Quick Nokia 7650 Thoughts

Russ has the Nokia 7650… sounds very good including iSync compatibility, but still the P800 might be the one based on screen and my usage if I could become a one-piece guy.

There was a problem with the GPRS – but it wasn’t the phone, Telefonica is having computer problems this morning so it’s not set up yet. The phone store is across the street from my office, so I went back over to see what the problem was. While waiting for my salesperson to finish up with another customer, I whipped out the Nokia and started playing some games. Full color arcade games in my hand! WOW! The experience was the same as if I pulled out my Gameboy. Seriously. I was so absorbed I didn’t notice that the guy was done and the customer behind me had to point out that it was my turn. DOH! This mobile game stuff is going TO ROCK THE EARTH.

I forget what a freak I am sometimes. The guy who sold me the phone had the same exact phone and was eager to show it off to me – including a T-Mobile video app he got from somewhere (I didn’t realize that the 7650 could do video!). I was all excited and started talking about Symbian and programming, etc. He looked at me like I had three heads. Okay. Next subject.

The only other .sis Symbian program that was on the CD was an iSync upgrade. So I installed that and now it looks like I can sync to the internet!!! Yeah, baby! I’ll have to explore that some more. I’d love to be able to use my server as a central repository for to-dos, calendar etc.

I want a dock. I want this thing to sit up. I guess that’s what the more PDA-like P800 is all about.

-Russ [Russell Beattie Notebook]

High-definition, low-functionality audio formats suck

The new high-definition audio discs (DVD-Audio, Super Audio CD) coming soon are being engineered to be as useless as possible. Specifically designed never to be integrated into a PC, sporting proprietary digital connectors that will not talk to any general-purpose, open device, though these haven’t been developed yet so early adopters will have to make do with analog-only outputs.

Yet both kinds of discs, despite being developed in the ‘Net-head late ’90s, are odd throwbacks to the pre-PC era. Most obviously, they’re the same size as the original CD. Can you name any other digital device that hasn’t shrunk in 20 years? The players for them are bulky, closer in size to Sony’s first CD decks than to Apple’s iPod, which holds 400 albums rather than just one.


Flip one of the players over, and you’ll find another retro sight: analog output jacks. To prevent buyers from running off bit-for-bit copies of the new discs, gear-makers have agreed not to put digital ports on either DVD-A or SACD players. Yet old-fashioned analog connections erode pristine digital sound and are prone to interference from televisions, lights, and computers—the objects they’ll be placed next to in modern homes.


The real deal-breaker is that a stand-alone player is the only kind available. By manufacturers’ consensus, there won’t be any network ports on the players, nor will there be any DVD-A or SACD drives available for computers. Some makers are promising a digital link from the player to a home-theater console, but it’ll be deliberately incompatible with any of the jacks on a computer. In bringing the CD up to date with the PC, the music industry is also trying to split the two technologies asunder again.


It’s no wonder that gearheads who buy the latest, greatest everything have ignored DVD-A and SACD in favor of MP3 players and CD burners. Computer-friendly music formats let you archive hundreds of albums on a laptop, create custom playlists that draw from your entire collection, and download them to portable players smaller than a single CD jewel box. Today’s fans want their music in a form that fits the pocket-sized, personalized, interconnected world of their computers, cameras, phones, and PDAs. Asking digital consumers to give that power back in exchange for a better-sounding disc is like offering them a phonograph needle.

LinkDiscuss [Boing Boing]

Is it just me?

Perhaps I am psyching myself out in the final hours (OK – 12) before the MacWorld Keynote, but there is no secret looking home page at Apple. I recall other mind altering pre-notices leading us to believe that something amazing was waiting. This show eve, there is nothing…at least not yet.

The whole day I have been wondering what might lie ahead from Cupertino. I feel the need for a new gadget and can’t help my urge for an Apple Palm or Phone or Tablet or something! A video iPod is not doing it for me at least in the current form factor. Some of the rumor sites have mentioned a touch screen, which begins to make things interesting if they then push what you can do on the device. There are sites that list potential apps for the iPod, but many would be silly if you could only do things with the scroll wheel.

