what do you get when you pit a Lenovo/IBM Thinkpad against a NASA astronaut training tank?
The Thinkpad lasted about 3 seconds. Impressive.
what do you get when you pit a Lenovo/IBM Thinkpad against a NASA astronaut training tank?
The Thinkpad lasted about 3 seconds. Impressive.
Maybe this post is sour grapes on my part; I certainly can’t afford one. But the iPhone wasn’t exactly the runaway smash that Steve Jobs, objective observer that he is, claimed it would be. Even Brian doesn’t want one 🙂
Who said mobs were dumb? The iPhone is a beautiful piece of electronics, so much so that Apple can’t allow you to do things with it you’d normally be able to do with a SIM-card GSM device, like swap cards out, even intra-carrier.
and this is just wrong:
Steve opened up with how he believes that the iPhone will change the mobile space forever…. The iPhone was driven by the fact that everyone hates their phones, and it’s all about “core competence”—making all of the features easy-to-use and self-discoverable.
No. Most people love their phones; what they hate is their cell phone plan and provider. Why? Because of all the restrictions, contract termination fees, high prices… things that Apple does precisely nothing to ameliorate, and in fact exacerbates. Besides, anyone who’s ever seen the latest phones out of Japan knows that it’s not ease of use, but sexy features, that are what consumers want. Apple’s view that the phone features need to be “easy to use” suggest both a total lack of awareness of modern cell phones and a certain condescension towards the user.
I think that in some ways the iPhone represents the epitome of Apple’s embrace of “cool”, which necessarily carries connotations of elitism. This contrast starkly with Nintendo, which aims for a kind of mass appeal – but not in the shoddy sense, more of a family vibe.
I’m going to have to look very carefully at this:
Grazr is a free publishing tool for feeds. It lets you quickly and easily display RSS, RDF, Atom, and OPML files on any Web page so they can be viewed by any visitor to the site.
This kind of blows away the old RSS-to-Javascript service. And with the OPML support.. this could really be useful.
(I’m bending the mandatory title punning rule here, but I claim artistic license)
this news speaks for itself:
As part of the final Hollywood & Games Summit panel in Los Angeles, LucasArts’ Jim Ward has been discussing the oft-raised question of a lightsaber game for Nintendo’s Wii, saying that the company has internal prototypes running using the Wiimote.
In response to a question from session moderator N’Gai Croal of Newsweek asking: “What would it take to make a lightsaber game for the Wii?”, Ward, who is President of LucasArts and a Senior VP at Lucasfilm, commented:
“We’re all over that, and internally we have already played a lightsaber game on the Wii. It’s a lot of fun, and we’ll get there.”
He added that the whole concept of a title using a lightsaber of Nintendo Wii was “…in place! There’ll be some stuff out this Fall – it’s going to be a lot of fun.”
I predict that we will also see a bevy of smaller lightsabre-esque titles for the Wii via the new WiiWare channel, which allows small game developers to post their games to the Wii’s virtual console for download. Maybe someone will create a light-scimitar game!
I’m barely into The Girl Who Leapt at present, but am already thinking ahead. Based on Steven’s considerable enthusiasm, and Don’s deft enticement, it’s obvious that the next title on my list should be Shingu.
Which raises the usual ethical question: buy or download? Unlike TGWL, Shingu is available for purchase with subtitling. However, I have financial realities that I can’t ignore, especially after the expense of moving. That’s just a rationalization – anime is a voluntary pleasure, not a need, and if it comes down to diapers vs anime then obviously I’d choose the former (and believe me, there is enough projectile and explosive action on that front. don’t ask). But as a consumer I also have a philosophical objection to the present model wherein the movie industry expects me to believe that region encoding is anything other than a blatant ploy for milking profit beyond the market value of their product.
I pretty much entirely disagree with Steven’s assertion that the fansub industry is p*ssing in the soup; with regards to the options for the studios, I’d take his choice 1 (simultaneous release to US and Japanese markets) and go even further: abolish region-encoding entirely. Steven notes that simultaneous release would
undercut the Japanese business, because Japanese fans will start importing region 1 DVDs, paying $10 per episode instead of more than $25. Or if they try to charge Americans something like what they currently charge in Japan, titles will flop. No one here is going to pay $50 for a 2-episode DVD.
I don’t have much sympathy for the poor studios looking at losing their $40 price gouging to their captive Japanese market. If anything, it’s region-encoding that has pissed in the soup; that alone has created the fansub industry out of whole cloth. The fouling of the soup by RE is why the pricing model is on the verge of collapse, not the actions of genuine fans who’ve done more to increase profits for the studios (by introducing their product to new markets) than undermine them.
That said, the present law is the law, and downloading a fansub (or a legit copy) violates it. My conscience’s salve is that I will buy the title at some point if I enjoy it; I paid for full copies of Haibane Renmei and Sugar and have Someday’s Dreamers and Kino’s Journey on the list (and if TGWL ever makes it, will add that too).
