Apple’s iLife keeps becoming more and more compelling with each iteration. Here is what iLife’09 manages to pack in:
iPhoto ‘09 – With face recognition coming to Picassa and Windows Live Photo Gallery, it was only a matter of time before iPhoto got it too. While iPhoto had no problems recognizing photos of my wife, it keeps having trouble recognizing my face. Fortunately, iPhoto ‘09 learns as you tag a person. Each time I tag a new photo of mine, it recognizes me in a few more.
Another welcome feature is integration with FaceBook. You go to a collection of photos, click the FaceBook button at the bottom right side of the window and a new album will be created under your FaceBook account and all the pictures in the given collection published there.
iPhoto’09 now has an ability to organize photos by location. While it needs latitude longitude information to be present as part of the picture’s meta data (which will be the case if you have an iPhone 3G or one of the new GPS enabled cameras), you can still manually mark a photo’s location in case the information is missing for your pictures.

I’d certainly like to see some of these features ported to Aperture as well!
GarageBand’09 too sees a bevy of new features. The most prominent of them is Learn to Play. Out of the box, GarageBand comes with basic lessons for the Piano and the Guitar. Although it helps if you have a MIDI keyboard or an electric guitar hooked up to your Mac, you can follow the lessons even if you don’t. You can download 16 more basic lessons free of cost from within Garageband itself (the download experience reminded me a bit of the App Store Experience on the iPhone).

One disappointment for me was that the Artist Lesson feature – where you can learn to play a popular song from the Artist who performed/composed it – was not available in India. I guess the same royalty/revenue arrangements that keep iTunes music store from coming to India also keep the artist lessons out:

“Artist Lessons are not currently available for your region. Please check back later.”
GarageBand has had the ability to create iPhone ringtones for a while and it’s is good to see the feature given the prominence it deserves.

iWeb is finally becoming more ‘web-like’. There is an option to update your Facebook Profile when you publish the site – either to Mobile Me or to an FTP Server of your own. Then there is a handy Google Adsense widget which you can drag and drop onto your site and have the ads appear. You can even customize the ad-sizes and colors from within iWeb itself.

And finally there are widgets to allow you to easily embed RSS feeds and Google Maps into your web pages.
iWeb has always been great for quickly cobbling together a personal website. These features ensure that you are up and running with little or no fiddling around with HTML and such.
iMovie sees addition of some useful features too – like video stabalization and animated travel maps but in my opinion it remains the weakest of the lot. I was not a big fan of the new iMovie UI that Apple had introduced in iMovie’08 and that part hasn’t changed all the much in iMovie’09. I think Apple is still looking to strike a balance here between their consumer and prosumer (think Final Cut Express) products here. They seem to have pulled it off with Aperture and iPhoto and I hope they’d figure it out with their video line-up too.
iDVD has not seen addition of new features. I wonder if this is because a move to Blue Ray might be in the offing.
iLife’09 is now available in India for Rs. 4,320.