Rosetta Stone Vietnamese Level 1-3 Set

Rosetta Stone Vietnamese Level 1-3 Set

I have Rosetta Stone V4 TOTALe: French Level 1-3 Set, so I bought Rosetta Stone Vietnamese Level 1-3 Set with some expectations. I was a little disappointed in the Vietnamese program, because it has so much potential. Below are some of my observations.

SOME THINGS TO KNOW

Before purchasing Vietnamese TOTALe, there are a few things you might like to know:

* Vietnamese TOTALe teaches in the Northern accent
* Vietnamese TOTALe only goes up to level 3 (other languages may go up to level 5)
* TOTALe may only be installed on one computer
* Up to five learners may be added (those learners may use Rosetta Course freely but must pay for access to Rosetta World and Studio)
* 6 month guarantee only available if purchased directly from Rosetta Stone (must be CD-ROM version)
* Children under thirteen may not access Rosetta World and Studio.

ROSETTA COURSE

I actually found the flash cards to be much more difficult in Vietnamese than in French. Of course, Vietnamese is a more difficult language for a Westerner to learn. They don’t start out with simple words — it’s partial sentences.

Basically, words flash on the screen and the learners match them with the cards. Later, we type them or we say them. Word association comes slowly but surely. My kids picked up rather quickly.

The word recognition is weaker in Vietnamses than in French. I could say things completely wrong and Vietnamese TOTALe takes it. There is an option to set the sensitivity. I just haven’t gotten around to it. The default gives lots of leeway.

On the software, there are a lot fewer speakers in Vietnamese than in French. I find that a drawback, because it’s good to hear the same words and phrases from many people.

STUDIO

In Rosetta Studio, learners meet with a native speaking coach where they go over some cards and the coach quizzes the learners on the vocabulary and phrases they’ve learned in the Rosetta Course.

My experience in Vietnamese Studio hasn’t been the most fantastic. I guess I compare it to the French Studio sessions and there are so many limitations that I’ve run into.

For one, the hours are very limited compared to French Studio sessions. At one point, no sessions were available for a few weeks during December. Admittedly, someone must have been on vacation, but there was no replacement until I emailed to complain. Now, there are about two slots per day from which to choose. It varies week to week. Sometimes, only three days a week are available. Compare that to French, where I can pretty much schedule any time of the day, even during December.

Secondly, I seem to have audio problems with the Vietnamese coach, whereas there are no problems with the myriad of French coaches I’ve had. It’s just the Vietnamese coach. I think maybe she has a bad connection, but they say it’s a problem on my end.

Finally, the coach (speaking with a Northern accent) has a problem with me using any phrase or word other than what’s in the “book.” Although I may respond correctly, she will correct me until I say it exactly as it says on her phrasebook. Okay, I’m not great at Vietnamese, which is why I’m taking it, so I ask native speakers for help, and they agree that I’m speaking correctly, it’s just not what’s in her phrasebook. French coaches will go on, as long as I’m communicating correctly. Also, this same coach has me repeating phrases I’ve already said. She does not emphasize that I’m pronouncing anything incorrectly as the French coaches do. I just repeat exactly as before and then we move on. Very frustrating. These have to be quirks of this particular coach. I mention it because it is a problem for me, as I have gotten the same coach each time I’ve signed on.

ROSETTA WORLD

Hours are very limited (1 PM to 5 PM Pacific Time). One may play solo games or read and listen to stories at any time.

Games involving two players can be played outside of Rosetta World hours, but no one is ever around outside those hours. Even within those hours, there are very few players, maybe one or two at the most.

Duo mode involves playing with other Vietnamese learners. In Simbio mode, players play against English learners who are native Vietnamese speakers. Games may be played on keyboard or via mic. I find keyboarding in Vietnamese very difficult because of the accent marks on the letters so I only use the mic. Other players are only comfortable on keyboard, but it’s mic vs. mic or keyboard vs. keyboard.

I have never ever seen any Simbio (native Vietnamese speakers learning English) players. In French TOTALe, it is rare. In Vietnamese TOTALe, it is non-existent.

One shortfall of the games is a lack of Chatonium, where the players freely chat for a short, timed session. This is a great way to improve conversational skills and I wonder why it is not available. I have it in French Rosetta World and it is invaluable.