There is of course a third option; using a movie rental service like Blockbuster or Netflix (I highly recommend the former). That was how I initially sampled Serial Experiments: Lain, though I did download the final disc instead so I could watch it more conveniently on my laptop rather than cart around the portable DVD player. The issue again comes down to convenience – which is by no means a right, purely a pleasure, but I confess to being as human as the next guy. If I am paying my monthly fee for blockbuster’s mail DVD service, and a title is available there, but I download it anyway, is there a difference? That’s more of a philosophical question I guess. The bottom line is that downloading lowers the action bar for me to actually bother with a title, and if that title is a quality one, makes it likely I will buy it. If I stuck to the book and only rented titles by mail or bought them outright, the simple fact is that I’d watch less anime, and probably buy none. That’s not an excuse on my part for skirting the law, but it certainly is a factual description of outcomes that I think the studios would be wiser to tap into for their own advantage. But I am not personally concerned with the studios’ business acumen; if they choose to remain on a path that obstructs me from their product, I’ll stop consuming it, and find something else.
Charles Conklin, aka Flightblogger, scored a major coup: exclusive first photos of the new Boeing 787 Dreamliner rolling out of manufacturing at the Everett, WA plant.
(go to Conklin’s site for several more photos)
The Dreamliner represents the antithesis of Airbus’ giant new A380 – a smaller, light, fuel-efficient plane that emphasizes passenger comfort over a vast behemoth that packs them in like sardines and requires airports to pay for expensive new gate upgrades just to host. Boeing is in many ways the antithesis of Airbus, too – though the argument that Boeing’s supposed civilian market prowess is partially subsidized by its vastly more lucrative defense contracts has some merit. Still. Look at that baby and tell me you wouldn’t love to fly aboard. I’ve flown aboard a few 777’s and the Dreamliner promises to be even more of a sublime travel experience.
One 26 foot truck with trailer, four days, 1660+ miles, 197 gallons of diesel fuel, and 8.9 miles per gallon (est. highway).
Kind of speaks for itself, no? well, so too does this (look closely).
Here’s the detailed itinerary via Google (at zipcode resolution only, so its not 100% accurate on the side-street level). It turns out that I passed right through Nick’s backyard and also within shouting distance of Astro. That’s a genuine shame; my blogroll is a short one for a reason, and I’d have valued a meeting with either of them highly. Then again, as my twitter log shows, we were pressed for time the whole way and fell behind schedule, revising our plan somewhat along the route. I really enjoyed the freedom of looking at the map and saying, “today we will do this instead of this.”
Incidentally, I’ve also put my mileage calculations online in a google spreadsheet; since each time I filled up, I filled up the tank to the maximum, I think the implicit assumption of my calculation (that gallons filled are equal to gallons consumed on the previous leg) holds. I invite corrections.
At any rate, here I am, in Marshfield WI. I welcome my new cheese overlords. I’m going to blog a bit about life here, and have added a Marshfield category accordingly.
And I will actually do some geek and anime blogging, too, while I am at it. I’m about halfway through the Girl Who Leapt…
OK, settling in for the night in Baton Rouge. I’d have loved to have an excuse to visit Don, but that route would have been hundreds of miles out of the way. We’re gonna head up straight through Mississippi to Memphis via I-10/12/55, then cut across Tennessee on I-40, and then take I-65 up through Kentucky and Indiana on our way to Chicago and Wisconsin beyond. Do visit my Twitter for real-time updates from the road. Yes, I know I shouldn’t Twitter and drive, esp while driving a 26ft truck and trailer…
I spent the entire week packing all our possessions into boxes large and small. Tomorrow morning I will pick up a 26ft truck and tow attachment for our small car, and start loading all the detritus of our life here in Dickinson, Texas the past 9 years. Sunday afternoon I will hit the road, and arrive in Marshfield, WI hopefully by Wednesday.
It’s a strange thing, leaving a life behind. The past decade I have grown as a person in every possible way; I’ve picked up a doctorate, my wife picked up two (Pharm D and MD. Both count 🙂 We’ve had two kids, I’ve started a few blogs, and grew a crop of white hair. I’ve got those Reed Richards-esque stripes on both sides now.
In Wisconsin, our life promises to be totally different. Slow rather than fast, stationary rather than always in motion. I am genuinely excited, even the tinge of fear of change just serves to enhance my anticipation.
But first I’ve got to get there. Actually, first I’ve got to load that bloody truck. Tomorrow is going to suck a lot worse than this whole week, cumulative. But then it’s open road… and I’ll be “blogging” the trip via Twitter, so do keep tabs on me Sunday through Wednesday, at http://www.twitter.com/azizhp if you like. Those of you with my cell phone number, do ping me to keep me awake on the road, while you’re at it 🙂
Let’s see where this goes.
Netscape has released a new version of Navigator. Netscape! And Apple has ported Safari to Windows. Its notable that for both, the main selling points of differentiation from IE and Firefox are new ways of messing around with tabs. I find this obsession with tabs on the part of these bit players to be a kind of cargo cult mentality; wave the word “tabs” around and the users will fall out of the skies.
The real innovation on the browser front is porting the web to handheld devices. In that regard, Opera is the king – they just released a version for the wifi-capable Nintendo DS. Opera really understands that the user interface needs to be custom to the device; anyone who has used the Opera browser on the Wii can attest to how well they’ve leveraged the strengths of the unique interface there. With the DS, they have two screens, and a stylus to play with. That is definitely going to be interesting; the DS is a fraction of the cost of bulkier “web access devices” like the UMPC or Origami, and there’s already a gigantic user base.