Home » News » Trillian Astra: Version 4.1 Hits Public Download Availability
Trillian Astra: Version 4.1 Hits Public Download Availability
by Andy Balman (30 Oct 2009)
Version 4.0 of the popular multi-protocol instant messaging application Trillian reached the Beta milestone in is development process back in June. It’s been a while and Ceruleans Studios, the company behind Trillian, has been busy releasing Trillian 4.1 builds to early alpha testers. But since alpha builds tend to be unstable, and since they were only released to a select few, we did not focus on them. But today we do focus on Trillian Astra, because version 4.1 just became available for download as a public Beta.
“Trillian for Windows 4.1 Build 15 is now available for public beta testing. We’ve removed the authentication requirement from our download page and all interested customers are now free to participate in the beta. Moving forward, we’ll be continuing to work with beta testers to resolve reported issues as we push towards a final release. Remember, 4.1 is still beta and will contain bugs and crashes. Don’t upgrade unless you’re comfortable running pre-release software! Thanks for your support and we hope you enjoy the newest Trillian,” announced Cerulean Studios.
Trillian 4.1 comes with the following changes and improvements
Windows 7 Support
Trillian 4.1 works with the user interface provided by the latest version of the Windows-based operating system, Windows 7.
Tanks to Windows 7 API’s Trillian 4.1 can provide these handy functions: set your status from the Jump Lists, see the progress of your file transfers in the taskbar, see your status in the taskbar, enhanced taskbar thumbnails.
Enhanced Status Control
You can change your status without changing your status message
You can tweet from the contact list; when you set your status, a character count will appear (the Twitter plugin must be set to match your Trillian status)
You can set a separate status for individual connections
The options to set a status message as “away” and auto-responses have been brought back
The option to activate a "hide button"; activate it from Preferences
Disable buzz locally
Screen capture supported for secondary monitors
Mail improvements
Display mail in compact mode, full mode, or show them like Gmail
More lines of text are displayed in the contact list
Right click context menu to easily mark mail as read, spam, archive or delete the message.
Improved email preview
Notification windows are grouped together
Next and back buttons for notifications
Place notifications in any corner of the monitor
Multiple monitors support for notifications
Twitter and Facebook Features
Follow and unfollow from within Trillian
Otion to filter tweets
News Feeds has a new layout
The Contact List comes with several new Twitter features: Twitter searches, tweet from the contact list, Twitter “floater” windows
The tweet window comes with TwitPic integration, character count, shortened URL support (bit.ly and TinyURL), an edit window for retweets
Support for the new Facebook stream API
If you would like to get Windows 4.1 Beta for Windows, a download location is available here..
Link to this article :
Trillian Astra: Version 4.1 Hits Public Download Availability - User Comments
Add Comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment this product by clicking the link above.
MSN, the web portal that provides access to a wide variety of information, has been redesigned by Redmond-bases software giant Microsoft. To be completely fair to Microsoft and MSN, the portal’s looks have been tweaked before – but for the past decade, all the tweaks were minor. This redesign though is something else, it is the first major MSN redesign in a decade. The new design is less cluttered, streamlined to let the user more easily navigate through the content, and puts an emphasis on Microsoft’s decision engine Bing. ... (read more)
Google releases versions of the Chrome browser on three different channels: the developer channel, the beta channel and the stable channel. A new version is first rolled out to the dev channel; as the bugs and issues are worked out of the software it moves to the Beta channel; when all the issues are solved the software moves to the stable channel. This is precisely what happened with Chrome 4.0. At the start of the week it moved out of the dev channel and to the Beta channel. ... (read more)
The SeaMonkey Project has recently announced that SeaMonkey 2.0 has finally been released to the web. The final version of SeaMonkey 2.0 (free, open source and cross platform internet suite that incorporates a web browser, an email client, a news client, an IRC client and an HTML editor) is now available for download. ... (read more)
Less than a week from now, on the 9th of November, the Mozilla Foundation will celebrate 5 years since the first version of the Firefox browser was released. A long time has passed since then. The latest stable version is Firefox 3.5 (which I use daily and I’m very much pleased with its performance) and the Beta version of the upcoming v 3.6 has been released over the weekend. ... (read more)
It is already well known that the Google developed Chrome browser has the fastest JavaScript engine in the browser world. What some users may not know is that Chrome focuses on speed as well as security. To be more precise, Chrome wants to make the user’s browsing experience a safe one. And the manner in which it does this is by displaying security warning messages when the user attempts to visit a known malware spreading site or a known phishing site. ... (read more)
A few days ago the team behind popular computation knowledge engine released a Wolfram Alpha application for the iPhone – a good app, but a bit on the expensive side. It seems that iPhone users don’t care that the Wolfram Alpha app carried a price tag of $49.99; many of them purchased the app, enjoyed the functionality it provides and made it one of the hottest items in the App Store. ... (read more)
After reaching the Release Candidate (RC) milestone on the 22nd of October (the same day that Microsoft released the final version of Windows 7 onto the market), Ubuntu 9.10 will today, the 29th of October, be released as a final, stable operating system. Jane Silber, COO with Canonical, comments: “Ubuntu 9.10 gives users more reasons than ever to seriously consider Linux at a time when many are thinking again about their operating system options. ... (read more)
I love music, you love music, everybody loves music – and apparently this includes two of the big names in the search engine world, mainly Yahoo! and Google. Starting with Yahoo!, the company showed its love for music in two ways: 1. Yahoo! Messenger v. 8.1, v. 9 and v. 10 users can control their music player and let their friends know what music they’re listening to thanks to the newly released FoxyTunes plugin ... (read more)
With the launch of the Windows 7 operating system, the Redmond-based software giant also opened its first Microsoft Stores. You know, the ones that Microsoft’s Chief Operating Officer, Kevin Turner, announced at the Worldwide Partner Conference WPC) in New Orleans earlier this year. The great thing about these retail stores is that if you purchase a PC with Windows 7 on it from a Microsoft Store, it will not come with bloatware or crapware. ... (read more)
Two of the biggest names in the web browser world have released updates for their products. Starting with Opera Software, the organization has updated its browser to version 10.01. Opera 10.01 has been classified by the Opera team as a “stability and security” update that will fix a bunch of annoyances in the software. You can see precisely what Opera 10.01 fixes in the changelog. ... (read more)