Archive for the ‘Software’ Category

Variable Movie Rating System

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

There are a lot of great movies out there but that are not suitable for young viewers.  With all the digital technology available, wouldn’t it be great if you could purchase a movie, but at playback time, select the rating that you wanted to watch it at?  In other words, let’s say you wanted your Middle School wrestler to watch “Win Win”.  Currently, this movie is rated R which means it is a no-no for young kids.  What if the scenes or language that drove the R-rating could be digitally skipped or blanked? Should be easy shouldn’t it?  And your DVD player or iTunes or whatever you use to grab movies, would do all the work and let you enjoy a fun, family evening.  Since it is all automatic, no need to “fast forward” or say “close your eyes”. 

For those of you who let your kids watch anything, hmmm.  This option is not for you.  But I think kids will have plenty of opportunities to see content that is above their age level.  I just want to make sure that as a parent, that does not happen under my tutelage.  It makes a difference.

Any adventurous movie studios willing to follow my idea and get some variable rating movies published?

Popularity: 1%

iFantasy

Monday, January 16th, 2012

Let me preface this post.  I am not a Windows Fanboy, nor am I an Apple athiest.  I just love technology when it makes life easier. The more intuitive, the better. The shorter the learning curve, the better. However, I must caveat, I think more like a Windows user than a Mac user.  How do I know this? Because many things are intuitive to me on a Windows machine, but I am all thumbs on a Mac. 

A couple examples.  I tried to help my son with a school project. He just needed some pictures from the internet.  We were on my Windows machine, I surfed Google images using Internet Explorer, found exactly what he needed, right-clicked, selected download, and voila, images saved.  4-5 seconds of work.  I was ready for the next image….but he wanted to finish his paper on the Mac.  No sweat right?…Open up Safari, surf the same Google Images, find the image, but wait…where is the right click?  No go–only a single button under the mouse pad.  Hmmm….How about drag and drop….no?  O.K.  search the internet but can’t find the right search term to solve my problem.  Call a Mac friend who made it all clear.  I had to learn the “two finger” drag.  Interesting.  O.K. new pardigm.  I can learn right?  But it was not intuitive for me.  

I installed iTunes on my Windows computer to help manage all our iPods and iPads and to interface with our Apple TV.  Easy and works great.  Kind of.  You see, I can’t really share the music with my four computers.  If I plug an iPod into the desktop, and sync music there, it does not allow me to sync music on my Laptop with the same iPod.  You can only sync with one machine.  Hmmm.  Apparently that is bad.  I can link accounts, but I still cannot plug and play into different machines.  The iPod will reset and all data will be lost. Amazing.  Want to sync some images? Good luck, if it is not your registered computer, you get the images that were on that machine rather than the machine picking up your pics. Probably not what you intended when you visited your friend.  Oh, and you lose all your images.  Hope you saved them someplace else.

And the real frustrating one: I created a playlist on one my iPods.  Easy stuff.  And then I wanted to move that playlist over to my computer.  No Go.  Then I tried moving the music to a specific folder on my computer so I could get the same music/playlist on another iPod.  No Go.  Is what I’m thinking so difficult to do?  I want to drag and drop the playlist to my Desktop iTunes. Again, searched the internet, and discovered that you need a third-party program to do what I just suggested. Really?  Really!?  Is this what they mean by “it just works”?  Works for whom?  So I tried adding a comment to the comment section on the iPad, resynching and the finding the files with those comments.  But you can’t search “just” comments.  It automagically searches everything.  What am I missing?

And another thing, why does iTunes recognize lots of video formats, but does not bother to convert them when I try to drag to my iPad?  It just tells me I can’t put it on my iPad, but does not give me a hint on what I should do. 

I could go on about these quirks, but alas, I have to go back to installing a fresh copy of Win7 on my old 2007 laptop.  Oh, done.  That was quick!  17 minutes from a blank drive to a full install. With no interruptions and very little required of me…a step in the right direction. 

