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Home>How to download and save streaming videos

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 298 • 2011-07-21 • Circulation: over 400,000


Table of contents 
  • Windows Secrets: Extend the life of your PC with Windows Secrets’ best tips
  • Top Story: How to download and save streaming videos
  • Lounge Life: Fine points of software purchasing mastered here
  • Wacky Web Week: Possessed by a supernatural … vacuum?
  • LangaList Plus: Digging deeper into Win7-XP networking
  • Hot Tips: Can Google+ seriously challenge Facebook?
  • Best Practices: Making Microsoft Word 2010 easier to use

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Windows Secrets

Extend the life of your PC with Windows Secrets’ best tips

PC Maintenance GuideOver the years, Windows Secrets has accumulated a vast amount of information about Windows and Windows-related hardware and software.

To make your computing life easier, the Windows Secrets editors pored through several years of published information and compiled the PC Maintenance Guide — an e-book with the best tips from Fred Langa and the other Windows Secrets contributors. The guide covers three major categories:
  • Upgrading your system
  • Tuning up/speeding up your PC
  • Emergency troubleshooting

You’re welcome to read the entire 27-page e-book from front to back, but it’s most useful as a quick-reference guide that you keep close at hand.

Happy computing!

Windows Secrets subscribers: Purchase the PC Maintenance Guide for only $9.95 through your Windows Secrets shopping cart.
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Top Story

How to download and save streaming videos

Woody leonhard By Woody Leonhard

How many times have you wanted to download and store an online streaming video so you could play it back at a different time or on a different machine?

While the basics of downloading YouTube and other videos have been around for a long time, there are tricks to getting the video you want into a format you can use.

The tricks aren’t limited to YouTube. If you get the right software, you can download almost any streaming video and store it in many different formats. You can even download Flash games and play them when you’re offline.

Each video (and online game) site has different restrictions, so make sure your activities don’t violate any laws or user agreements. The YouTube terms of service (TOS), for example, are quite succinct:

“You agree not to distribute in any medium any part of the Service or the Content without YouTube’s prior written authorization. … You agree not to access Content through any technology or means other than the video playback pages of the Service itself, the Embeddable Player, or other explicitly authorized means YouTube may designate.”

As far as I can tell, YouTube’s TOS doesn’t cover cases where a product (such as an iPad) is incapable of playing a video because of format restrictions. More about that in a moment.

What the YouTube TOS says you can do might not coincide with local laws. Is it illegal to record something playing on your computer, so you can view it at a later time? If so, why does YouTube have hooks that allow programs to download files? (Netflix, for example, is almost impervious to similar approaches because of the technology it uses.) The legal situation is murky at best. Caveat downloader.

Why you might want to rip streaming video

I’ve bumped into the download problem twice in the past six weeks.

First, when Microsoft’s Julie Larson-Green and Steve Sinofsky gave the Windows 8 demo at the All Things D conference. I had to download the video so I could watch it repeatedly on a flight. I caught a lot of nuances at 30,000 feet — without the complications of a video-stuttering Internet connection or exorbitant in-flight connection fees.

I accomplished the download, but it took some serious mojo.

Second — and more importantly — before heading out on vacation. I wanted to grab a handful of YouTube videos that my son could watch later. Believe me, a fussy toddler in the back of a stuffy taxi responds marvelously to a YouTube lullaby or a familiar sing-along on the ol’ iPad. Some of the places we go just don’t have Internet connections — and I’ll be skinned and steeped in cactus juice before I’ll spend $25 a day for a hotel’s connection to the World Wide Web.

Also, my friends have asked for tips on downloading videos — from YouTube and other sites with streaming content — for a multitude of reasons. Some of them have good Internet connections just at home, or only in a coffee shop, or when at the office, but tortuously slow speeds elsewhere. Downloading a video where there’s a fast connection and replaying it at leisure avoids the glips and glops of a bad line. Some have YouTube blocked by their corporate admins, so they have to smuggle videos of the Evian babies into work. One friend likes to record things so he can view them while camping on the weekend.

