Saturday, May 10, 2008

This thing really does kick butt...#

The ButtKicker LFE Kit just arrived today. All I can say is wow. I'm busy watching all the big blockbuster films with loads of bass. Right now it's Terminator 3 time. From the very first nuke that goes off, to when Arnold makes his debut, all the way until the truck chase scene. The wow factor does not stop. I'm totally looking forward to watching Band of Brothers tomorrow.

I've got a sub in the form of the Boston XB6 but I've got the volume down nearly all the way, apartment living and such. The Boston VR3's go pretty low anyway, the cross over is set to 60Hz but but Boston says 35Hz can be cleanly achieved. The sub and ButtKicker are set to 80Hz. Somehow even at lower volumes it just sounds and feels amazing.

The transducer hits with precision but also rolls extremely well giving big flaming explosions a new sense of realism. Combining that with the great Boston sound and it really makes for an awesome experience.

I'm not sure what else to say beyond that. It's definitely something that one needs to feel and experience to understand. It's not gimmicky feeling at all, one person I talked to asked if it was like a phone vibrating, but not at all. It's far more complicated, smooth and natural.

I haven't had a chance to test it with music yet. That's for tomorrow during the day. I will say, it might need some adjusting then, when I first hooked it up I ignored the manual set the thing to 75% volume. I think that was a pretty extreme, it kinda felt like the provided amp was giving the unit /too/ much power. If that's even possible. Turning it down half way and it's perfect.

Went down stairs and sure enough, couldn't really notice any of the vibrations or anything. Not sure about next door though.

That's the review for now, more tomorrow after music.




Home Life | Media | Music
Friday, May 09, 2008 11:32:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Thursday, April 10, 2008

While on the topic about home entertainment and home theater PC's...#

So this discussion came up recently about home theater's and what various people are doing, I just kinda figured whatever and throw my info out here as well.

First off, here is a link to an RSS feed that has some home theater examples which are pretty sweet:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/eh/rss/C154 via http://www.electronichouse.com/

Photos can be found here: http://cid-491062c199155578.skydrive.live.com/browse.aspx/Home%20Theater

Not the ideal set up in terms of layout but it’s an apartment…

Equipment:
56” Samsung HL-T5689S 1080p - currently $1400 (through a long history I originally paid a lot more)
Denon AVR-3808CI - $1200
Dell XPS w/dual OCUR and a LG HD/BD drive (dvi w/hdcp to hdmi) - believe this can be had for $1200
Dell PowerEdge 2900 with 4TB RAID5 in a closet up stairs - $3000
BostonAcoustics VR3 * 4 (front and rear) - $250/ea
VRC (center) - $250
VRX (sides not in use) - $250
XB6 (sub) - $250
Xbox 360 Elite (plugged in via HDMI), Wii (component), PS3 (HDMI) – retail

All the furniture is the cheap but decent Ikea stuff. Unfortunately because it is an apartment and the layout kind of sucks the rear speakers are way too close to the couch, but using the Audyssey in the Denon helps adjust for that and the surround experience is still pretty good. Oh and the fact I’m totally blocking the fireplace that’ll never be used anyway. The main thing for me was finding something cheap and simple to put all the equipment and TV on. Luckily the TV stand thing has space underneath so the cables are tied nicely under there. The only cable that’s visible is the wireless receiver for the KB and mouse. That new Logitech looks like it might be a good replacement though.

Monoprice.com for all the cabling which cost about $60, and considering that included 100ft of 12 gauge speaker wire, banana plugs, 3 spdif cables, 2 HDMI cables, cable for the sub… that’s pretty sweet. I also had previously bought a lot of CAT5e so the entire apartment is wired now though the cables are run under the baseboards.

There’s a single HDMI cable going from the receiver to TV and the TV is permanently set to that input. Luckily there’s no real overscan issues with the TV and MCE. The Dell w/OCUR is plugged in to the receiver via DVI w/HDCP to HDMI, for audio there’s a SPDIF cable as well as the normal 5.1 analog cabling. This allows me to normally use the digital output and get DD and DTS to the receiver, if I want WMA 5.1 and Uncompressed 5.1 PCM I switch to analog and that’s as simple as pressing the Input button on the Denon remote (it cycles through HDMI and Analog quickly). Now I did have an issue with the ATI 2600 card and the HDCP stuff when I added the receiver into the mix, the picture and audio would just cut out every 30 seconds or so. I switched to a nVidia 8600 and the problems went away (ATI driver issue I guess). There’s nothing too special about the setup though beyond that.

I actually use MCE for everything with no standalone players or devices other than the game consoles. It’s just nice and simple that way. The complexity is added by having ALL media stored on the RAID5 upstairs with everything in a domain. It’s pretty well organized but there’s still not enough room to rip all the DVD’s, though Network Media Sharing and Zune handle all the other media.

The speakers are possibly the best part of the setup since they were a total steal. I bought them from OneCall.com who pretty much is the only online retailer for BA. I had some Bostons way back when but they were stolen so it was kinda nice finally getting some again. I had looked at Magnolia and Definitive. I compared Klipsch, Monitor, Definitive’s, and B&W’s. I actually had no way to hear the Boston since Circuit City sucks like that.

My first choice was the B&W’s the 703’s were just awesome and at some point far in the future I hope to have some B&W’s. Randomly though I noticed OneCall had all the VR stuff for insane prices $249 vs. $629 so I ended up jumping on that. Turns out Boston EOL’d the VR series so they were just clearing inventory. They disappeared for a while but it looks like they’re up for $399 now. But this is a good point I think, you can get an awesome deal if you buy slightly used or EOL’d products, as long as you know the product is quality to begin with and the company making them is decent you can’t really go wrong. If and when I go for some B&W’s I might buy the current model year product just after the updated models are out.