At least I have finally figured out that to eject a CD from my Mac!  O.K.  this is basic, you drag the CD to the trash bin!  Clever.  But way beyond what I would have guessed.  Another win for Mac.  Not so much for me.  I keep trying.  But this really can be trying!

Will continue trying to master both Mac and Windows.  And Android and iOS….

Popularity: 1%

Xperia X-10 update

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

More than a year ago, I purchased the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 (SO-01B) from a little shop near my house. As I mentioned in a previous post, I really enjoyed the promises of the phone, but was disappointed with the performance. Slow to start, laggy, and running Android version 1.6 when version 2.1 had already been released to the market.

Fast forward to today. Despite my orignal complaints (or in spite of its shortcomings) I continued to use the phone. And use it, and use it. At first, I found that I was carrying around both my trusty Garakei (local indigenous DoCoMo Panasonic slide phone) and my bright shiny, battery consuming 1st generation Android SE Smartphone. But with the purchase of an additional battery, I left the old phone at home to play bedside alarm clock.

The phone picked up some new tricks when they updated to dual touch and then Android version 2.1. Things improved slightly, but I still longed for a better phone…without having to pay for another device.

In the meantime, I picked up an iPad and then an iPad2. (What does this have to do with the Xperia you may ask….I’ll get to that in a minute).

And while I played with these devices, I found that I enjoyed the iPod/iPad/iPhone interface, but missed some of the Android features.

Specifically, the i-series of toys respond very well to the user and the experience feels polished and smooth. Contrast that with my Xperia Android experience where I wasn’t always sure if my inputs were recognized. Taking a photo with the iPad2 (yes, we have used it to take photos) was a quick affair. The app started up quickly, and the shutter response was decent for a multi-purpose device. The Xperia on the other hand, made me wait, and wait to start the app, then wait 3 seconds from shutter to photo.

OK, so it sounds like the iPad wins right? Well not so fast….you see, the reason the Xperia seems to take so long is it is trying push a lot more data through a little pipe. The photos on the screen of the iPad look great…but load them up on a computer and the low pixel density is all too apparent. The slower Xperia on the other hand turned out far higher quality images on my computer. Tough to call. For expedient, the iPad, for quality-the Xperia. hmmmm.

Next was the home screen. I discovered lots of things about the iPad home screen, screen copy, and how to move icons. Same for the Android. But the widgets I really liked on Android. I could see my DoCoMo phone bill and the yen rate at a glance…without the need to start an app. And I could put icons at the bottom and top of the screen with nothing in the middle. iPod only allows moving between screens, but no control over placement on the screen.
(Oops, This is digressing into a comparisons of systems which I did not originally intend to do…oh well). I am trying to explain how I feel about my Xperia. So back to the task at hand.

With these new toys, I found that each had its place in my life. But I needed a way to reduce monthly fees. I put my EMobile stick on a freeze plan (don’t use it and the fee is 0 yen, use it and the fee is lots…but available) and kept my iPods on WiFi mode.

Now I needed a way to make a hotspot. EMobile advertised this feature on their phones. AU did the same. But could I have this feature on my current, (ancient) phone without actually paying for a new device? hmmm.

And now, this is where my story begins. Here is the meat that I have been developing through the words above. You see, I had heard of this thing called “flashing”. As a EE major, I had much experience “flashing” EEPROMs with little programs to energize an 8086 processor to do simple tasks. I had flashed hardware with critical company provided updates. But I had never attempted to overwrite the code on my phone with unauthorized versions of software. While the phone was under warranty, I was frankly, too scared. (This is my 4th physical unit…I had 3 warranty approved replacements!) I was not about to risk voiding my warranty…and then….the warranty period expired, and I had those iPads to feed….

So I started looking around for a 2.3 version of Android to slide into my phone. Turns out I was in luck! SE actually released a version of Android in the 2.3.3 flavor for the Xperia line! But I was out of luck because DoCoMo decided not to implement this version. Probably because it would cut into sales of the Arc and Acro….Makes business sense to me…but I am not here to keep DoCoMo selling new phones. I already pay them plenty every month….they’ve got me….what I wanted was that new and shiny 2.3.3. But how to get it?

