming Chrome 6-based Facebook-connected Web browser

Filed under:

The day you've all been dreading has finally come: RockMelt, a Web browser that forces you to log into Facebook, is here. Lee covered its release earlier today, but now I'm going to give you my hands-on impressions Looking through the accompanying gallery is by far the best way to understand what RockMelt is, but read on if you want my opinions.

RockMelt is, for all intents and purposes, Chrome 6 with a couple of attractive sidebars. On the left is the 'Friends Edge', where you can see your online Facebook friends, and on the right is the 'App Edge', where you interact with activity feeds. There's also a 'Share' widget up near the address bar... but that's it. As I said, this is Chrome with some sidebars that could easily be added with extensions.

But as they're not extensions that you can simply add to your current installation of Chrome, you're forced into using RockMelt and its antiquated Chrome 6 underpinnings. You're also forced into logging into Facebook -- which takes ages every time you load up the browser. I guess it's downloading my entire profile every time I connect (incidentally, if you try to browse before RockMelt has finished scraping data from Facebook, the browser crashes and refuses to restart.)
Once you get going, though, it's actually quite fun. Sharing links with friends, or Twitter, is very easy. The interface is attractive and easy to use. Chatting with Facebook friends pops up a new window, which is handy, and the search box displays results on top of your current page, in a layer, rather than navigating you away from your current page. You can also search for friends from both the address and search boxes -- neat. Third-party extensions can be installed as normal onto the right-hand bar -- but so what? Chrome could already do that.

No matter which way you look at it, FaceMelt RockMelt is a proprietary browser that offers a Chrome 6 base with a bunch of extensions. You don't get hardware acceleration, or up-to-date versions of the WebKit layout engine or V8 JavaScript engine. Then there are the security concerns -- with Firefox, Chrome and Internet Explorer you have industry-leading support from three huge companies. With RockMelt you have a small team of coders working with a deprecated version of Chromium. Their proprietary extensions are probably riddled with holes, too -- and considering RockMelt hasn't published its source code, the first sign of a security breach will be a zero-day attack.

Awesome.

Hands-on with RockMelt, the underwhelming Chrome 6-based Facebook-connected Web browser originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TERADATA TELETECH HOLDINGS

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

How To Use Your Android Phone as a Remote For YouTube on Your Computer or Google TV [Androidapps]

For ages, YouTube-watching posture was essentially this: slumping forward over your computer and squinting your eyes at a clip. But Google's been trying to make things more comfortable, first with Leanback and now with the YouTube Remote app for Android. More »


ORACLE OPENWAVE SYSTEMS ON SEMICONDUCTOR NVIDIA

AMD teases Bobcat Fusion APUs again, delivers Atom-busting performance (video)

A quick refresher: Bobcat is AMD's low-power Accelerated Processing Unit that can handle both computational and graphical duties, Ontario and Zacate are the chips built upon that core, and Brazos is the overall platform that they'll be doing their work on. Clear enough? We hope so. AMD has finally allowed a few tech pubs to get their hands on Brazos-based systems and, along with feedback about their experience, the guys have come back with some added spec notes. There'll be two initial Zacate options, the dual-core E-350 running at 1.6GHz or the single-core E-240 clocked at 1.5GHz, while Ontario will offer 1GHz dual-core and 1.2GHz single-core variants. Let's not forget that both are intended for netbooks and lithe desktop computers before writing them off as too slow -- which would be a mistake anyway as the sites that got a chance to play with the E-350 reported very respectable performance. HardOCP dared to try out Crysis and managed to get it chugging along at a resolution around 720p, whereas Hot Hardware witnessed a 1080p video clip being played back perfectly smoothly alongside an instance of Hyper Pi maxing out the CPU load. Benchmark results will have to wait for another day, but feel free to peruse the links below for a more detailed breakdown of the new architecture.

Continue reading AMD teases Bobcat Fusion APUs again, delivers Atom-busting performance (video)

AMD teases Bobcat Fusion APUs again, delivers Atom-busting performance (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Nov 2010 01:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceHardOCP, Tech Report, Hot Hardware, PC Perspective  | Email this | Comments

SKYWORKS SOLUTIONS SILICON LABORATORIES SI INTERNATIONAL SEAGATE TECHNOLOGY

Flexible metamaterial could make your next invisibility cloak rather more comfortable

Flexible metamaterial could make your next invisibility cloak more cloak-likeMetamaterials have a lot of potential future applications, but only one of them really gets our geeky senses tingling: invisibility cloaks. Previous theoretical examples we've seen were built upon rigid silicon substrates, meaning they'd be about as comfortable to wear as a motherboard jacket with ISA sleeves. But, a new material at the University of St. Andrews has been created that offers similar light-bending properties in a flexible package, crafted by the formation of a membrane upon a release layer, etching microscopic gold bars upon it, and then removing the release layer to have just the blingy membrane left behind. It can be tuned to bend various wavelengths, with the team having success working at wavelengths as short as 620nm -- you know, red. If there's one problem it's the size of the thing, with current prototypes measuring just 5 x 8mm, but it is said to be "scalable to industrial levels," meaning next-year's Harry Potter costume could be the best one ever.

Flexible metamaterial could make your next invisibility cloak rather more comfortable originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Nov 2010 15:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Technology Review  |  sourceNew Journal of Physics  | Email this | Comments


SYNOPSYS SYNNEX SYMANTEC SYKES ENTERPRISES INORATED

Review: Call of Duty: Black Ops Redefines Modern Warfare [Video]

Black Ops slips players into the counter-espionage and abiding fear of the Cold War, while serving as a powerful link between the World War II games that came before it and the likely countless modern shooters that will come in its wake. More »


ORACLE OPENWAVE SYSTEMS ON SEMICONDUCTOR NVIDIA

Use VPN On Your iPad To Protect Privacy | Plus Special Giveaway Inside

When it comes to online privacy while using your iPad you need all the protection you can get. Luckily Golden Frog provides a service called VyprVPN that keeps your data safe. You may not be aware but your surfing as well as other online activities are constantly being tracked and recorded by your ISP and [...]

NVIDIA NUANCE COMMUNICATIONS NOVELLUS SYSTEMS VERIFONE HOLDINGS

Large Hadron Collider wants to make mini Big Bangs, Sheldon and Leonard disapprove

The Large Hadron Collider has been busily colliding protons since it opened last year, but a new set of experiments starting later this month could tell us more about the beginnings of the universe than we've ever known before. At CERN, where the LHC is housed in Geneva, scientists will attempt to create mini Big Bangs (the full-sized one is generally accepted as having created the actual universe about 13.7 billion years ago). The process will involve shooting lead ions through the 17-mile long collider, and accelerating them to relativistic speeds before colliding them head-on with protons. According to popular wisdom this should cause an explosion resulting in the creation of brand spanking new particles. Although similar experiments have been conducted on a much smaller scale at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, this will be the first time scientists have attempted to accurately recreate conditions exactly like the Big Bang. Hit the source link for the full story.

Large Hadron Collider wants to make mini Big Bangs, Sheldon and Leonard disapprove originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 17:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Extreme Tech  |  sourceDiscovery  | Email this | Comments

TRIDENT MICROSYSTEMS TRANSACTION SYSTEMS ARCHITECTS TOTAL SYSTEM SERVICES TNS