All in all it’s a comfortable setup and the budget really isn’t that bad. I personally feel that however much is spent on the TV should be spent on the audio and however much is spent on the audio should be spent on the receiver and stuff that powers it all. So everything is right about that level. Flaws would be the fact it’s all in an apartment with a crappy layout and not a lot of wiggle room. It sucks I have to block the fireplace but that’s the only option in my case, we’ll see what it’s like when I move this month. The center channel is a little weak but I’ve adjusted that. I’m probably going to get a ButtKicker LFE after I move to still be able to enjoy things a bit. Though I’ve actually turned the sub down all the way I’ve still had noise complaints, the VR3’s go down to 35Hz and at a decent volume on some music can probably bug neighbors. I also can’t even use the VRX speakers at this point since I don’t have walls to mount them to, they are dipole surrounds which create a more theater like experience but even so I probably will use them in a dual surround config not 7.1. I mainly bought them because of their discount and the fact they’re EOL.

Anywho, there’s my quick personal review of my own setup. Hoping that at some point in the future I can do a proper home theater room with seating, acoustically transparent projector screen and so on. :-)




Home Life | Media
Thursday, April 10, 2008 4:55:49 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Thursday, February 21, 2008

You know you have a good product when...#

So I was just talking to Mooney about how I used to have my PC audio hooked up. Which immediately led me to talk about the Creative DDTS-100. In this day and age I really have a bad taste from using most Creative products. They can't write drivers to save their life, their audio cards suck, their speakers suck, just about everything Creative makes these days suck. But it's not all bad for Creative, they've got one good product that I know about. They simply need to look at products like the DDTS-100 and then go to eBay and see how much those products go for used.

The Creative DDTS-100 quite simply is the equivalent of a PC audio receiver in that it'll take SPDIF, TOSLINK, PC multi-channel analog, and RCA and it will decode Dolby Digital as well as DTS and it even includes DD and DTS upmixing, I was especially fond of the DTS NEO:6 Music setting. Why would anyone need this? Well it was great, I had multiple PC's all connected via SPDIF and one via analog. I could switch between PC's and use a single set of speakers. I even had an Xbox connected to it as well. I sent out a nice digital signal and it decoded all my content awesomely. Sure it's not a real receiver/amp, but when you're using Klipsch 5.1 Ultra speakers it's perfect.

Like I said though. You know you have a good product when you can look on eBay over 3 years after you bought it, and it has actually gone UP in value! I buy a lot of crap, and usually after a while and some upgrades I buy better crap and sell the old stuff. The two things I'm very very reluctant to sell though is the Creative DDTS-100 and those Klipsch 5.1 Ultra speakers. The speakers, sure, maybe, but the DDTS-100, one day a year from now I'm pretty sure I'll need it.

That being said, it's questionable if the DDTS-100 would be worth as much a year from now. It does the job it does amazingly well. Yeah it's ugly as all sin and they could've saved a shit ton of money by cutting down on the LED's and silverness but as far as I know the product is the only one of its kind.

There's a reason why I could sell it for $200 tomorrow and take a $75 profit though.

Creative needs to learn something fast, which is that people want quality. There's a reason people even still would consider Creative products today, it's not because of the crap that's made today, it's because of the stuff that was made back when the word SoundBlaster meant sound on PC's.




Comments | Media
Thursday, February 21, 2008 10:35:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Monday, October 29, 2007

New iPod ad uses the same music as an old Zune viral ad...#
First, Jon points out the BSOD screenshot in OS X. And now tonight I notice the same music from a Zune viral used in an iPod ad during Heroes.

Even more amusing is the story behind the ad.




Comedy | Media | Microsoft
Monday, October 29, 2007 8:35:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Sorting an setting up the movie collection.#

I once had over 2000 movies, but through stupid circumstances that was reduced to 0 and I started over with DVD's. It's not quite gotten back to 2000 but it's getting there. I've been using DVD Profiler for a while now to add all the movies in the collection. Annoyingly the web interface blows and the XML it exports stinks. So I'm still on the look out for a web interface that makes it all look pretty and ajaxy. In the mean time here's a link to the existing movie library.




Home Life | Media
Thursday, March 08, 2007 6:55:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Super Bowl XLI results: HDTV is such a let down.#

This year I had the pleasure of watching the Super Bowl on my Samsung HLS-5688W over QAM free and clear from the wall outlet direct to the TV. The game was decent. Found the touchdown on kick-off to be quite hilarious. Then the first 5 minutes of play to be equally hilarious due to both teams sucking. Then after that the rain didn't help matters and it was another boring football game.

Now the things I noticed and the main reasons for watching this year were technical things. Like the first down line not doing too well on the white full yard lines. Next and the main reason for this post was the utter lack of quality at some point during the camera and the signal going into the DSP of my DLP. I actually had to go into the settings of the TV and move the picture up because CBS seemed to be broadcasting it so badly there was an annoying half inch black line at the top. Even after doing that I noticed some ads just weren't centered vertically. Ignoring that. They simply need to have better encoding of this stuff, more bandwidth, something, as soon as they'd get in close on a player on the sidelines that would be running just a bit the picture would go blocky and all that glorious 1080i content just looked like crap on my 1080p TV. And honestly this isn't just a problem with CBS, all the networks, service providers, whoever, aren't really doing a good job for motion content. Hire Joel and Brandon or something :-), oops they're already taken...

That being said, when they had a nice stable picture it was just jaw dropping. Blades of grass, little specks of rain. Brilliant. And shame on all those SDTV ads, yuck. I can't wait for the day to have a full hour of TV in 100% HD... Oh wait I do, it's on 82-5 here, KCTS-HD :-).




Comments | Home Life | Media
Sunday, February 04, 2007 8:30:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Oh no, webcams have become the terrorists next tool for destruction... Run for your lives!!?#

What can I say really. This has got to be the stupidest thing I've ever heard. It's about as good as saying something causes cancer when these days everything causes cancer. Oh and I guess SeaTac better be on the look out since there's this webcam and the terrorists are watching. Heck it's even broadcast over cable, oh my. I wonder what they could be planning with all those traffic cams!? The horror of it all.




Comedy | Media
Saturday, January 13, 2007 3:38:52 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Friday, September 08, 2006

WMP, minor change, hours and hours of difference!#
With a minor addition to the Find Album Wizard pipeline hours of frustration are gone. Before one would go through the wizard for any random album and hopefully find all of the tracks one by one. Sometimes on random albums random tracks would just be gone because of common word removal and a complex search algorithm. That for the most part has been taken care of now...