I like to record videos for all those reasons plus one more that stands out: I hate it when I can’t view a Flash video on my iPad. (As you will quickly discover, if you haven’t already, Apple’s iPads and iPhones don’t do Flash — at least, not without Herculean effort.) Fortunately for the users of those devices, most popular YouTube videos are available in Flash and H.264/MP4 formats; YouTube senses when your computer can’t play Flash and usually dishes up an MP4 instead. But some of the more obscure videos on YouTube — including many kids’ videos in a hundred languages — don’t get the dual-format treatment. Try to play them on your iPad or iPhone, and you might get an obscure, bogus error message about a server malfunction.

Server malfunction, my foot. YouTube just hasn’t taken the time or care to convert formats. So I have to do it myself.

That said, there’s one occasion where you don’t want to download a video. It makes no sense at all to rip a video off a major site such as YouTube and e-mail that video file to someone else. Save yourself a ton of bother, and save your correspondents megabytes of useless bits. E-mail a link to the YouTube site, not the video itself. Sounds obvious, but you’d be surprised how many e-mails I get with attached files that were scraped off YouTube.

Video download sites — the old-fashioned way

I think there are hundreds of websites that help you download YouTube videos. Some of them are almost as old as YouTube itself. The most popular ones work in several different modes.

One of the oldest and best-known sites, KEEPVID (see Figure 1), lets you capture a streaming video in three different ways:

First, you can copy the URL of the page containing the video you want to download and paste it into the top box on the KEEPVID page. KEEPVID scans the page and sees what videos are available. In Figure 1, you can see that KEEPVID found six different video formats and one audio format for a popular music video. These are all native YouTube formats — YouTube stores the video in all six formats. Click on the link for the format you want, and KEEPVID downloads the chosen file in the usual way.

KEEPVID has three different ways to download youtube videos
Figure 1. KEEPVID supports three different download modes.

Second, you can drag the button near the top of the page to your browser’s bookmark toolbar. With the bookmark toolbar showing, navigate to the page containing the video you want to download and click the KEEPVID icon on the bookmark toolbar. You get similar choices. (One problem, however: I had trouble getting the bookmarklet to work on several newer browsers.)

Third, you can pay for a standalone KEEPVID program that will do the downloading. Since there are many free alternatives, it’s hard to recommend shelling out cash for the standalone program.

KEEPVID works with YouTube, Dailymotion, eHow, Facebook, Vimeo, and others. It didn’t work for me on the Windows 8 demo page at All Things D.

If you want a Web-based downloader and KEEPVID doesn’t work for you, try one or more of these sites: savevid.com (caution: site contains pornographic material), Vixy, or Download YouTube Videos.

And if you find that you’ve downloaded Flash video (.flv) files and can’t play them, get a copy of the free VLC Media Player (download page).

An easier way — using browser plugins

Several products will hook into your browser and make it easy to download YouTube videos. RealPlayer (info page), for example, pops up a simple dropbox when you mouse over a YouTube video.

If you’re primarily interested in YouTube videos and Chrome is your browser of choice, check out the Chrome YouTube Downloader (download page), which puts a download button under each YouTube video.

When it comes to downloading streaming video, though, you can’t beat Firefox. My favorite is an add-on called Video DownloadHelper (page), which grabs a wide array of streaming video files and can translate and save those files to many different formats. When you install DownloadHelper, it appears as a small icon on your Firefox navigation bar, to the left of the address box (see Figure 2).

Video downloadhelper
Figure 2. The Firefox add-in Video DownloadHelper works with hundreds of websites.

On video-content sites that support Video DownloadHelper (right-click the icon for a list), the icon starts whirling; click the down arrow to the right of the icon, and you see a list of available file formats. Choose the format you want, and Firefox downloads it. DownloadHelper will let you download a single file or all the files on a page. You can also change settings, such as the default download folder, by right-clicking on the icon and choosing Preferences.

There are dozens of download add-ons for Firefox, if DownloadHelper doesn’t do what you want. I’ve also had some luck with FlashGot (page), a ripper with a slightly different slant: it’s designed to be used with a standalone download manager — to optimize downloading all media on a page in one fell swoop.

What to do if none of the downloaders works

Sometimes downloading video just isn’t easy. Often you have to find a downloader that works best with specific sites. Pulling a video off YouTube is easy; Video DownloadHelper probably has you covered for less-common sites. But some streaming videos defy even the best downloader.

That’s what happened to me with the Windows 8 demo on the All Things D site. None of the rippers I tried could touch the video. I could not find any copies of the video on YouTube or other major sites, so even Video DownloadHelper couldn’t snag it.