I know, I know, you either have done this and am laughing at my trepidation, or you too are wondering if this is something that you are capable of handing. Well, in a word, if you have patience, you are more than capable of doing this! It was a snap..took some trial and error, but wow! In retrospect, it was flash bang easy!

The most stressful part? Trying to download the Official Generic ROM from these new and clever download sites. All the download sites are pretty clever…you pay to get speedy download, or wait for the slow download that is usually corrupted. (i.e. the wrong size file because only part of the file made it through…here is where I installed a hash-checker (or something like that) to check the hash sums to make sure the file was the one the author intended.)

And after I got the entire file to download properly (a generic SE Android 2.3.3 ROM) and the XDA developer provided Flasher software (I have to go send him some donation love!), it was as simple as drag, drop, flash, reboot, and start my 2.3.3 experience. (Well there were a few specific steps, but it was really simple…nothing complicated and nothing tricky. Just drag some files to a folder, turn off the phone, plug it in while holding the return button…and then rebooting….really that easy!) Of course, I’ve left out the fact that my data was all completely wiped…not a big deal since I used a backup program to back up my apps, and Google already has all my phone book information stored on their servers…and MailDroid has a feature that saves all the e-mail settings…so all in all…the only real pain was reinstalling everything with the backup software and resetting all the options and logging back into google…)

And then, while I did that and then let the phone rebuild the icons or whatever it was doing (it was slow for a while); it took a while to catch up, but when it did….the overall experience improved, the phone felt sleeker and faster, and MOST IMPORTANT OF ALL, I now had the ability to turn my phone into a Wireless WiFi hotspot!

If you already have this capability on your phone, you know how awesome it is to not require a separate bill to power up another internet device. So now, instead of trying to type this blog on that super tiny smartphone with the lousy tiny on-glass keyboard, I can type with a real keyboard onto my iPad (Apple wireless keyboard for those wondering…)

And now, as I sit on the Shinkansen, with my Xperia in my holster, broadcasting WiFi…I can type in style an relative comfort.

There were some other features with 2.3.3 that seemed to have been borrowed from the iPhone…the bottom line of the screen now has a permanent dock for four apps…I stick mail, camera, e-mail and phone down there….and the remainder of my screens are mostly empty since the app drawer is much better laid out: I can now sort my apps by alphabetical order, most recently installed, or by use…or even in any order I like. Way better than the stock SE Android app drawer!

The camera did not seem to change. Same 6-7 seconds to start up and 3 seconds from push to photo. But, if my phone is in silent mode, no camera sounds! Whew! (Japanese law requires phones to always make a sound when taking a photo…weirdos taking photos when they shouldn’t have started that rule….) I hate the noise they make and always covered up the little hole to reduce the sound…but now with the new ROM, it can be silenced. Nice. Just like a regular point and shoot.

There might be other cool features that are part of this new Android (like being able to use Adobe Flash 10.2) but I really haven’t noticed any other differences. The real key is HOTSPOT!

With this new flashed version of Andriod, the promise is getting closer to reality. I still think the i-toy version of the operating system is a smoother and prettier looking interface, but I can’t complain as loudly about my Xperia anymore. I love it, warts and all.

It is working great for me and hope the experience continues to get better (without requiring new hardware!)

The phone works great, the screen looks great, hooked up with my JawBone JAMBOX it sounds great, and life is good again.

Cheers and tweet ya later!
@Aloha_Dylan

P.S. anyone know how to use the Shinkansen WiFi wihtout paying an additional fee? I have a home OCN account, NTT hikari fiber, and DoCoMo phone…surely someohow, I can get some WiFi under the guise of an existing customer?!

Popularity: 10%

A New Xperia Xperience

Friday, November 12th, 2010

Refreshing news…finally.  The Sony Ericsson Xperia works better now.   After installing the Android 2.1 update, my Xperia picked up some speed, and feels more complete.  I had some trouble spots during my upgrade, but eventually reached a happy conclusion.   Things are working great now.  So I’m sure you are wondering….what changed?  What’s new?

