Category: Computer Software

Times Up Kidz- Parental Control Software and Time Management

TypicalLimitsI came to the realization a few weeks ago that I had to move beyond the built in parental controls in Windows to something a little more flexible to limit the amount of time my son was spending playing games.  The problem I had with the Windows parental controls is that it only allowed me to set times of the day that he was able to play.  Our schedule varies greatly from day to day, and with only one game computer in the house sometimes he would not be able to play at a certain time and would come crying to me saying that he had been cheated.  After digging around through a bunch of other parental control software titles like NetNanny and Cybercop I finally downloaded and tried TimesUpKidz, and found that all my prayers had been answered.

The thing that makes TimesUpKidz so nice is how customizable it is.  I can create settings for any user with an account on the machine and set time limits in many different ways.  The way I finally set things was to limit time to one hour of access on school days, with a little bonus time on the weekends.  The system keeps a log of how much of this time my child uses each day.  If you truly want to teach some time management skills set TimesUpKidz to provide a set amount of play time per week.  If the child uses it all up in one day, so be it, they will not be able to log in again until the next week.  You can also set the system to require a child to take a break after a certain amount of play time, say like taking a fifteen minute break after playing for one hour.

The TimesUpKidz program obviously has some interesting applications for other uses as well.  For those who spend too much time behind their computer set the system to force a break every hour or two or simply set limits on how much surfing you can do in one sitting.

The TimesUpKidz software comes with a free thirty day trial, and purchasing a license only costs $29.99.  I am not the type of person that buys a lot of shareware software but TimesUpKidz does everything I need it to and does it exactly the way I need it done in terms of controlling my child’s access to the computer.  Highly recommended!

Rhythm Heaven Review for Nintendo DSi

Rhythm Heaven For The Nintendo DS

Rhythm Heaven For The Nintendo DS

Music oriented video games tend to be a mixed bag.  The vast majority are pure mind numbing entertainment with very little extrinsic value in terms of learning a new skill or developing an ability.  In Rhythm Heaven for the Nintendo DS however, the challenges are both visual and auditory, and depending on your level of musicianship they can be quite an intellectual challenge.

What is Rhythm Heaven All About?

Rhythm Heaven’s game play is based on developing a strong sense of rhythmic accuracy but is done in a fun, cartoonish way.  A player makes his way over fifty mini games, each one with a slightly different theme but with varying degrees of required accuracy.  The last of every five games is a remix, where the four preceding games are thrown together in random succession and with increasing levels of difficulty.

Each level has it’s own threshold past which a player must pass before they can move on to the next mini game.  The level of accuracy varies between games, but for some it will take even experienced musicians several tries before they are accurate enough to move on.  One downside to the game is that the individual mini games are always the exact same thing.  There is no real variety or randomness to the play, or at least it seems like it.  For beginners and those that are rhythmically challenged though, this actually can work out to be a good thing as the game play is simple yet addicting in many different ways.

The first  few games include:

  • Built To Scale – Flick the screen with the stylus at the correct time, just as the scale gets to “sol” so that the pin is shoved into the widget and assembled correctly.
  • Glee Club – You control one member of a vocal trio, making him sing or stop singing in rhythm with the other singers.  Flicking the mouse makes him do a cool little scream!
  • Fillbots – You fill up robots by accurately pumping fluid into them in time to the music.  Four beats for the small robots, eight beats worth for the big ones.
  • Fan Club – A basic call and response game where you clap in different patterns based on what the singer has just said.  It’s harder than it sounds!
  • Remix 1 – A mashup of the previous four games at a faster tempo.
  • Rhythm Rally – Ping pong that requires a very high level of rhythmic accuracy.  Flick the screen at exactly the correct beat or you hit the ball out of bounds.  Much harder than it looks!
  • Shoot Em’Up – A space invader inspired call and response game where you copy the complex rhythms that are played.
  • Bluebirds – Similar to Fan Club but with an avian  military style theme.
  • Moai Doo-Wop – Two Moai (Easter Island statues) sing and jive in another call and response type game.
  • Remix 2-  A remix of the previous four games.
  • Love Lizards – Scrape a lizard’s back  in time with the music to make the other lizard fall in love with you.
  • Crop Stomp – Stomp on the down beat to pick the veggies, flick on the eighth note up beat to toss them into the basket, flick on the sixteenth note to grab moles and throw them out of the garden.
  • Freeze Frame – Snap photos of race cars as the cross the finish line with lots of off-beat rhythms.  As the game progresses more of the screen gets covered, requiring you to use your ears more and more to time your shots
  • The Dazzles – A cheerleading kind of competition, trying to get a contestant to cheer and move at the appropriate time to the music.
  • Remix 3 – Fast paced remix of the previous four games.
  • More games too!