I know the Apple deal with Pixo was for 2 devices and we are still on the first…This Wired News article from last year at this time shoots down the amazing iWalk which would be a super delicious surprise.

GeoURL

This is very cool… working out my whereabouts now…

UPDATE – adding the meta info to the blog was very simple thanks to the site. I can now see myself within the physical blog space. This is similar, but seemingly more accurate than NYCBloggers which maps NYC based bloggers by subway line…You can find me on the “6“.

I like this one: GeoURL (via Howard Rheingold, Smart Mobs). You add two tags to your HTML – one with your latitude and longitude coordinates, and one with the name of your weblog (here’s how). You then ping them, and soon your weblog will be indexed, so that you can see which weblogs are geographically near yours. Here are my neighbors (within a 500 mile radius).

By the way: I used Maporama.com to look up my coordinates. According to GeoURL, I live one mile west of the center of Stockholm. You get an RSS feed with the neighboring weblogs as items. Here is a list of all sites near Stockholm.

[Tesugen.com]

broadband IV: the endgame

Sounds good to me…

As cable companies continue to increase the cost of broadband service, and as telcom monopolies are strengthened by changes in FCC policy, it is now absolutely clear what the broadband endgame will be in the US: wireless. Think of a city where every single street light is a node in a mesh (for an example, see meshnetworks), and thus where the cloud of the internet sits on the street like the fog in San Francisco. For almost nothing, cities could provide IP light, as cities provide street lights. Neutral, end-to-end, fast, and cheap. (Apologies for this uncharacteristically optimistic post. Just a preview of the moot.)

[Lessig Blog]

FTP through the Finder

I am not sure who knows this, but the Finder in OS X is capable as an FTP client. That’s right, you can transfer through the Finder via FTP directly without an app. It certainly won’t meet all your needs, but it does work.

I’ve known this for a while, but never seek it out as something to use… until today when my machine decided it was time. I received an email from Proteron suggesting I update my Lite Switch app to the latest version. Lite Switch is a better (in my opinion) application switcher than what Apple provides with Apple+Tab. When I clicked the link in Mail.app a finder window opened and the download began. Pretty cool and efficient. No browser windows to close when it was through…just a stuffit archive on my desktop.

In case you were wondering, my FTP client of choice is Transmit from Panic. It’s simple and reliable and has a very cool feature which lets you synchronize local and network volumes.

Is TV Show Swapping Legal?

Just the kind of debate that we like to see….

Swappers aren’t absolved of standard copyright abuse, either. Copying entire seasons of “The Sopranos” for Net distribution is still a no-go. “It’s one thing to have hacked it,” Zittrain says. “‘Distribution of works’ is another violation altogether. It’s apples and oranges,” and the oranges could still land you in jail. But an attorney with DMCA experience under his belt says precedents set in the VCR-related suits of the early ’80s mean network TV is still up for grabs if the commercials are included in the video. It looks as if lawyers will have a lot to say, actually, before all of this is settled.

Source: Fortune.com

Image uploading

This is something I would love to see… hopefully soon enough thanks to developers like Brent leading the charge.

An extension to the various weblog APIs that I’d love to see would be easy image uploading.

Not just images, but movies, Flash files, etc.

I get lots of requests for that as a feature to add to NetNewsWire. Unfortunately there isn’t a common API similar to the MetaWeblog API for uploading media files to weblogs.

But hey, listen—webloggers (at least some of them) really want this. [inessential.com]

Back to the Future for Verisign…

This is so ridiculous it is amazing. Verisign paid about $21 Billion in stock to acquire at the height of their market cap and muddles with the brand for 2 years only to roll it back out?? aigh… They certainly could have saved millions of dollars not rebranding everything and re-marketing everything only to reverse it all back.