First, the obvious:  The home screen grew by two screens on each side to give you a total of 5 home screens.  Respectable.   Each screen now has an extra row of four icons…Makes sense…the screen was big enough: so 5 home screens, 20 apps per screen.  The dedicated App tray is no longer a pull out tray….it is a tap to open button.  And the unlock is a normal slide rather than an arc across the screen…

Next, the less than obvious: Google can now handle more than one mail account.  Music apps actually work! (i.e. when you press the piano key, or the drums, or the guitar, the sound plays right away without a little nagging delay…’bout time!…).  The screen seems much sharper to my eyes…might be a trick of the brain, but the fonts seem slightly larger and definitely crisper.   You can install live wallpapers and you have access to many, many more apps under 2.1 compared to the limited number of 1.6 apps.  Others have reported increased battery life, but I won’t know for sure until a couple more days have passed.  The video mode has continuous focus and HD capability.  The browser grabs a screen shot to save in your Bookmarks collection…so you get a panel of screen shots making it easy to find your bookmarked pages!

But the bad news:  No Flash capability and no multitouch.  Mediascape is supposed to be better but is still far short of the Android Gallery App.  And for the Japanese user who inputs English text, the Sony POBox Touch or the Standard Keyboard still fall way short of the mark for ease of use.  And what’s up with the two rows of all caps NTT DOCOMO | NTT DOCOMO?!  Hello!? And where did my silent mode button go? 

O.K.  delving a little deeper.

I began my upgrade Xperience on 10 Nov at 9 pm.  The release was scheduled for 6 pm so I had no trouble getting the Sony Ericsson Update Service to recognize that I had an older version of the software.  I opted for the upgrade and keep my configuration rather than the upgrade and reset to factory configuration.  Naturally, I used the backup utility first to save all of my settings (all?  well not quite all…)  Then I upgraded without trouble and in 19 minutes my phone stated it was 2.1 and ready to go.  I went from Android 1.6, Baseband version 1.0.24, Kernel 2.6.29 -relsemc, Build R1EA025 ….to….  Android 2.1, Baseband version 2.0.47, Kernel 2.6.29 SEMCVSer@SEMCHost, Build 2.0.B.0.138.  But all those numbers are not important…what I thought was important was that little number under Android version….I was now Android 2.1…    I powered on and off a few times after the full install to make sure the system was ready to roll….

But not so fast…I decided to run some benchmark tests to compare it to my original 1.6 version.  I loaded up quadrant and compared 5 test runs with my previous 5 test runs.  When I was running Android 1.6, I scored 437 or 436 fairly consistently.  Now, with this brand new build of Android, my test scores vaired from a low of 421 to a high of 492…hmmm…something fishy….the variability didn’t make sense….And some of my apps would not run properly (Smart Keyboard would not power up even though it was selected)….I could not download new apps, they all failed.  I could receive calls, but I could not locate anyone in my address book.  Dialer would lock up if I tried to look for a contact.  And a number of other unrelated failures.  I went into denial.  No one else commented about trouble during the upgrade, so I tried to pretend that my problems would go away if I just ignored them.  So after a several hour bike ride, I came back to the realization that the upgrade had not gone well for Dylan.  There was no way around it…I would have to do a full reinstall to initial factory settings.  Grrrr…

So I grit my teeth and got to work.  A full reinstall takes just a few minutes more than the original install, but it gave me everything I needed for a clean finish.  Everything was working as it should.  And with a clean install, I ran quadrant a few times and came up with scores of 529 – 531.  Much more consistent and much better than the system under 1.6.  So the feeling of speed is not just in my head.  (BTW, graphics in the quadrant standard benchmark test seemed to run smoother and brighter too…)  I had no trouble downloading and reinstalling my apps.  And the App Market had lots of new apps that I was not able to view when I was running 1.6.   