SOUTHERN VIETNAMESE VS. NORTHERN VIETNAMESE

Rosetta Stone TOTALe focuses on teaching Northern Vietnamese. Apart from accent, basic vocabulary is often different. While native born Southern Vietnamese seem to understand those of either accent, it can be confusing to new learners to deal with the difference in vocabulary, which can be completely different. Tonal accent differences are less of a problem. Although they are markedly different to native speakers, the tones are so similar to Western ears that Westerners don’t seem to distinguish them well. Therefore, it doesn’t confuse them. I cite my children as an example of that. Pronunciation differences can be a problem, but just a few corrections are needed and they move on just fine.

Most Vietnamese expatriates are South Vietnamese, although there are also plenty of Northerners.

RECOMMENDATION

If you already own Rosetta Stone TOTALe in another language, it would be better to buy Rosetta Stone Homeschool Vietnamese Level 1-3 Set including Audio Companion. That way, you could install the language CD’s for Vietnamese into your Rosetta Stone TOTALe. This will give you Vietnamese TOTALe on that computer. Then, you can install Rosetta Stone Homeschool on another computer.

Homeschool is basically like getting TOTALe with just the Rosetta Course. It has its own advantages, like the ability to track progress for up to five students per computer and the ability to install in up to three computers. It does not have Rosetta World. You cannot install Homeschool and TOTALe on the same computer.

Actually, because Vietnamese Rosetta World is not developed as fully as some other languages, I suggest buying directly from the manufacturer to get the six month guarantee. If you don’t like it, you can always get your money back. I don’t think this works if you buy it anywhere else. It also doesn’t work if you buy the online subscription only, which I accidentally did once, so be sure you do buy the CD-ROM version of TOTALe.

If you are looking for purely Southern Vietnamese, then TOTALe Vietnamese will not be for you.

McAfee All Access Individual 2013

McAfee All Access Individual 2013

I have trusted McAfee to protect my PC’s for years. A few years back, there was trouble with some of the software, but it’s been good for the most part. I’m very happy with the All Access version that I’ve been using since last year — no need to buy multiple licenses.

This year, it’s the most compatible I’ve seen for all devices. I can actually use it for my Windows 7 and 8 PC’s, netbook and notebook, Kindle Fire and Kindle Fire HD 8.9″. Unfortunately, it does not work on iPhone.

PC

On the PC, installation is quick and easy. I don’t notice it bogging my systems down. Everything is seemless in the background and it doesn’t overwhelm me with pop-ups. I get antivirus, firewall protection, web protection, parental controls — pretty much everything I’m looking for.

NETBOOK AND NOTBOOK

It works much the same on the netbook and notebook as it does on the PC’s for antivirus and firewall.

I really wish there was a location feature and other anti-theft features, like remote lock and wipe and automatic picture taking.

ORIGINAL KINDLE FIRE

Although we can lock and alarm the original Kindle Fire, there is no option to track it on the McAfee Mobile Security site. We can backup, wipeout, or restore. If we lock it, the Fire will display a message that the device is being tracked (or we can type our own message), but the device cannot truly be tracked.

KINDLE FIRE HD

On the Fire HD 8.9″, there is a tracking option, but it doesn’t work. I tried and tried, but nothing.

The locking and alarm function take a long time to take effect. At first, I thought it didn’t work, but then my Fire started screaming over and over, like it needed help. My daughter thought it was hilarious — it was pretty funny.

As an antivirus product, it scans everything and tells me what applications the apps have access to, like my contact list or the internet, etc. That is handy for figuring out how to protect my privacy.

OVERALL

I feel safe with McAfee. I wish it had a few more features (like anti-theft for my netbook) but it works for the most part and I’m happy with it.

This product was provided for review by the Amazon Vine program.

Norton Anti-Theft 1.0

Norton Anti-Theft 1.0 – 3 Users

I was really hoping Norton Anti-Theft would work with my original Kindle Fire, my Kindle Fire HD 8.9″, and my iPhone 4S. Unfortunately, it doesn’t work on Kindles and iPhones. It works on laptops, notebooks, Android smartphones, and Android tablets.

We do have a notebook and an a netbook at home, so I loaded the software onto them. I really love how it works. From my desktop, I can see if my device is online. I can take a photo of the person using my netbook. If the user is not online, I can set to have it take a photo when the user comes back online.

If I lose my netbook, Norton Anti-Theft will take a photo every ten minutes. I can view the last 10 pics and download whichever one I want. The netbook will lock up and a message displayed a default message or one I type. I tried this and it was effective. In order to unlock the device, I have to type in the code I provided to Norton when I locked the device.

The location feature was flawless for my netbook, which was connected to the internet via Wi-Fi at home. It was not so successful with my husband’s notebook, which was connected via a USB dongle. The website located his notebook a whole county away. When the devices are off, I can find the last known location. Depending on how it is connected, this may or may not be accurate but it’s better than nothing.