VeriSign has created a wholly owned subsidiary to operate a new version of the domain name business it bought three years ago. As part of the move, the company will revamp the Network Solutions brand, which has been downplayed since the VeriSign purchase.

Back in the office…

I am back in the office today after a nice long break. Seems to be off to a quiet start, let’s see how the day plays out.

I noticed as I was walking out the door that my Palm did not pick up the event I had scheduled in iCal. I might have to start my process within Meeting Maker for the whole thing to happen. Also, two banners I created within Meeting Maker have not come over either. I guess only timed events work which is not ideal.

Gadgets Gadgets and Gadgets…

The Intel / SONICblue Personal Video Player, or PVP, is just one of (hopefully) many new cool devices being shown this week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. I can’t honestly say I want one of these unless it serves other purposes as well. My briefcase (and back) can only take so much…

iCal and iSync updates are worthy

Both updates (including tonight’s update to iCal)are very strong and should be considered if you have not already done so. I have found that the way iSync now handles calendar events (from within the app, not the palm conduit) allows for a more sophisticated approach. You can choose which calendars to sync on each device as well as sync more than one calendar application. I can now sync my Palm, Meeting Maker and iCal.

Speaking of iCal… It has gotten a needed update in speed and responsiveness. I can now consider it my calendar of choice, though I do need to continually check through Meeting Maker in order to get notices through my office. This may actually get resolved in the next update to Meeting Maker as well since they have indicated support for iCal.

Not holding my breath yet, but please please with sugar on top?!

eWeek: Apple Tablet?: “Apple Tablet Rumors from rumors Matthew Rothenberg” Source: MacRumors

My sources sketch the following picture: A device that superficially resembles a large iPod with an 8-inch diagonal screen, lacks a keyboard, packs USB and FireWire ports, and runs Mac OS X along with a variety of multimedia goodies. I’m going to hazard a guess that this specimen also features wireless connectivity.

I’ve opined before that Apple is preparing to apply its InkWell handwriting-recognition technologies and its lengthy experience with portable design to a new product that puts a distinctive spin on the pen-driven paradigm currently being touted by Microsoft and its Tablet PC partners.

A compelling, stylish device that puts Mac OS X in a new form factor, plays to Apple’s multimedia strengths, and borrows momentum from the iPod’s success would fit the bill nicely—and point the company’s Mac OS X pitch in a dramatic new direction.

Kung Tunes

Thanks to Kung Tunes, a very cool app I’ve been waiting to use, I can now show what music I have been listening to on my sidebar. It’s not exactly where I want it to be…

I can’t figure out how to get my Amazon ID in the historical list and I can’t quite get the sidebar to allow itself to expand either. hmmm… the limits of my technical knowledge/abilities come forward.

iTunes mayhem

So my iTunes app/library bit the dust. I started to get an error which repeated on startup which read – A fatal error occurred while saving the file ITunes 3 Music Library. Nice right? I deleted the prefs but something was seriously wrong as it returned soon after a relaunch. I tried to delete all 3 preference files, but the error was quite persistent in returning.

My solution was a bit tough perhaps, but since I could not find an answer on the Apple Support boards, I had no other choice but to start over. I did a backup of the iTunes library file and made a copy of that, just in case. Then I moved it away and relaunched iTunes as if it was being done for the first time.

Time to import… I dragged my collection into iTunes and then walked away. I have over 32GB of music, it was actually over 34GB, but I found a host of duplicates and files that were just old downloads of things I never listen to. After iTunes processed everything I had only to rebuild my playlists, which was actually quicker and easier than I expected. Since I keep my playlists sorted as albums, for easy listening and iPod syncing, i just sorted my library by album and highlighted each one to create a new list for each selected group.

Most of my music is either ripped from my collection or traded with friends, rather than straight downloaded to maintain a level of quality in the files. I was amazed at things I guess I never had listened to, or was keeping for some archival purpose. I was able to purge my system of about 2GB of Krap (the K is for emphasis). Anyway, I now am back on the air, listening to my music which has been reorganized beautifully with only a small sacrifice of time.