The Camera runs more smoothly.  Initial startup is still slow, but the shutter appears to release faster after taking less time to focus. You still have to wait for the previous photo to be saved before you can take a new photo, but that processing seems to have been speeded up considerably.  The video mode now includes HD video and continuous focusing.  The continuous focusing is nice and fairly smooth.  It makes the video operation seamless. Still have to turn on the light each time you start up the camera.  It does not save this mode for you.  Nor does it “guess” when you need it…bummer.

Seems the screen goes to sleep a lot faster…I wonder if that is how they extend the battery life? 

There are Backed-Up Apps, and then there are all the other Apps.

Did I mention I backed up everything?  Well it turns out that the backup tool DOES NOT backup UNPAID apps.  All the paid apps are fine…at least those that are still listed.  But unpaid apps…the hundreds of unpaid apps that I downloaded from the market and use so often?  Those apps were not stored in the Downloads folder.  I had to try to remember the proper titles and go back out and find them. I still think I’m missing quite a few.  I actually took the time to record every single downloaded app in my notes, but still….why wouldn’t the backup software include these free apps…is there a hidden message from Google? 

SE is Still Disappointing in many ways.

Mediascape is still slow to load, slow to enlarge selected photos and slow to move to the next photo. If you’ve ever done this on an iPhone, you wonder how the folks at SE could not get this one right.  As a matter of fact, to cover their tracks, the programmers at SE went to the extra trouble to hide, bury, and stash away the perfectly good Android Gallery App.  I didn’t even know there was a Gallery App on my phone.  And it works great!  Want to see how good?  Go to the Add a Widget, Scroll down to Photo Frame (??????) and have a look around.  This is the Android Gallery App.  Nice huh?  Smooth scrolling images, quick to load, easy to see your photos…(only too bad you can’t organize the folders from this app).  Anyway, if you try to add this app to your desktop, or try to look for it in your app tray you will notice it is “missing”.  Hmmm….I checked under the system management tool for Managing Apps and it is sitting right there.  Yet it is not anywhere to be found from the launcher….Thanks SE…But not to worry fans, you can get an app that will bring this right to your desktop…you just need an App Installer, and the XDA Developers APK that brings the Gallery App out of hiding…Check out the story here:  www.xperia10.net/2010/11/07/tired-of-mediascape-get-access-to-the-3d-gallery/

Adobe Flash Viewer on 2.1? I know, I know, some phones you can download a workaround for Flash and run Flash on 2.1.  I tried, I installed, but none of the several Flash Sites could I see…none.  Hello SE?  I’ll even spare you the trouble of looking for the link and trying.  It doesn’t seem to work.  (But if you find a way, let me know and I’ll be glad to edit this portion!)

New row of Quick buttons….Nice color, increased to 5 buttons…but I lost my silent mode button, picked up a sync button and a screen lighting button…hmm.  The power button kit looks nice and adds a battery status, airplane mode switch, silent mode, GPS, and data roaming quick setting switch.  But there are no settings to edit either of these two choices…what happened to the people’s choice?

NO GOOGLE EARTH…come on…I thought this was one of the big improvements in moving to 2.1.  Tried and tired again. No luck.  No Google Earth.  (But the new Google Maps has an AWESOME Navi feature….rivals the awesome Navi in my car.  Plus, the navi in my car only gets an update once every two years.  The Google Navi seems updated a lot faster!  Now I just need a place to mount my Xperia on my car and also on my biycle!  Ideas anyone?  Anyone have a recommended upper arm/ shoulder case for jogging with the Xperia?