What we have now is a nice new check box option and a single new page in the wizard. This new option is labeled "Use the album selected below to update all tracks in wizard." It does exactly what it suggests. Click that one box then click on the correct album below and WMP/WMIS then presents a confirmation page with all the tracks listed, all you have to do is click Finish and it then updates all the tracks for the album with the correct metadata.

Awesome with a capital A.

UPDATE: Looks like there's a minor bug with international characters like the umlaut (ü) and others as well. I think it's in during the process of grabbing the information and pulling it into WMP that the characters aren't being encoded right in the HTTP or something along those lines. To work around the problem simply do Find Album Info once more on the track in trouble and it shoud be the only track listed and should have the correct characters in the right spot. When I get into work tomorrow I'll be checking to see if a bug on this issue exists yet, if not consider it filed.




Media | Microsoft | Music | Vista
Friday, September 08, 2006 12:36:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Sunday, November 20, 2005

An even better way to convert FLAC to WMA and MP3 with Nero.#
In my last post about FLAC I talked about how to convert FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) using Adobe Audition. That works just fine. But what I wanted was to not have to run the individual files through Windows Media Player manually entering in data. So this time around we'll do it much more fluidly.

Basically what we do is take our copy of Nero then download and install the plugin for FLAC. Default location for plugins being C:\Program Files\Common Files\Ahead\AudioPlugins.

At this point go through the normal Audio CD creation process using Nero. If the FLAC comes with a CUE file, just drap and drop the CUE file. If not, hopefully the tracks will be numbered, just drag and drop those.

Burn the project using the Image Recorder setting. Save the NRG file somewhere. Then mount the file using Nero ImageDrive. Once this is done open up Windows Media Player and enjoy. You should find that by going to the Rip pane WMP automatically finds all the track information with album art. Hug the wonderful code behind this one that analyzes things for you. Then rip to WMA VBR or MP3 and not have to worry about the metadata.

I should also mention that if you're a fan of the SHN (Shorten) codec you can download this plugin. Then just convert the files in the same way.

If you're a fan of WMA and the way WMP manages your media as I am this is probably the easiest solution for making sure WMIS (Windows Media Information Services) gets things right. :-)




Media | Microsoft | Music | Solutions
Sunday, November 20, 2005 11:51:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [2]

Saturday, July 30, 2005

How to watch DVR-MS files on a Windows Server 2003 system.#
A while back I started toying with playing back DVR-MS files from Media Center on Server 2003. For no particular reason really. Just thought it might be fun. I didn't bother going all the way through it since I didn't really see the point. Plus I was able to do it just fine with GraphEdit on Server if I really wanted. At any rate Jon (not TReKiE) decided that he wanted to be able to watch the files in Media Player on Server so with a little help from myself and Mark Salloway he's got a working Server install playing back his recordings. Here's the basic details:

"First, copy the following 3 files from the \Windows\System32 folder on your Windows XP machine to the \Windows\System32 folder on your Windows Server 2003 machine:
encdec.dll 6.05.2600.2180 sbe.dll 6.05.2600.2180 sbeio.dll 9.00.00.3165

Now run the following two commands from Start -> Run...:
regsvr32 encdec.dll regsvr32 sbe.dll

Next, load Windows Media Player (or any other media player, I presume), a .dvr-ms file, and enjoy!
Note: Like a regular Windows XP Home/Pro machine, in order to play .dvr-ms files, you will need a DVD decoder installed."

Here's a link to the actual posting from Jon.




Friends | Media | Solutions
Saturday, July 30, 2005 1:54:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Sunday, February 06, 2005

The beginning of a new wave of MSN Search ads?#
MCE managed to grab this new MSN Search ad the other night. I quite like it, it's pretty cool. Best from MSN so far. Though I do miss the "Home" adverts they had way back. I definitely prefer this add over the "Your Potential. Our Passion." ad campaign. They weren't bad but then again they weren't "cool". This almost has that all important cool factor except it has the guy talking at the end. If they could've left that bit of it really would be a 10. I give it a 8 for now. Definitely looking forward to the next ones. I can understand needing to get the word out that the MSN Search is actually "new" but umm, I can't really remember Google needing to do a major TV ad campaign :-). Anyway, definitely check it out if you haven't seen it. There's a certain opening scene to Contact/Encarta splash screen feel to it.

UPDATE: Here are a couple links to the videos from MS PressPass.
"A New Way to Search"
"Basketball"




Media | Microsoft
Sunday, February 06, 2005 2:23:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Tuesday, September 07, 2004

Is Microsoft actually getting closer to cool than uncool in their marketing?#
Shortly after WMP10 went live I checked around the Windows Media portion of Microsoft.com. Besides the update to match the rest of Microsoft's online branding they also added some more WMV HD content to their showcase. This is probably one of my most liked portions of the site, they've even got a stand alone URL for it at wmvhd.com (maybe something bigger planned for it soon?) for some reason this stand-alone site always has less content, who knows. Anyway, the featured vide on the WMV HD Showcase is currently the Windows Media Player 10 HD Trailer.

It's really worth a watch, just once at least. While this clearly isn't TV spot material it would obvious be great for showing off at conferences and other gigs. One thing that struck me right away was the fact that they didn't have some random uncool Microsoft sponsored group doing the music. They had The Helio Sequence a relatively new group on SubPop Records; probably helped that SubPop is in Seattle. The song you hear in the trailer is called Repeater off of the album Love and Distance. It's really quite good and unlike most other songs Microsoft has featured in the past. With maybe the exception of Overseer's Horndog which most will probably remember best from some car ad (think it was Nissan or Mitsu) as well as the LH video shown at PDC recently. Madonna's Ray of Light for Windows XP can't really be counted because everyone knew the song so that made it inherently uncool I'm afraid.

