Monday, November 29, 2010

Make AirPrint Work With Non-AirPrint-Compatible Printers


Like many users, I was pretty excited about iOS 4.2's AirPrint feature--until I learned that it would work only with AirPrint-compatible printers. Sorry, but I'm not ditching my perfectly good laser and inkjet models just so I can beam the occasional photo or document from my iPhone.

Fortunately, I don't have to. Following some instructions over at news blog Javox, I learned how to make AirPrint work with just about any printer.

I won't repeat the step-by-step here, as it's pretty straightforward. However, I will note some important items the author left out:

The download page for the required AirPrint files is rife with pop-ups, so make sure your browser security is up to date. I also hosted it here if you'd rather avoid that link altogether.

When you open the Command prompt (as described in Step 4), make sure you run it as an administrator. In Vista and Windows 7, you do this by clicking Start, typing cmd, right-clicking the entry that appears, and then choosing "Run as administrator."
On my Windows 7 system, I never got the Windows Firewall prompt as described in Step 6. Consequently, when I went to choose a printer on my iPhone, both my printers appeared--but with padlocks next to each. To access them, I had to manually add AirPrint as an "allowed program" in Windows Firewall.

If you encounter other problems getting this to work, you may need to enable a guest account in Windows (as described by this commenter), then stop and restart the AirPrint service.

I'm happy to report that after jumping through several of these hoops, I can now print to both my Brother HL-2170W and Brother MFC-490CW. Works like a charm.

Mac users may want to check out AirPrint Hacktivator 1.7, which accomplishes more or less the same thing but with a little more automation.


Read more: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-19512_7-20023976-233.html#ixzz16iLikPTR

Monday, November 8, 2010

RockMelt Browser Is Social, But Not Obnoxiously So


Is it worth switching to a new browser? Marc Andreessen never had to force users to ask that question when he built Mosaic. For most people, it was their first browser.

But now he's backing the development of another browser, RockMelt. This browser is not perfect, but it does show that there's room yet in the market. If Facebook built a browser, it would probably look a lot like this.

This has been tried before. The other social Web browser, Flock, integrates Facebook features. Also, like Flock (at least the new 3.0 version), RockMelt is built from Chromium, the same Google-developed open toolkit underneath the Chrome browser.


Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-19882_3-20022134-250.html?tag=mncol#ixzz14jbIeogQ

Monday, November 1, 2010

Windows Phone 7, Canadian Xbox 360s Get Netflix Streaming Today

Microsoft may have missed out on being the first to stream Netflix in 1080p with surround sound, but it's still improving access to the service with a new app for Windows Phone 7 arriving on the same day a dashboard update brings Watch Instantly access to Xbox 360-owning Canadians. The free app should be easily found in the Marketplace Video Store, but just in case you don't have an HTC Surround or similar device in your immediate vicinity check out this demo from March embedded after the break.