Summary

All in all, the update made my phone run faster.  The update process ran smooth….except for the part where it did not run smooth…but a repeat of the install made it behave and work well. Now, post 2.1 install, there are more apps to chose from…A good thing.  (I still could not find Google Earth though….).  Angry Birds runs smoother and with fewer bugs under 2.1.  Of the basic apps, the independent, non-Google and non-SE apps still provide excellent value.  In particular, I name a few of my favorites (in no particular order).  These are the ones that I cannot run my phone without.  They are an integral part of each Android day: 
Smart Keyboard – If you type in English and Japanese on your Xperia (or other languages) this one keyboard makes typing a breeze. The autocorrect function just works…the Standard SE Keyboard, makes you work….Smart Keyboard even has a calibration option and a tracker to let you know where your fingers are actually touching the screen.  It just works better all around.
Android Gallery – So much better than Mediascape.  I don’t know why I never found it before…oh that’s right, SE hid it from me.
K-9 Mail – It works.  And it keeps getting better.  It works with so many account types.  It has so many ways to make it fit your style.  It works better than the Google G-Mail…And I like G-mail…but not the app.  K-9 Mail makes e-mailing from Android easy again.
Jorte – Wow.  It syncs with Google Calendar, but it interfaces with me so much better.  Now I just have to figure out how to link it to my Outlook Calendar….

I promise, my next post will not be about this phone. Really. 

Just as I finished typing this post, I got an e-mail from DoCoMo…they were letting me know that version 2.1 was released.  I wonder if there were still Xperia users out there in Japan not aware that this was on the horizon…..Not impossible, but seems unlikely….

Time to move on and return to life before this “invented” excitement found its way into my daily activities.  I still miss having Flash and Google Earth.  HELLO SE?!  And can I get a better, more response (shutter lag time, light sensitivity, etc….)

Cheers,  Dylan

Popularity: 29%

Lately it’s so quiet

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

I have so much to say but I’ve been busy doing other things. Today, I am stuck in a meeting where I am not primary but I still must attend.? So here I type.? I feel like a Dilbert comic strip.

Today’s blog title reflects both my absence from this page as well as a line from my new favorite song.? Go Google and let me know if you like it….better yet check it out on YouTube and watch the fan created video that goes with it.

In other news my android phone is still limping along.? Since I downloaded “smart keyboard”, typing in English and Japanese has gotten better.?? But I lost my forward and back keys!!

If you are reading this, leave a comment.? You have to login (I think) but that is just to eliminate spam.?

Thanks for reading. I look forward to reading what’s on your mind.

Aloha.

Popularity: 8%

Open Source Manufacturing?!

Monday, July 6th, 2009

A circuit board for the masses: the Arduino microcontroller. Photo: James Day

A circuit board for the masses: the Arduino microcontroller. Photo: James Day

Imagine a world where ideas reign supreme and profits come as an after thought. That is the world that Linux’s founder, Linus Torvalds dreamed up when he launched Linux in 1991.  Well now, many years later, it seems that manufacturing is about to take a turn in this direction.  Arduino is an Italian firm that makes a little microprocessor.  Normal companies jealously guard the engineering secrets that make their box work.  Arduino gives away the plans and hopes you will make many copies and even improve the device. 

For anyone who as ever been out looking for a little microprocessor to help you do something better, this is a heavenly gift.  You can modify these plans at low cost to engineer your new device.  And lots of folks already have!  Without licensing fees! 

Arduino gadgets: WineM coaster; Snail Light Seeker; interactive embroidery with conductive threads; and Botanicalls, which tells you when your plants need water.

Arduino gadgets: WineM coaster; Snail Light Seeker; interactive embroidery with conductive threads; and Botanicalls, which tells you when your plants need water.

Can this be the wave of the future?  I certainly appreciate a product that is patented and rigorously tested.  I doubt I’d be interested in an open source automobile, but for some things, open source is really going to catch on.  All of my websites are run on open source software  (WordPress) programmed in open source languages (php).  I would love to have inexpensive devices tell me when my kids have left the lights on in their room and turn it off for them.  How about a wireless device that makes sure your plants always have the right amout of moisture?  Automatic curtain closers?  I could go on.  Clearly,  there is room to grow in this market and it may just be the home tinkerer who comes up with the next great device that changes our lives…via open source. 

Read more at Wired

Popularity: 13%

Animator vs. Animation!