At any rate, besides having a cool song they managed to make a video that isn't so bad after repeated viewing :). I still can't quite get past the people dancing around with their eyes closed and such. Or that guy's quirky smile towards the end. But looking beyond that and the fact that the people dancing around is so close to being an Apple iPod ad it's not a bad way to show off what's really hard to show off. That is, the Windows Media Player, just a little piece of software. I would've liked to see less people and more player in use doing cool things like showing the ease of the Auto Sync and such, pop in a CD and show it ripping with album info, not to mention MSN Music. I'm sure some money could be saved as well, just have two good looking people for eye candy for each sex, not too stunning though since we wouldn't want to take away from that new UI. In addition make sure there's plenty of other cool tunes to go with each spot, and give the group a nice plug, especially when they're on some indie record label. That's one thing Apple always has going for it, whenever I see an iTunes/iPod ad, on the web at least, it's always got some basically unknown but cool tune and they plug it as being available on iTunes. It's sort of the IKEA effect, people buy into that sort of thing, especially when they see it on display in it's proper environment. Apple and IKEA go hand in hand imho. Besides that, just stay away from people dancing with their eyes closed looking just a bit too into, it'll also help fend off those comments about it so closely matching Apple's rotoscoped dancers.

All in all, I give it starstarhalf star.




Media | Microsoft | Music
Tuesday, September 07, 2004 9:27:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Creative Zen Portable Media Center Review, Part 1...#
I guess first things first… A brief introduction… Some of the people reading this will be friends of mine who have been eagerly waiting (impatiently) for some time in fact. If you’re one of them, then too bad, you’ll have to wait a bit more.

I’m Corey Gouker (obviously); I’m a Media Center MVP who hangs out in the Microsoft newsgroups for everything Digital Media and Media Center related. I’m 20 years old and starting up college again at SJSU after already doing a year abroad at the University of Manchester in the Queen’s Country.

I’m pretty much an average geek. I think anything electronic (that at least has some class and style) is totally sexy. For example my cell phone, my Klipsch 5.1 Ultra’s, a 2TB RAID, a super fast Internet connection, you name it. If it’s geeky, chances are I love it and might find it sexy. And please, I don’t mean to get you worried at this point, I don’t find them attractive in a sexual way or anything like that, I’m much more drawn to a nice 5’8” red head than anything made of silicon, LOL, err, no pun intended. Besides that, I’m just an average guy with an anything but average collection of digital media. Some stats I compiled about a month ago are pretty out there. I was sitting on a 204GB collection of music. That’s approximately 44,190 tracks for the curious. My main Media Center Edition PC has a 250GB HDD which at any given time has about 200GB of recorded TV. Then there’s about 500 or so DVDs as well. I’m not even going to guess on the number of pictures, all I know is that there’s a 50 CD folder sitting on a book shelf that is filled with DVD+R’s with nothing but JPG’s from my Canon G2. I’ve actually warn out 3 batteries in the little time I’ve had the camera.

I personally don’t own that many media devices. In fact, I’ve only got one at the moment. A small but nice 256MB Creative MuVo TX. I’m in a unique situation in that unlike some, I couldn’t hope to fit my entire collection on a device to take it with me. Whether it be music, videos, TV, or pictures. I’ve almost bought a Dell DJ, 40GB iRiver, and 20GB Rio Karma, but didn’t buy any since I still felt none of them quite fit what I had in mind.

Being a Media Center MVP with some interest in the Digital Media Division as well, I’ve been keeping track as much as possible about some of the new stuff coming along. Portable Media Centers (PMC) really caught my eyes and ears when I first heard about them. Back then I hadn’t a clue what size drives they’d have so I had high hopes that they might be a breakthrough device that would fit my needs perfectly. Something that would really do damage to Apple’s iPod. While some might have put the idea out there that Microsoft wanted the PMC to be an iPod killer, I don’t really think this is true. I think most people within Microsoft who were working in the area knew perfectly well that this device was different and really could not be compared with previous Portable Music Players. The OEMs that signed on to make the device, Creative, iRiver, Samsung, knew the device was different. The only real way they could be compared would be in terms of size, weight, battery life, easy of use, style, and sexiness. The feature set of a PMC far surpasses a regular Portable Music Player. Besides it having a GUI that’s strikingly similar to the Media Center (imagine that) it’s got the PMP part down perfectly. You’ve got playlists, album art, and all that. But you’ve also got videos, TV, and pictures. It really is a on the go Media Center. Or like Microsoft says, [almost] all your media. Here. There. Everywhere.

The devices can be used with or without a Media Center PC but it really does go hand in hand with a MCE. The recorded TV aspect of the device almost makes a MCE a given. It’s not a device that you plug into a cable box and record TV on it for the cross country trip, and you don’t put DVD’s into a slot and watch them that way. To some this might seem pretty odd. I mean, where do you get the video and TV content then? Well. With a Media Center PC you’ll be sure to have plenty of Recorded TV content. As for Movies and Video content, well there are/will be a number of content providers doing subscription/pay for download solutions that will let people download and sync their content to a PMC through MP10 with the help of Janus DRM technology. Not got enough music? MSN Music will help you out there as well. But really one of the main things in WMP10 is Janus. CinemaNow.com will have movies available for purchase or rent directly from the net and they’re already in WMV format, perfect for the PMC. Storing home movies from DV cams is also quite easy when combined with Windows Movie Maker and such. PapaJohn, another MVP, will probably have plenty to add to that. The biggest thing will be the entire rental model for Music. This is quite a bit different than what we’ve got now. Now you pay 99 cents and you’ve got your song. Soon you’ll pay your monthly subscription fee and be able to select all the songs you want to be able to download and listen to, as long as you’ve got a license for those and are paying those monthly fees you’ll be able to listen to that music. You aren’t actually paying for each track and don’t own them. To me this seems like an all around best scenario for music. As long as those monthly fees are right I think this should be a success. I wouldn’t be surprised if we saw a couple price points as well. Say a $5.95, 9.95, 19.95, and 29.95 plans. Hopefully that “expensive” plan will allow for unlimited listening. We’ll see.

Back when my Mom was being educated on MCE’s and PMC’s, she really didn’t understand the concept of only having digital content. So I showed her MovieLink and a couple other sites. After having a Media Center PC in the house for a bit she wanted it in the living room to use, she wanted all her stimulating reality TV shows, Queer Eye, and home improvement programs recorded so she could follow what was happening on every possible reality program available. Quite scary really. But anyway, the point is that after a while our entire TV lifestyle changed. I personally didn’t have a clue what time anything came on anymore, stopped channel surfing, and my TV time was cut down drastically. It was a real change, TV started becoming a 1 or 2 hour a day type thing that I did while eating dinner and relaxing. With a PMC I can easily see that changing again. With daily schedules becoming tighter and tighter a PMC would let someone take entertainment with them wherever and enjoy it at any time and not just enjoy it at home. In that regard, PMC’s really are different from previous types of portable media devices.