Other reviewers of this game have not been so kind.  While many of the Rhythm Heaven reviews from other sites all seem to hit the point that it is a fairly tough game to win at.  While that may be true to some extent it is still a lot of fun and rather addicting as you try to get your rhythmic timing just right.  Yes, it is a bit harder to complete especially if you are a non-musician, but unlike other games where you practice a level with the only reward being that you finish the game, completing Rhythm Heaven can actually help you improve your rhythmic accuracy on a visual and auditory level.  As anyone that plays it will attest to, you can’t solely rely on the visuals to pass the levels.  You have to use your ear and develop a very keen internal sense of rhythm in order to advance through the game.

As video games go Rhythm Heaven for the Nintendo DS is a good play for all ages.

Pros: A fun, brain intensive game that almost anyone can enjoy playing.  The mini games are inventive and very original. A good edutainment alternative for aspiring musicians to play around with.

Cons: Relatively rapid completion of the game if you have a good sense of rhythm and beat.  Although it is rated E, children under age nine or so may have problems getting accurate enough to move on to the higher levels.

Wii Sports Resort Review


wiisportsresortWhen we first got our Wii all we had was the good old Wii Sports game and Wii Music.  The kids rather quickly got tired of Wii Music but Wii Sports has stuck with us for over a year and is still a popular game with our four kids.  When I heard that Wii Sports Resort had been released I decided that I had to go out and get it despite the rather high cost of ownership.

For those unfamiliar with Wii Sports Resort it includes twelve different games ranging from classics like a souped up version of the old bowling game to more unique titles like wakeboarding, archery, and fencing.  Each of the games is well rendered, with easy enough rules even for my three year old to figure out how to play.  My only problem with the game is the price tag.  Not the $50 for the game (many popular Nintendo titles seem to start out at that price level) but with the required additional controllers that you have to buy to play the games.  Wii Sports Resort uses a new enhanced motion detection accessory called the Wii Motion Plus.  It attaches to the end of the Wii remote and comes with a special extended length jacket to put the remote in.  The big problem is that each remote needs a Wii Motion Plus, and each adaptor costs an additional $20 (the game ships with one included).  If a friend comes over to play and brings his remote it will not work unless he also has a Wii Motion Plus to go with it.  In another bit of annoyance for certain games (like Mario Cart) you have to take the Wii Motion Plus off if you want to use a steering wheel or if your hands are too small to be comfortable (such as with small children).  Removing and reinstalling the Wii Motion Plus is relatively easy, but it is still an annoyance due to the special effort you have to make to get the thing in and out of the new, longer jacket.

Overall though, I can’t complain about the games.  Even the old games like bowling are definately enhanced with the new controller.  My three year old who used to bowl 270 now gets a more reasonable 100 or so.   In the end, if you can afford to invest $70 for the game and two controllers then Wii Sports Resort is a resonable buy for the amount of game play involved and will provide your family with hours of interactive entertainment.   Would I buy it again, sure,

Five Best Open Source Apps For Windows

Screenshot of Gimp 2.6

Screenshot of Gimp 2.6

Infoworld today released a slide show presentation of their take on the ten best open source software applications for Windows.  I’m not sure that I totally agree with all of them, so I have my own list of great free, open source apps that no Windows user should be without:

  1. Open Office -  I agree with them on this one.  While I long for the day that I can use my MS Access databases seamlessly with OpenOffice, in almost every other respect this open source software program has taken away 90% of my need to pay for MS Office.  It opens, edits, and saves Word, Excel, and Powerpoint documents with ease, and the development community behind it is always releasing new updates to add features and fix problems.
  2. Filezilla – This is the other app that I agree with Infoworld on.  I use it almost every day to manage the many different web sites that I am in charge of.  You can’t ask for a better free FTP client.
  3. VideoLan Client (VLC) -  While I am also a fan of Media Player Classic, VLC has really made me a big fan of late.  It is a small yet powerful media player that has been able to play almost any file that I ask it to.  There is also a version that can fit on a USB stick to take with you when using someone else’s computer.
  4. The GIMP – I consider myself to be a very novice photographer, but I still make use of the more powerful tools and abilities of the GIMP to edit my photos.  The interface and controls take a little bit of practice, but once you get the hang of it you will no longer have a need for paying hundreds of dollars for Photoshop.
  5. Audacity – I also use Audacity all of the time as a music educator.  This simple, free application is a modest yet powerful audio recorder and editor that can be used for podcasting, mixing your own remix of your favorite tunes, or cleaning up recordings of live performances.