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
The Leading Role - aka the victim

The Leading Role - aka the victim

 

I love the Internet. The things you can find, the ideas people have. Deviant Art has a way of pulling together some interesting talent. But it takes some time to go through and find the gems. I wish I could build animation like this.  This is truly one of the gems. Great action, cool story line, perfect blend of sound effects… I can’t wait to see the sequel!

The Plot:  A bored animator decides to create a stick figure that he can mangle, maim, and otherwise torture.  But the stick figure, aka “victim” wants no part of this.  The stick figure leaps off the animation work area and wreaks havoc with the menus pulling a few tricks of his own. Watch the movie to see how this turns out!

Animator vs Animation

D

P.S. Interested in making your own flash movies?  Of course there is the tried and true Adobe Flash CS4 Professional, but have you checked out Swish?  I recommend starting with Swish Max.  Get the free download, check out the lessons online, look at the samples, and enjoy programming your own Flash movies!

Popularity: 24%

Can’t keep up with technology

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

I enjoy technology for the sake of technology.  I think that we have completely missed the capability inherent in our computers when we limit their use to internet surfing, word processing, and e-mail.  

Don’t get me wrong, these are all great uses of the computer, but you don’t need a high-powered computer to do these activities.  Cell phones are now very capable of handling these functions.  It all boils down to the software.  Can you program enough lines of code to make the computer interact at a higher level?  Can we get semi-autonomous machines that control the light in our house, turn on the lights when it gets dark, control the temperature in the house etc…?

But I digress.  This post is about not being able to keep up with the changes on the internet.  Recently, I discovered Chrome when I downloaded Google Earth.  I also found CoolIris when I was looking for a plugin for Lightroom.  I just signed up for Facebook and have been wondering who else I might know with an account.  I just updated the underlying software for this blog.  I am now using WordPress ver 2.7.

Change is great.  I like the new features that come with new toys.  And with the exception of Lightroom, all were free!  How does this work?  Who is paying for these programmers to pay their rent and electirc bills?  Again I digress.

Chrome is great.  I like being able to search by typing directly in the address bar (I just discovered that IE also allows this…funny I never noticed before…) Hard to keep up.  I like the graphical display (a mini page shot) in Chrome that shows the sites you visit most frequently.  Cooliris is neat but a little disorienting.  I feel like I’m on a boat in the ocean with gentle waves lapping at my boat….I couldn’t stop the screen…it keeps moving a little after your mouse stops. (Turns out you can turn of the gently scrolling feature to make it feel like you are on terra firma). But again, a neat graphical represenation of your searches on a huge wall that spans left and right as far as you like.  Much more fun to search this way than with the simple text responses from google.  But alas, something is missing and I gave up. Too much splash and not enough content….But a step in the right direction.

Google Earth is a great way to view the world.  Wonderful mapping and 360 pictures are eerie.  It is fun to jump into pictures and see where I am jumping.

Lightroom is finally working well for me and I just wish it could handle video images.  Now that the Canon 5D Mark II DSLR can take video (probably not its claim to fame, but it appears game-changing to me), it seems appropriate to have Lightroom pick up the marker and move the ball forward.  Now anyone can use high quality lenses to make movies on a Digital SLR. Wow.

And Facebook.  A neat idea, but can I have a system that allows me to “rate” my friends?  Not everyone comes to my house for dinner and so, everyone on facebook should not be allowed the same level of access.  I have acquaintences, and friends.  I have family and really close friends.  I should be able to rank my contacts to change how much of my Facebook they can access…Not everyone needs to write on my wall.  And those applications that are so neat…why do they have to access everything on my page (to include my friend’s information)?  I would love to try those apps, but if I play, all of my friends content is opened up to the app and then by extension, to google and search engines.   There should be a better lock for this…Maybe I’ll have to make my own “facebook” page… I think I’ll call it “myspatula.com”.  Cause you’ll be able to “cook up”  any scheme you like for keeping track of your contacts….

But I’m just dreaming on.  The more things change, the more humans stay the same.  Technology changes, but will these changes become permanent useful fixtures (like the car, telephone, or Internet), or just road markers on the way to something better (Disc Cameras, Cassette Tapes, Neckties)?  