Just make sure this product is compatible with your device. When it is, it’s a great product.

This product was provided for review by the Amazon Vine program.

McAfee Total Protection 2011 3 User

This review was originally posted March 26, 2011.

McAfee Total Protection 2011 3 User

MY EXPERIENCE

I’ve been a loyal McAfee user for years and have never had a problem with viruses until recently. Last year, I downloaded McAfee Internet Security 2010. Since then, I’ve had a few viruses slip through that were not detected by McAfee until I did a full scan.

A few weeks ago, my husband, with Internet Security on his computer, picked up some rogueware. His computer completely shut down. It would not connect to the internet. There was some fake antivirus program running that kept “scanning” and telling him he had this virus and that and to pay for the software to remove it. I couldn’t run Internet Security, I couldn’t run Malwarebytes, I couldn’t execute Task Manager.

I put the computer in safe mode, then tried running Internet Security, but it didn’t detect anything. Malwarebytes didn’t find anything, either.

I uninstalled Internet Security and installed McAfee Total Protection 2011, with not much hope it would work. I set it to scan, and it soon found 3 viruses and 3 cookies that were previously undetected by Internet Security. I have no idea how many more viruses were detected, because I let it run and left the room. When I came back, McAfee said the computer was free of viruses and cookies, but there was no mention of what it had found. I looked in the log and found nothing.

I restarted the computer and was pleasantly surprised. The computer was running, no more fake antivirus program. I could run any program, just like before. McAfee was working. Task Manager was working. Wow.

SETUP

Setup is very time consuming. I’ve installed the program on three computers and it takes a good 45 minutes to an hour.

INTERFACE

The interface for Total Protection is pretty much the same as the one in Internet Security. I find the interface difficult to navigate without mucking around. Once I know where things reside, it’s not so hard; but it still feels cluttered.

The one thing I’ve never liked about Total Protection is when a virus is found, I can’t tell what virus it is. I just get a screen that says three viruses are found. Actually, in this last case, if I had missed the viruses found during the scanning, I wouldn’t have known any viruses were found at all. I would appreciate more information in that area.

MORE DIFFERENCES

I’ve noticed more pop up warnings from the Total Protection compared to Internet Security, especially when I surf the web. I get warnings when I’m entering dangerous territory or when something is trying to make changes to my settings.

The computer doesn’t feel sluggish at all with Total Protection in the background. Sometimes, with Internet Security, I could feel it working and would have to stop the scan or update for later. Now, it saves all the work for when the computer is idle. That’s a huge improvement.

I tried to use online backup, but the files I would like to back up far exceed the 2GB we’re allotted. That’s still better than the 1GB of space in Internet Security.

PROS:
+ it works!
+ doesn’t slow down computer
+ 2GB online storage

CONS:
- interface and reports need improvement

CONCLUSION

The test case on my husband’s computer shows Total Protection detects viruses Internet Security and Malwarebytes can’t. I googled only to read all sorts of complicated solutions for my malware problem. Total Protection was easy to use, and I definitely feel more secure now after having seen it in action.

This product was provided for review by the Amazon Vine program.

PowerDirector 9 Ultra – 64

This review was originally posted April 10, 2011.

I have Power Director 6, which I loved, because it didn’t crash my computer and it has a magic movie wizard. I was so excited to get PowerDirector 9 Ultra – 64. I couldn’t wait to see all the improvements.

For this review, I used a quad core, Windows Vista Home Premium computer with 12 GB RAM, and nVidia GeForce 9800GT.

SPEED

Yes, PD9 is noticeably faster than PD6, especially when it comes to editing and rendering. Importing files is top speed. The wizards work quickly. My movie isn’t so choppy in the editor, which helps a whole lot to visualize the final result. Definitely fast, and no crashing. Occasionally, it will hang for a few minutes, but I know I don’t have to wait long.

I don’t know exactly how long it takes to render my 20 minute movie. I always leave the room, but when I come back in 2 hours, it’s done.

MAGIC MOVIE WIZARD

Magic Movie wizard is by far my biggest disappointment. I absolutely loved the wizard in PD6. It would cut up my videos, randomly sprinkle them around my movie, intersperse them with photos with effects, a title page and transitions. What a godsend when I have a ton of footage and photos. All I had to do was tweak the output for a quick and easy home movie.