Before you’d have your MP3/WMA player and might only use it while out walking, jogging, biking, shopping, driving, whatever. It was only music though and really didn’t do much more than a Walkman did. PMC’s will let people download a movie to a device, go to a friends house, plug the A/V cable into a TV and enjoy all their music, pictures, movies, and videos with friends and family. Or a person on the go might carry it with them on the road and enjoy their favorite TV series while in a hotel. Maybe I’m making the device out to be something totally revolutionary. I don’t mean to, but it is a pretty new way of handling media. This is only the start and I’m sure gradually PMC’s will change the way people think about how they interact with their media.

So recently out of the blue I got an email from my MVP Lead, Andrew, if I wanted a PMC to play with for a bit. I was like, what in the world, why me, why now? Especially since the PMC is not an eHome product like Media Center is. It’s a Windows Mobile device that’s really under the Digital Media Division at Microsoft. So except for the fact that it’s called a Portable “Media Center” and that it’s got a very similar Start (green) button and the UI is also very similar to the desktop Media Center. It is not a Media Center and doesn’t belong to eHome. Hence my reasons for wondering why they decided to send one to me. But whatever… I immediately replied and two days later a 20GB Creative Zen PMC was waiting at my doorstep when I arrived home. When I first picked up the box I was a bit surprised at the size of the box and such and how light it was. I honestly thought it was another Media Center Remote to try out (I’ve got like 4 or 5 of them). So I began opening it up with anticipation that it might actually be a PMC. Of course… there it was. I’m not sure why exactly but I was actually pretty excited even though I knew I’d only get around 2 weeks or so to play with it and decide for myself if it really was a big deal and whether I’d end up buying one sometime soon. Andrew didn’t give me a choice in terms of the device. I might have asked for an iRiver PMC or most likely a Samsung. But heck, beggars can’t be choosers.

First thing I did when I got the device out of the box; I plugged in the juice to get it going. Then I started examining it to see if it would be easy to take it apart, LOL. Sadly while I’m sure it is; I don’t have a screw driver small enough at the moment. So that’ll probably have to wait for a couple more days. I’m always kind of curious about the batteries they use in these devices since you’ve got Li-Ion or Li-Poly, Ni-Mh are becoming a thing of the past I think. Both providing really good battery life, but Polymer usually are even lighter than Ion and are a bit more advanced. So I was quite pleased when I saw a 3.7V Li-Ion Polymer Battery in there that had 3.6Ah.

Luckily I had to go out for a bit and take care of some things. I was totally ready to just load the thing with a 20GB selection of music from my 204GB selection but sadly that would have to wait. Instead I brought my little tiny 256MB Creative MuVo TX with me which had a whopping 4 CD’s on it. Just my luck though when I got to the Wash America Laundromat and went to play some tunes the AAA battery turns out to be dead. I get back in after an hour or so and check the PMC. I unplug it and try turning it on, it doesn’t come on, I take the battery out and pop it back in, still nothing. Keep the battery out and plug it in, still nothing, then I pull the power out slowly and with the plug in half way the screen goes white. I was baffled. I thought the device might be dead. After letting it charge again for another hour or so I tried again, still nothing. I tried some tricks to get it to turn on that sometimes work with electronics and such. Like holding the power button in and popping the battery in and plugging it in, trying the reset button, holding the Start (aka green) button and pressing power, everything I could come up with. Finally, somehow the device turned on. I was set. I kept it plugged in and started playing. Being a curious geek I went to the Settings and About screen. By that it was pretty easy to tell the device wasn’t final. So I asked Andrew and was informed that I was sent a really really expensive engineering sample or something. Whatever it was it was as close to final as I’d see without actually buying it from Amazon. After going through every menu I was a little disappointed. I think partly because the sample media that was on the device left much to be desired. Some of the “classics” they had on there were just daft. But nm. At this point I pretty much decided that I was going to post up a massive review of the Creative Zen PMC for all to read, complete with pictures, video and anything else I could come up with.

I plugged in the USB 2.0 cable into the Zen which connects at the bottom of the device into the front of my computer and was quite happy that that was it. I didn’t need to do anything else in terms of drivers or software. I’m running a MCE with SP2 and MP10 so the device just shows up under Audio Devices in My Computer as well as the new Portable Media Devices area in Control Panel. To my dismay however, the device doesn’t exactly work as just another external USB drive. This may or not matter to you but it can be annoying. The device has a Data and a Media Folder, the Media Folder has a Music, Pictures, TV, and Video folder. Plus a WMPInfo.xml file from WMP. If you want you can just copy media to each of the folders and that’ll work just fine. And if you want to store apps, Word docs, whatever, you can copy it to the Data folder. One thing that really doesn’t please me though is that you must copy the data back off the device to use it if you plug it into another computer. So for example… Say I’ve got this review which I’m writing in Word. I copy it to the PMC and take a flight over to Jon and plug the PMC into his system, I can’t just open up the Word doc from the device, do a quick edit and save. I must copy it off to his system, edit, save, then copy the doc back onto the PMC. This holds true with any file on the device. Double clicking any of the files on the device will give you the File Properties Dialog and some nice text that says “Files cannot be opened directly from this device. Please copy the file to a local folder and open the copy.” Personally I just fine this to be idiotic. But I’m sure Microsoft had its reasons, one of which was probably DRM related.

At first I was thinking that it was all a bit daft in terms of getting content onto the device. But I then popped open WMP10 and started going through my library. One of the new things you’ll see in the Library of WMP10 is that it doesn’t just have Music and Videos now. It’s got a whole lot more, you’ve got a place for TV, Pictures, Purchased music, etc. Plus devices like the Zen also show up under the Library. It’s really quite cool. The Library is probably one of the biggest improvements to WMP10 over 9. There are now two artist views for Music. One for Album Artist and one for Contributing Artist. This is great because many albums such as Santana’s Supernatural or Shaman have other artists that are either co-singers or are featured on a song, like P.O.D., Michelle Branch, or Rob Thomas. In WMP9 they’d all appear under Artists, which would end up being extremely annoying since you’d have to scroll through all those artists even if they were only featured on a single song. There’s also Composer, Rated, and Purchased Music section. Not to mention the Year Released section which was sort of available before if you installed them. The Purchased Music view makes it really easy to quickly see what you’ve purchased on Napster or MSN Music for example.