Fortunately, there’s another way to skin this cat. Instead of trying to download the video, I recorded the video as it was being played, using a screen-recording utility that scraped the interview and turned it into a .wmv file suitable for playing on VLC Media Player or even Windows Media Player. If you’re stuck in a similar bind, try My Screen Recorder (download page) from DeskShare software.

This program isn’t free; there’s a free 30-day trial version, but it produces videos with a box at the bottom with text stating: “My Screen Recorder Trial Version / Please Purchase.” The registered version will set you back U.S. $49.95. In my experience it works well, in a last-resort kind of way. Take a few minutes and step through the setup — to get the audio working correctly, you might have to unhide a disabled audio source (using the included instructions) so My Screen Recorder can record sounds properly. Once it’s set up, the app works easily: F8 starts recording, F9 stops — piece o’ cake.

Have more info on this subject? Post your tip in the WS Columns forum.

Woody Leonhard is a Windows Secrets senior editor and a senior contributing editor at InfoWorld. His books on Windows and Office include the award-winning Windows 7 All-In-One For Dummies. His many writings cast a critical eye on the latest industry shenanigans.

 
Lounge Life

Fine points of software purchasing mastered here

By Kathleen Atkins

Not only do Lounge members know how to fix their machines, they know the best ways to get their gear.

That means they can advise on the arcana of license agreements and any other variables of purchases — including freeware alternatives. So when Lounge member Ron M came asking about OneNote for multiple machines, he got a survey of the possibilities in short order.

See what Ron M decided to do. More»

The following links are this week’s most interesting Lounge threads, including several new questions to which you might be able to provide responses:

Office Applications
General Productivity 
OneNote: Buy as Office app or standalone?
☼
Word Processing 
All boxes grayed out, can’t read

Spreadsheets 
Purpose of double quotes in a formula?
☼
Databases 
Need to optimize/repair database

Visual Basic for Apps 
Excel 2003 VBA: Delete row if not SS#

Microsoft Outlook 
Unauthorized use of my e-mail address?

Non-Outlook E-mail 
Thunderbird 5.0 and missing e-mails
☼
Windows
General Windows 
How to change icon for pinned websites

Windows 7
Corrupt files found during full image backup
Boot issue
New login screen
☼

☼
Windows Vista 
Latest batch of Vista updates failed to install
☼
Windows XP 
XP freezing

Windows Servers 
Automate file copy/delete on Win 2000 server
☼
Internet/Connectivity
Internet Explorer 
Constant “IE 9 has encountered a problem” issues

Third-Party Browsers 
Cannot kill an already-running profile!

Networking
Port forwarding on TOT’s Fiber 2U

Other Technologies
Security & Backups 
Backing up the family PCs
☼
Other Applications 
Yahoo Messenger privacy
☼
The Lounge
Forum Feedback 
BullGuard doesn’t like Windows Secrets?

☼ starred posts — particularly useful

If you’re not already a Lounge member, use the quick registration form to sign up for free. The ability to post comments and take advantage of other Lounge features is available only to registered members.

If you’re already registered, you can jump right into today’s discussions in the Lounge.

The Lounge Life column is a digest of the best of the WS Lounge discussion board. Kathleen Atkins is associate editor of Windows Secrets.

 
Wacky Web Week

Possessed by a supernatural … vacuum?

Supernatural vacuum By Tracey Capen

It’s the fear of every TV-show producer — a product commercial that proves more creative and more interesting than the show it’s intended to support. Think of the many VW Beetle commercials of the past. (Look ‘em up on YouTube if you’re too young to have seen them.)

Typically, one would have a hard time imagining a commercial that combines a vacuum cleaner and a classic horror movie such as The Exorcist, but one clever ad-maker pulls it off to great applause. Play the video




 
LangaList Plus

Digging deeper into Win7-XP networking

Fred langa By Fred Langa

Win7′s “Network Level Authentication” is built in and enabled by default, but in XP it’s an add-on you have to specifically install and enable.

And that’s just one of several major obstacles that can impede smooth networking between these two Windows versions.


Adding Network Level Authentication to XP

Like many of us, Tom Linton ran into snags trying to get his Win7 and XP systems networked successfully.