PD9 took this special feature, the one thing I raved about to my friends and family, and dumbed it down. It no longer mixes up bits and pieces of videos and photos throughout the movie. Instead, it cuts up all the scenes and inserts them and the photos into the movie in the exact order they appear in the library (the place we into which we import our media). If I have a lot of media in a short time, the photos and scenes are speeded up to fit the allotted timeframe in a dizzying frenzy. Yes, I can go in and manually choose what scenes and photos to use and mix them up myself, but this makes the Magic Movie wizard pretty much useless to me. The only thing magic about it is it adds transitions and a title page, which I can do myself.

EDITING

Something I found so useful in PD9 is the multitrim tool. I don’t think it’s in PD6 (wouldn’t have needed it, because I used the movie magic wizard and didn’t need to cut down huge chunks of video). It makes cutting out scenes quick and easy. There’s no need for repeated splitting and deleting or reloading and trimming. Just watch the video and click the in and out buttons when desired. Mistakes are easy to correct.

Video color and lighting, white balance and sharpness can all be corrected with a click of a button.

There are lots of effects that are packaged with the software, but more can be downloaded from the Cyberlink site. Some of those larger files take awhile to download (I have a 3G connection), so I just stick with smaller files or what I have.

SLIDESHOW

We can use the slideshow feature to make a standalone slideshow; but what I do is make my movie with videos and choose a selection of photos to add and then make a slideshow out of those photos within my movie. Love this feature. It makes my videos and photos flow so much more smoothly.

MUSIC

The Magic Music feature is terrific, except that we have to pay to use the music. Would have been nice if a basic library was included with the software. With Magic Music, the music can be customized to fit the exact length of the movie with precisely the right flavor (romantic, kids, family, party, etc.). Even special effects, like animal sounds, are available.

We can also add our own music and use Cyberlink Wave Editor (included) to change pitch, speed, trim, etc. I don’t want to pay extra for music, so I just do this.

PROS:
+ fast
+ multitrim tool
+ lots of effects included, more can be downloaded for free
+ function to enhance picture quality in videos
+ slideshow feature

CONS:
- Magic Movie lost some of its magic
- must pay for music in Magic Music library
- learning curve

FINAL THOUGHTS

With the old magic movie wizard, anyone could make a nice movie. With the new magic movie wizard, anyone can make a movie, but the result is not so elegant without a lot of tweaking.

There is a learning curve to using this video editor to its fullest. I only know most of the techniques because I owned PD6. This tends to be true with most of the more powerful video editing software. The results can be more than satisfying. I’m always so proud of myself when I’m done.

All in all, I love the improvement in speed. Wish they’d bring back the old Magic Movie wizard. The new Magic Movie function makes me so sad, I want to give it three stars. I’ll give it four to be fair, because everything else about PD9 is five stars.

This product was provided for review by the Amazon Vine program.

UPDATE: I stand corrected on the Smartsound music. There are some tracks that do come with Power Director. They are the first ones that show up on the list. The songs farther down the list cost money.

Quicken Starter Edition 2013

Quicken Starter Edition 2013

I have been using Quicken for years and just recently upgraded to Quicken Starter Edition 2013. I only use Quicken to balance my checkbook — no need to calculate retirement, create a plan to reduce debt, create a savings plan, etc. — so the Starter Edition is right for me.

Although the box says only the Deluxe Edition imports data from earlier versions of Quicken, my Starter Edition converted my files automatically. All of my data was retained. I did not lose anything.  I am not sure if other reviewers are actually experiencing problems with this or if they stopped after reading the labeling on the box.  Upgrading for me went very smoothly.

Just remember that some of the functionality is limited by the institution. For instance, although there is an option for this, I cannot download my statements directly with Quicken. I have to go to my bank online and download it from there. Then, Quicken will automatically balance my checkbook for me.

Navigating is intuitive.  The interface is less busy than the Quicken version I had earlier. When it suspects a transaction has been entered before, it will flash a pop-up to ask me. I appreciate that. Quicken is simple, easy to use, and does exactly what I need.

True Image 2013 Plus

True Image 2013 Plus

I had Acronis True Image 2011, which I used to clone a my old hard drive to a new hybrid hard drive. The clone didn’t take. I then tried to restore a backup to the new drive. That didn’t take. I did a clean install of Windows 7 and then tried to do a restore, at which point Acronis True Image 2011 said I needed True Image Plus Pack for dissimilar hardware. I downloaded True Image Plus Pack from the Acronis website, but then found that True Image Plus Pack only works with Acronis True Image 2013. I bought the Acronis True Image 2013 and restored the image I made with Acronis 2011. That worked. Whew!