The All TV section of WMP10 is equally as impressive. In fact, it provides a much more informative view of TV than the MCE actually does. Obviously there’s a section for the series’, so I can easily see the two CSI’s, Futurama, and Family Guy. You’ve also got a section for programs that have not yet been viewed. Genre view, Date Recorded, and Rated TV as in star rating not parental guideline ratings. I also thought it was cool that there is an Actors view as well, which might come in handy. Under Videos, the main new thing is a Purchased Videos view, continuing to align WMP10 to online content services.

WMP10 can now also be used to organize all your pictures in the Library which is kind of cool. You can organize stuff by Event, the date the pictures were taken, and can also continue rating stuff and rate the pictures as well. I was a bit disappointed that WMP10 didn’t expose EXIF data in a sort of Advanced Tag Editor dialog like music has. Maybe for WMP11 :-)? Even without that, it’s still a pretty handy way of organizing all the main media a system might have.

So in WMP10 there really are two ways of actually syncing content to the device. Automatic mode and Manual mode. Automatic is new and is quite cool. I think while I personally might like to have some exact say in what goes onto the device WMP help you do a pretty good job of automatically getting stuff onto the device without any user involvement. There are too many options to choose from in terms of Automatic syncing to go over. But you’ve go all the different playlist options for music, adding stuff via ratings, fresh tracks, pictures taken in the last month, TV from the past week, etc etc. It really is quite extensive. To Manually get content on the device is equally as simple. You just go through your library right clicking and then going to Add to > Sync List. Or at the right side you switch to Sync List then just drag and drop. From there just press Start Sync. The Burn and Now Playing lists are also separated from the Sync list, and the entire list concept has undergone some major changes to fix annoyances caused by creating a massive list only to play some totally random file and losing that list.

You’ve also got some other options for the device and syncing. You can let WMP create a folder structure on the device for you automatically and can have it do a total ActiveSync type thing and start syncing everything when you plug it in. And finally under the quality tab there’s an option to not convert files. Granted this option applies to both Music and Video/TV at the same time, it should be a separate option for each. For example you can have WMP auto set the quality. You can set the bit rate you want for each. Or you can have it not convert at all. This is really handy for some people who have large devices say 5GB or larger. It’s pretty silly on these larger devices to convert a 192K WMA/MP3 down to 128K when you have all that room. Plus there’s a time factor in converting and this removes it. But like I said the option to convert or not is singular. So you can’t have it just convert TV automatically but not touch the Music.

There’s plenty of new features and updates in WMP10, a couple start to address my previous blog entry about WMP9. I’m not going to go too in depth yet about the new Media Player, that’ll be for another time. I should also note now that this is going to be the first part in a series of blogs about PMC’s, MCE *cough* and related, and WMP10. I’ve not go exact times for stuff like battery life and conversion times yet so that’ll be in the follow-up PMC blog.

Getting back on track now, I ended up adding about 14GB of actual content to the Sync List. That includes pictures, TV, video and music. I hit sync and minimized WMP10, a couple hours later it had converted everything and copied it to the device. It ended up only taking about 2GB on the device. So converting can come in handy.

I popped the headphones on, and started playing. The UI sounds have been borrowed from MCE as well which wasn’t predictable at all :-). I played my copy of the Dark Side SACD which was encoded with 90% VBR WMA. It sounded pretty darn good on the cheap little Creative headphones. Which, btw, have a really annoying cable. Where the line splits to each phone you’ve got one side longer than the other. But like I said, it sounded great, especially compared to my Sennheiser EH2270’s plugged directly into my MCE. Volume level was pretty good with the in the ear cans and I really couldn’t complain. I plugged in those EH2270’s and was even happier with the sound quality. Granted the little PMC can’t pump out enough power for these mighty Senn’s but fidelity and signal to noise was great. I unplugged the headphones expecting the tiny mono speaker to take over but it didn’t, instead the PMC auto mutes the device when unplugging the headphones, plus or minus depending on how you look at it I guess. Turning the sound up all the way, I was immediately disappointed. The sound is even worse than listening to the same track on my HP iPaq 5550. And can’t even hope compare to the sound coming from the Dell Inpsiron 8600 sitting next to it. While I’d imagine most will use the device with headphones or the A/V out, having a better speaker than the midget mono would’ve been greatly appreciated. I can’t overstate just how bad the speaker was on this Creative. I took it right outside my front door, there’s some construction going on about 400 yards away at this new student housing complex. Even with it being a quiet day there I couldn’t really make out anything in particular on Money. Just hi-end noise and that was it. With headphones of course all I heard was beautiful music so at least it’s got that.

Next thing while outside was the screen. They can range from 3.5 to 4” and have a standard 320x240 resolution. It looked just fine indoors, especially with the brightness turned all the way up. But even with the brightness set to its battery killing greatness, outside it left a lot to be desired. I walked over to the Blockbuster to grab another 3 DVD’s on the Movie Pass while watching Coral Reef Adventure. Still really happy with the sound quality and just totally guessing as to what was on the screen since I couldn’t actually see much but highlights. On the way back I walked a bit more slowly and played with the brightness levels including turning off the backlight and nothing really seemed to help. The quality of the screen outdoors really can’t compare to even the iPaq 5550 which I also had with me playing the same video. They could’ve done a much better job with this one. The other problem that I saw was that the device has a glass like reflective quality so I kept on getting reflections over the screen and that only made things worse.

Plugging in the handy little corded remote I tried out the FM features. The remote itself is quite small, the headphones plug into it like most other corded remotes. The controls are pretty easy to use, tactile feedback isn’t bad either. I found even with my big hands I could use it one or two handed. The LCD on the remote has a nice TReKiE blue backlight which is quite sexy. The text and such is a bit small and hard to read around the edges because the LCD is set into the remote so deeply. Bringing it closer to the plastic and removing some of the black border would resolve that. Sound quality remained good even with the headphones plugged into the remote and the actual cable length was also plenty long.