  • “Your May 12 article, ‘Win7 network stuck in “Public” mode,’ touched on a pet peeve of mine: networking my three PCs (a Win7 laptop and two XP desktops, all updated regularly) so they can see each other and share files. I have searched the Microsoft site many times and the Internet in general for answers. I have gone through many sets of instructions on setting up a Windows homegroup. No good.

    “I went back to the instructions for classic networking and had some partial success, but none of the recommendations resolved my problem.

    “Totally frustrated!”


When homegroups work, they’re great. There’s no faster, easier, newbie-friendly, click-and-forget way to set up a basic peer network among Win7 PCs. (See Microsoft’s Help & How-to article, “HomeGroup from start to finish,” for more setup info.)

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

Already a paid subscriber? Click here to login.


 
Hot Tips

Can Google+ seriously challenge Facebook?

Chris murray By Chris Murray

In Google+, the search-engine juggernaut hopes it has a contender.

Is it good enough to compete with the likes of Facebook, which has amassed over 750 million users, or is it doomed to be just another short-lived Google service?


Google overcoming its self-made adversity

When Google announced it was once again throwing its hat into the social-networking ring, I was reluctant to believe it could fare any better than it had in its previous attempts. Both Google Buzz and Google Wave emerged as socially awkward failures; it seemed likely to me that Google’s third go, Google+, would also fall flat on its face.

But it appears that the data giant has learned from its mistakes. One sign of better judgment was that the company released Google+ as a closed beta so that only a limited number of people could use the service. Clearly, Google learned from Buzz: if it ain’t ready for prime time, don’t show it to everybody!

Google also recognized the need to focus its creative energies — too much spread too thin just wasn’t going to cut it. Google concentrated on four primary features:

Plus one button The +1 button. Before releasing Google+, Google introduced the +1 button next to its search results. Clicking +1 generates a link to your Google profile and lets others know what sites you recommend. The +1 button is Google’s way of beginning a long re-reintroduction of itself to the social-networking fray.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

Already a paid subscriber? Click here to login.


 
Best Practices

Making Microsoft Word 2010 easier to use

Lincoln spector By Lincoln Spector

I liked Microsoft Office 2010 when I first tried it out last year, but it didn’t seem like a huge improvement over the previous version.

I was wrong — especially about Word, the Office application I use the most.


Microsoft makes a vastly superior word processor

When I started using Word 2010 regularly this spring (the result of upgrading to a new computer), I realized that I had a much better tool than I was accustomed to. The new Word is more configurable and better for navigating a large document. (It also has some excellent new formatting and graphic tools, but I’m not covering them here.)

The first part of this article discusses my favorite new feature, the navigation pane. The second part tells you how to configure the Ribbon — which wasn’t possible in 2007. Word is a huge, feature-rich, and complex application. You might as well get the most out of it.

The navigation pane means less navigation pain

Remember Word 2007′s thumbnails pane? Microsoft has turned it into an exceptional outlining and search tool.

Open up Word 2010 and take a look. Do you see a pane titled Navigation on the left side of the window? If not, click the Ribbon’s View tab and check Navigation Pane. Or you can simply press Ctrl-F to start a search. I explain below why starting a search brings you to the navigation pane.

Headings tab: Word for Windows has always had a pretty good outlining feature, based on the heading styles (Heading 1, Heading 2, and so on). But if you wanted to see the full outline, or alter it, you had to collapse everything, causing you to lose your place in the text.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Table of contents

Top-scoring articles in the past 12 months
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  • One year and 99 security bulletins later 4.18
  • 1.8TB external drive goes down hard 4.17
  • Don’t pay for software you don’t need — Part 3 4.16
  • Internet Explorer gets another round of patches 4.15
  • Is your free AV tool a ‘resource pig?’ 4.15
  • Vacation’s over; it’s a big round of patches 4.15
  • Remote access leads to remote attacks 4.15
  • Keeping you up to date: say no to .NET — again 4.14
  • Take control of Google’s privacy policy settings 4.14
  • Office File Validation patch leads to problems 4.14
  • The advanced system-recover toolkit 4.13
  • New “419″ scam involves PayPal and Western Union 4.12
  • Readers’ best personal-privacy tips 4.11
  • Getting the most from Windows Search — Part 2 4.11
  • Re-examining Dropbox and its alternatives 4.10
  • Easily edit Windows’ right-click context menus 4.09
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Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, WinFind, Windows Gizmos, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of iNET Interactive. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.
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