Category: Tech

  • Amanita Design

    http://nlp.fi.muni.cz/~xsvobod4/amanita/plantage/

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    Polyphonic
    Sandoz?
    Amazing Flash?

  • The Next Killer App

    Do you have an IM program? Do you go to websites or use plugins to manage a blog? Do you email files to friends or have an account on Friendster or LinkedIn? Do you play head-to-head games over the internet with friends or strangers? Do you chat? Do you listen to streaming music like WOXY? Do you like to use your broadband connection for cool video content like guys dancing? Do you like to share pictures online? Do you have a library of digital music?

    You’ve probably been using lots of different applications and websites to do these things. Maybe you’re using Snapfish or Flickr to share pictures, Miranda or GAIM for IM (or AIM) and YouTube for video. Have you tried delicious for managing links (and the community)? Maybe you like to pass yor time playing Puzzle Pirates against other people. You probably listen to music using iTunes, WinAmp or somesuch. If you’ve got a blog you’re probably using Blogger or WordPress to manage it. If you’re sophisticated you might be streaming music using Shoutcast or Icecast.

    Recently a few applications have emerged for Windows (there may be Mac analogues but I’m not aware of them – please post in comments if you’re aware of any) that have been bundling a lot of this functionality. I’ve been trying them out with friends and the’re very exciting. Here’s a synopsis of three feature-rich (and free) apps:

    • Grouper bundles picture and file sharing, streaming audio between users, messaging, and the concept of “groups” into a polished interface. Groups are basically communities that you can set up with their own permissions where you can share your pictures, music, documents and whatever else with the other members of your group. Of course, all the other members have to have Grouper to participate.

      We liked the Grouper interface a lot. But, we didn’t like the absence of a universal instant messaging client so that we could use existing AIM/MSN/ICQ/Yahoo accounts to IM one another. In addition, Grouper, undoubtedly terrified of the RIAA and MPAA lawyer-army, restricts music sharing to streaming only in certain formats. So, I can connect to my groupmates’ machine and listen to their music, but I can’t actually download it from them. While I understand the effort to preserve the rights of the artist, it’s an ultimately false one because a determined user can simply convert said files into another format or archive it in order to share it over Grouper.

    • Qnext bundles universal IM, streaming audio, online game-play, videoconferencing, remote PC access, picture and file sharing, group chat and ICQ and VoIP internet calling. It’s a pretty phenomenal feature set and it has taken hold among our group.

      The user interface is pretty good and where Grouper has groups, Qnext has shared “zones” where you set up who gets access to what. The photo sharing is great – with zoom/pan, slideshow and save functions but image tagging like Flickr would make it better. The streaming audio “jukebox” zone allows the user to define what quality level stream to provide, either 64kbps or native quality, or both, thus enabling a cap on bandwidth usage for this function. Of course, this could be better with more support for the smaller audio formats. The universal IM client works but is a bit kludgy and slow and isn’t as configurable to your own personal habits as other clients like Gaim (with plugins) or Trillian.

    Google image sharing?

    Regardless of what app you’re using, the major barrier to taking full advantage of this software is adoption. While you’ll find your net-savvy friends with always-on broadband may jump right in, you’ll more likely find them wincing at having to download and install something, paranoid about privacy, or just “not getting” the concept. In addition, opening the proper ports to use these apps is a major hurdle – I’ve got several friends that have vociferously expressed interest and have waged war with the XP firewall and their own routers to no avail. While some utilize UPnP, support for UPnP is mixed and in my real-world experience it has been no help.

  • The Video Professor is a Fraud!

    video professorFrom the Denver Post:

    “Shortly before going on a live [TV] spot, a producer asked him to take calls from viewers. “I’ve got to tell you something,” Scherer said he was forced to confess. “I don’t know how to use a computer.”

    Read the Full Article

  • Power Point Stupidity

    David Byrne says PowerPoint’s medium is the message and Edward Tufte says PowerPoint is Evil. David Coursey has some good tips on using it (after surmising “does PowerPoint make us stupid?”) But, his tips are really for advanced users. Let’s start simple.

      Remember, trees die for your slides (assuming you print them). If I see another slide with a single sentence on it in 48-point font, I may cry. Not because of the excruciating boredom, nor the overwhelming stupidity (more…)
  • My journey to MP3 player bliss (or, Wisdom buys and reviews a gadget)

    Back around January I decided to embark upon listening to the unabridged Atlas Shrugged audiobook. Problem was, I had it in MP3 format and burning it to audio disc would require at least 40 CDR’s plus the time and hassle involved in burning. As a result, I decided it was time to get me an MP3 player.

    Determined to spend less than $100, I shopped around for a long time, getting a feel for price ranges, flash vs. hard-drive players, feature sets, disposable vs. rechargeable batteries, and DRM vs. non-DRM. (more…)