There’s also an IR remote, that might seem kind of odd, but it makes sense for when you’ve got the device plugged into a TV and are sitting back on the couch. It works quite well too. All of the controls are reproduced including the 4 presets at the top. I couldn’t actually find a way to customize these presets though. The remote is quite small, and was pleasant enough. It uses a standard 3V CR2025 battery and it’s easy enough to replace. The IR receiver on the unit is on the front of the device so when you’ve got it plugged in you’ll want the screen facing towards you and the remote.

I started browsing through all my pictures on the device and was quite pleased with the speed of the UI. Thanks to the 400MHz Intel XScale processor and 64MB RAM, I doubt anyone will have to be concerned about it. Even when I had close to 4,000 tracks on the device the Songs view only took about 8 seconds to load up the title of every one of those songs. There was no delay at all though with the Artists and Albums view. Very pleased indeed. One of the very cool things that I quickly got used to while using the device was the entire concept of what Microsoft calls “twist navigation”. The best way of describing it is this. You’ve got the top levels, My Music, My Pictures, etc. Then you go down into My Music, from there you’ve got at the top Artists, Albums, Songs, etc. You can either go left or right for that stuff. Or you can go down through the list of Albums which have album art when you scroll slowly and switch to the letter that you’re on when you scroll quickly. Say I go down to In Step by SRV. I can then go down again through the list of tracks on that album. But now at the top I’ve got the albums to the left and right. If I go left I’ve got How the West Was Won by Zeppelin, and In the Beginning to the right, another by SRV. The same thing holds true if you go to Artists. Go down to A Perfect Circle, to the left you’ve got “A”, to the right you’ve got Audioslave. If you go down to A Perfect Circle’s first album you’ve got all the tracks but can go left or right to the other album. You’ve got this entire twist navigation thing going on throughout the device except in the Settings. This is a real breakthrough on these small devices in terms of navigation. It really makes things really simple and easy to jump around through content.

So I started up some Cure to listen to while I browsed through the pictures. I’m not sure what I was expecting really since it’s almost exactly like MCE. The only real difference is that you’ve only got a fade transition and not some super almost intelligent moving picture and fade transition that MCE has. You can’t zoom in or move around as far as I can tell which is kind of a shame considering that Pictures are one thing that doesn’t get converted down to a smaller size. I’m kind of curious why since the display is 320x240, you’d think WMP10 would auto convert down to say 640x480 or 320x240 for each picture going on just to save space. While yeah, you might want to plug the device in elsewhere and view the originals, you’ve still got to copy them off the device. So at the moment all my pictures on the device are over a meg in size and 2272x1704, the default resolution from my Canon. Along the lines of having EXIF data in the library of WMP10, I would’ve liked to see some extra features for the pictures on the PMC that might give photographers reasons to drool. For example, if the device had a SD/CFII slot, you could pop the card into the device and automatically download all those photos to the device. There are some stand alone data storage devices but they’re ridiculously expensive for what they do. For example, Epson sells the P-1000 which holds 10GB (9GB available) and has a 3.7” 640x480 LCD with USB 1.1. But that runs $599, and while it does everything a digital photographer wants in external storage, it also costs a lot per GB and doesn’t do anything else. Who’s to say digital photographers don’t want to listen to some music while taking photos :-). A couple more features and a SD/CFII slot and the PMC would be great for them. A couple more cool suggestions which I like that came from other MVPs (Zarax, Jake Ludington, et al) gave were to give the device a better display and PowerPoint support. That way a professional could pop a PPT on the device, plug it into a digital projector through the A/V and use the IR remote to control the presentation instead of using a laptop. Zarax suggested Bluetooth support so that you could quickly move all the photos from a camera phone to the device. Diane Dumas suggested that GPS would also be really cool since the device has plenty of storage for maps of the entire planet. I think we pretty much all agreed that memory card slots and USB Host features would be really nice. At the same time there’s got to be a distinction here between a PMC and a PocketPC. Maybe at some point we’ll see some sort of convergence here.

When I was going through my music when I had 3968 tracks on it I really started noticing that unless I remembered the name of something there wasn’t a way for me to find it otherwise. You can’t really change the order stuff appears in, and you can’t make changes to any of the content or even delete the content from the device. This must all be done from a host system. Whether or not this matters is debatable.

In the Now Playing view you’ve got a couple of viewing options. My favorite is probably the view that gives you the album art, artist, album, track number, and track info all in one. This is definitely the best view. In another you’ve got the album art taking up almost the entire area, with just the track time and number as well. Next it slides over and half the album art is shown with a complete track listing and the track time showing for the currently playing track. Next you’ve still got half the album art but you can change the options, like repeat, shuffle, eq, rating, and purchase. The way I understand that purchase option is that it’s for when you’re renting music and like something enough to want to buy it. You check the box and WMP10 will go out and buy it. I’ve got to confirm this but that’s my current understanding since I can’t think of any other reason for it. Anyway the last view is a bit pointless imho, it’s only got the album info but no art, and is frankly quite boring. One of the cool things is when you’re in the half album art and track listing view. You can scroll up and down through not just that album but all the tracks on the PMC. I think for some they might be a bit disappointed that there aren’t any visuals, not even a spectrum analyzer visual. Any visuals like this would mean a battery trade off so it’s my only guess as to why they weren’t included.

With My Videos, you can sort things by Date or Name as well as a place for New stuff. There aren’t any thumbnails of the videos which might make video browsing more of a chore if you’ve got a lot of similarly named videos. Overall picture quality while watching videos is quite good. Even when I transcoded the Rules of Attraction WMV HD down to 320x240 800K for the device with all the fast movement and such it still performed well. You can see a few artifacts and notice a couple dropped frames in very fast scene changes and such. Like when you’ve got a close up of this girls face with her lips. Then it draws the next scene which is all black. You can see the diagonal blocks for a quick frame or so. I think if you’ve seen the video quality of a high end PocketPC with an XScale processor that will give you an idea of the actual video playback capabilities of the device. My TV quality is just like My Videos, same views, no thumbs, and the quality is still just as good as other videos. You’ve still got the same transport controls as well so you can still pause, rewind, and fast forward any of the videos or TV. You also have the now pervasive 30 second commercial skip as well. Conversion times for TV specially (DVR-MS files) relies on the MPEG-2 decoder that your system has installed whether that be CyberLink, InterVideo, nvDVD, etc. They’ll produce about the same results, generally I’ve found InterVideo to be the all around best decoder but that’s not to say the others are bad. I’ll go more in depth about the conversion process and conversion times in a follow on article since I’ve not had a complete experience yet and can’t report the findings just yet.