I like the new interface. It’s much easier to navigate than the 2011 version. I place my trust in Acronis despite the failed cloning attempt. Maybe it didn’t like cloning to a different type of hard drive? On numerous other occasions in the past, I’ve been saved by Acronis. I hope the 2013 Plus will do the same.

Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium

Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium

I used Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium first as an upgrade and then as a clean install.

UPGRADE

As an upgrade from Vista Home Premium, it was seemless. I first used Windows 7 Adviser (download available free from Microsoft) to see which version of Windows 7 is right for me. One cannot upgrade willy nilly from any version of Windows to any version of Windows 7. Then, I used Windows Easy Transfer to migrate my data to an external hard drive. I don’t think I needed Easy Transfer for the upgrade from Vista, but it came in useful later, when I had to do a clean install.

Upgrading went very smoothly. I retained all my software and settings. I really loved how easy it was.

WINDOWS EASY TRANSFER

It may interest some of you to know sysprep will not work on a computer with an OEM version of Vista with a paid upgrade to Windows 7. I could not even perform a Windows repair with the full version disk. Nope. Once I changed out my motherboard and CPU, I had to use this full version to do a clean install, after which I ran Windows Easy Transfer. Windows Easy Transfer did not restore all my software or even my email settings, but I did give me back my wallpaper.

CLEAN INSTALL

I had to do a few clean installs: the first time after upgrading my motherboard and CPU, the second time after upgrading my hard drive (cloning the old drive failed and my disk backup image did not work). I know, I should have done it all at once.

The first clean install was flawless. The second clean install was fraught with problems. Windows would not let me repair nor do a clean install. “On EFI systems, Windows can only be installed on GPT disks.” Lots of googling to solve this problem, and I did not find anything like what I finally did: I went to the “advanced” screen of the Windows setup screen and deleted all the partitions. That worked.

WINDOWS 7 VS. WINDOWS 8 AND VISTA

Compared to Vista, Windows 7 is very familiar. It feels stable. I haven’t had it lock up or anything. I like the taskbar on the bottom of the screen. I like being able to see small screenshots of my work by hovering over the icons there. I like anchoring my most used software there.

We do have Windows 8 at home and I chose not to upgrade to that. Windows 8 is very cluttered and clunky. Everything takes far too many clicks, like taking a roundabout route just to turn off the machine. I consider Windows 8 a downgrade.

Yes, I do like Windows 7. It’s very nice — the best Windows system to upgrade to at the moment.

Poser Debut

This review was originally posted September 13, 2011.
Smith Micro Software Poser Debut

I am a novice when it comes to 3-D animation. Poser Debut makes it easy for someone like me to look like a pro. It comes with a step-by-step lesson plan to help new users get acquainted with the basics. I could follow most of it pretty well. It moved at a quick pace and wasn’t too boring. Occasionally, I’d get frustrated, because it would tell me to go to something and I can’t find it. In their tutorial, it’s set up. In my page, I have to open it up, but I don’t know where to look for it.

My biggest frustration was the library. I didn’t have one at first. Turns out there was a glitch and the solution per Smith Micro (and it worked) was to run msconfig, close Poser and restart it. That’s it. No need to actually do anything in msconfig. Just run it.

Overall, the tutorial was very helpful. They do have basic shapes that can be altered; but mostly, this software is about people and characters. There is a large library of figures with all sorts of clothing and props. More may be purchased, if desired. The characters’ facial expressions, pose, hair, just about anything can be changed.

I find it easier to work in 3-D space on Poser Debut than Google Sketch-Up. I never have trouble placing my figures exactly where I want them. On the other hand, creating novel shapes is a little harder. That could be because I’m still new. I haven’t figured out how to do that yet. If they could only merge Google Sketch-Up with this, that would be the perfect marriage.

This product was provided for review by the Amazon Vine program.

My Voice V.2 Karaoke with Microphone

My Voice V.2 Karaoke with Microphone

I bought My Voice for its advertised voice cancellation feature. The software was a disappointment for me. The interface is very primitive. It looks more like freeware than software I have to pay for, or maybe it was something that was made more than fifteen years ago.

When I tried to use the mp3′s, it didn’t work. I had to use my Windows software to convert the files to wav format before getting started. Voice cancellation capability was nil. All I succeeded in doing was lower the quality of the rest of the audio. I’ve used voice cancellation software before. I know it’s not perfect and there is distortion, but this software didn’t even touch the voice.

Navigation is not completely intuitive. As far as I can tell, I can’t save the files, I can only burn what I make to CD, which I don’t want to do. I suppose I can take that and convert it to a file, but that’s the long way around for doing something.

This software is not much use to me. I ended up returning it.