People like their technology to be transparent.  The only people who brag about the size of their memory card or the number of pixels on the screen are geeks.  The rest of the world just wants to use their toys, watch their DVDs, and enjoy the fresh air….We don’t want to fight the technology, we just want to get by and have our lives be a little easier. But its hard to keep up with the newest gadget…. Got a new gadget you want me to try…Post a comment and let me know about it….

Eventually we will not wear ties.  But I digress…

D

Popularity: 10%

Adobe Lightroom

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Adobe Lightroom is by far the best software for managing your massive digital photo collection.  I love it.  I really do.  It lets me crop, tweak colors, add meta data, sort, file, build web pages, and more.  And it is great at everything it does.  It is not perfect and doesn’t do everything I want it to… but it is clearly on the road for sustained success.  I really like it.

And now that they have fixed the printing issue (was only occuring to a small, but distinguished group), it is truly a great place to print individual photos or standard photo packates.

BUT, Adobe has a long way to go to make this the software I would call near perfect. 

Here are my feature requests for this venerable and otherwise great software:

1. When I take a lot of photos, I like to print them out for the people in the picture.  So I’d like to see a feature where I can select a specific number of photos for each individual photo to be printed.  (i.e. 5 of #2, 4 of #1, etc.)

2. My still camera camera takes video.  My video camera takes still photos.  I’d like to be able to load both video and still images into the computer using Lightroom.

3. Lightroom does not have an effective tool to deal with duplicates.  And if you delete or move photos outside of lightroom, it gets confused.  I’d like an active tool to help me see where images are, if they’ve moved, if I accidently duplicated them–or even intentionally duplicated them (like to send an e-mail 2 years ago).  I’d like the tool to recognize the photo not only by the name, but by the content of the photo.  Identical images but one is inferior quality, smaller size etc.  Then let me cull this growing pile of duplicates with some automation!

4. Face recognition is neat. It is here.  Hello Adobe?

5. After upgrading Lightroom, it cannot find my card reader.  It used to open up automagically to import photos when I slid my cards into the reader.  I’d like Lightroom to notice this and turn the auto feature back on.  (I did it manually and it still doesn’t work…hmmmm)

6. I’d like a better system for swapping images and image libraries between computers.  I use two and would like to have access from both machines….Hmmmmmm.

7. Remote server. Planning on moving *some* of my photos to a remote server.  I wish Lightroom could handle two libraries simultaneously.  Why do I have to hard close out one to use another….Grrrrr.

8. The pop out/pop in menus are great.  Kind of….they keep popping in and out when I wanted to do something different.  Can we get some protectors to turn off the popping when we know we’ll be hovering the mouse in that general area?

9. When loading images from a card, I’d like to (in one step) apply mass Meta data.  I’d like to select x-y photos and tag them with “Tokyo”, then tag a-f with “Football”, and j-m with “Kids”, etc.  Why not at this stage?  Why do I have to tag all of the photos at once?  Come on Adobe…work with me…

10. Not sure why, but sometimes the filters are on the top of the page, sometimes a few are on the bottom.  Sometimes my favorite filters are there (pick, unpick, trash); and sometimes they aren’t.  Sometimes I can’t tell if a fiter is selected or not and I have to click it on and off to verify….can we fix all this so there is less guesswork?  

Lot’s more like this….but I think 10 is a good place to take a break….

Cheers,  D

Popularity: 8%

Command Line (or is it DOS?)

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

I used to use batch files and DOS commands when I sat down at my computer.  (I’m not that old am i?)  Well I got an inkling to go and do that again so I did a search and discovered that DOS is dead.  I mean I knew that, I just didn’t realize that the DOS emulator I have been seeing is not a DOS emulator.  It is a command line prompt.  Which means the possibilties are much greater than just a dumbed down DOS.  You can actually do much more.  But don’t let me ramble on about this, go see for yourself.

http://commandwindows.com/

Popularity: 14%