Tweetdeck- Better than Twitter ala carte

Tweetdeck Screenshot

Tweetdeck Screenshot

I have been on Twitter for about a year now but never really USED it until recently when I tried out an application called Tweetdeck.  I have tried using others like Twhirl and Firefox based Twitter clients, but none have given me the functionality and easy organization that I have found in Tweetdeck.

Tweetdeck allows a user to split their Twitter deluge up into different panes.  One pane is specifically for tweets by people you follow, another shows you the most recent tweets where others have retweeted something that you posted or where you are mentioned by your @username.  A third pane show me all of my direct messages.  Additional panes can be added as well, for example I have one pane that is a search that updates any tweets on Twitter that match a certain set of keywords.  Replying, retweeting, or viewing a user’s profile is quick and easy, just a right mouse click away.  The system also has a built in URL shortening service link and a variety of other useful features.

The only minor annoyance is that Tweetdeck uses the Adobe Air platform to run on.  You have to download and install Adobe Air (free download) before you can then install and run the Tweetdeck application.  The first  time I installed Tweetdeck I also had a little problem where some of the settings got corrupted.  I finally found the answer to the problem on the Tweetdeck forums, but I also must say that the Tweetdeck support community is very fast in responding to suggestions and questions.  Not bad for a free product!

Try it out!  I don’t think I would be using Twitter to the extent I am doing so without its help.  It has made using Twitter much easier and much faster in almost every way.

Geocaching App For iPhone and iPod Touch

geocaching_appOne of the great new activities to come out of the digital revolution is something called Geocaching. Essentially it is a hide and seek kind of game where individuals equipped with a GPS device hide a small treasure of some kind somewhere in the world (yes, world!). Using coordinates given on any of a number of web sites potential treasure seekers enter the coordinates into their own GPS unit and set off in search of the prize.

Depending on the person that set up the cache the prize may be something as basic as a simple film canister that holds a pencil stub and a paper log to record the time and date that you found the cache. More interesting caches can contain items that you are supposed to trade trinkets for, say swapping out a hat pin or a button in exchange for one contained in the cache. It’s a fun activity and can be done by almost anyone, especially someone with an iPhone!

In all of geocaching there is one web site that is the best, geocache.com. It holds the largest database of caches and geocaching information. The new, aptly named, Geocaching app for the iPhone and iPod Touch connects directly to this database allowing you to quickly search for any caches that might be in your general area. Once you find a cache that sounds like fun the app uses your iPhone’s GPS receiver to guide you in the general direction of the cache. Once you arrive at the destination it is up to you to find it of course, but half the fun is finding the cache in the first place!

Amateur Composers Lend Me Your Ears

If you consider yourself an amateur musician or composer you might want to dabble a bit with the Noteflight music notation editor, and online music editor that lets you write and print music notation without having to install any expensive software like Finale or Sibelius.  I’ve played around with Noteflight on several occasions and I really do like the interface.  It is fairly easy to write music using this online service and the price couldn’t be better (free).

One of the things they are trying to do to draw more attention to the site is offering a $500 prize to the composer who submits the best arrangement of good old Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.  So go online and take a look at Noteflight and try your hand at arranging Mozart’s classic in your own uniqe way.

Digital Chocolate iPhone Game Sale

Tower Bloxx by Digital Chocolate

Tower Bloxx by Digital Chocolate

I am a fan of several iPhone games from the company named Digital Chocolate.  I have spent many lazy hours flinging penguins around playing their Crazy Penguin Catapult Lite game, but now I have a reason to splurge and buy the full version.  Not just of the Crazy Penguin Catapult game, but of several of Digital Chocolate’s other iPhone games such as Tower Bloxx Deluxe and Jungle Bloxx (a game very similar to the popular Boom Blox game for the Nintendo Wii.  All of these games, and several others from the same company are on sale for a short time for just $.99 each.  Check them out on the iTunes Store while they are still on sale!

WordPress Themes