One of the major gripes I have with the device is the fact that I’ve got all these cables coming out of all but one of the sides. For the amount of money that these are running it really should have a charging/sync cradle. My HP iPaq has on which is quite sexy because it hides the cables behind the device and the screen is still fully viewable and you can use the device while docked. Creative do something equally as pleasing, I figured you could make it really sexy and add one or two TReKiE blue LED’s and such but that’s just me. I’ve been told that there will be a cradle available as an after market accessory. It’ll let you sync, charge, and even do A/V out from the device. Great right? But yeah, they could really have used a cheaper one with sync and charge only included with the device.

So the size and weight of the device. Well here’s the specs of the Zen, which if I remember right, is the largest and heaviest of the 3 PMC’s atm. It’s 12 oz or 340 gms with the battery. The device is actually pretty thick, you can see from my pictures in the PMC gallery that it’s as thick as my Inspiron 8600 with the lid open. 144mm x 80.7mm x 22mm or 5.67” x 3.18” x 1.06” (WxHxD). The display is described as a “large 3.8” or 96.5mm 64k color 320x240 resolution backlit display”. Battery life is claimed to be up to 22 hours for audio and 7 hours for video. That’s just an estimate for 64K WMA and 500K WMV. I’ll do a full run down and charge and post some real stats in the next few days. The frequency response is quite good, giving a full 20-20, I would’ve liked to see some more info, like signal to noise and such but oh well.

So how does it compare to the iPod and other PMP’s in terms of the coolness factor. Well, the Creative certainly doesn’t look as sleek and sexy as the iPod that’s for sure. It doesn’t have that Click Wheel which people seem to have a love/hate thing going with it. But it does have this massive screen with color and album art and all that. But like I said before, you can’t compare them directly. The PMC does so much more than an iPod. I honestly can’t say at this point whether I’d buy one or not. While the entire idea behind PMC’s has grown on me since using it over the past few days it still hasn’t won me. I think it might just be the Creative device so if MS decides to send me a Samsung and/or iRiver to review I’d be more than happy to do so. In the end the consumers will decide whether or not this device is cool and whether they want it. Personally I can see it doing much better than TabletPC’s and PocketPC’s that’s for sure. I hope that we’ll see many more OEM’s sign onto the idea as well since that’ll help improve things.

I guess I’ll sign off now with links to what everyone has been wanting for some time. Be sure to check back over the next few days as I’ll be getting one or two more blogs up with more specs and more information with regards to using the device every day on campus along with other peoples reactions. Not to mention the all important battery life and conversion times.

For now I’ve got 2 mirrors in addition to my own for the pictures and videos. The videos are both about 23MB WMV’s. They were recorded with my trusty Intel CS-430 including the demo of the PMC UI through the video in. Sorry there isn’t any audio in either, I should be getting another video up soon including one that will have the player playing audio until the battery dies.

(Please use a mirror first, this server is only on a lowly DSL connection, Thanks)

WMV: External Overview of Creative Zen PMC (temporarily down) – Mirror 1Mirror 2
WMV: Demo of Portable Media Center UI (temporarily down) – Mirror 1Mirror 2
Gallery of Images from Creative Zen PMC (down due to DSL dying) – Mirror 1Mirror 2




Media | Microsoft | Music | Outside | Photography
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 8:45:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [15]

Saturday, May 15, 2004

WMP vs. WinAmp, random listening showdown.#
So it's been a little while since I posted the mother of all WMP9 the good, the bad, and the ugly posts, one thing I really wasn't happy about was the poor demonstration that a screen shot provided when demonstrating just how much of a pain jumping through your music collection is with WMP9. So after all this time and because I know a new version will always be coming for WMP I figured wth, lets provide a video.

So here we have it. First the minute long demonstration of trying to pull up Weezer's Green Album from the Task Bar Player menu in WMP9. Note the multiple listings of Greatest Hits. Also, I'm sorry about the 1600x1200 res, it's my LCD's native... also at lower resolutions there are even more menus so I figure I saved some time but keeping it at 1600x1200 :-).

Next we have the 30 second demonstration of me using CTRL+ALT+J, otherwise known as the global hot key for Jump in WinAmp 5. Now for this I've added audio, mostly because I think it clearly shows just how quickly WinAmp will go from file to file immediately playing as soon as I hit enter. Also note that the mouse does not move once after I make the player smaller. In WMP I had to move the mouse back and forth umpteen times. With WinAmp, I could simply be carrying on a convo in Messenger and hit jump and type the title, hit enter, then get back in my convo without ever taking my hands off the keyboard. Furthermore, even after I got all the way to the Green Album in WMP it still took another 4 seconds before it even began to play.

Clearly WinAmp wins hands down, and sadly as much as I'd want to solely use WMP, I think I'll be using both players for quite some time.




Longhorn | Media | Microsoft | Rants
Saturday, May 15, 2004 7:46:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Saturday, April 17, 2004

Cool GirlsGoTech.org ads...#
I was just watching Live TV on my MCE for a change when a perfectly innocent ad came on, at first it just seemed like a Mom and daughter reading in bed, but then they started talking about downloading gigabytes, and bits, and all that cool stuff. Needless to say it caught my attention and I wanted to see if there were any more of these ads. Which of course there are. They're done in part by the Ad Council for GirlsGoTech.org, and can be found here. It's a shame that they're only encoded in low res Real format. I'll see about getting a WMV made from my DVR-MS when I have some time.




Media
Saturday, April 17, 2004 10:20:03 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

Patrick Stewart uses one of his best assets with Crestor once more.#
So once again Capt. Picard, aka, Patrick Stewart's voice can be heard on a Crestor advert (492K WMA). Not sure if I like this one better than the last, though his little “bye bye” might make for a good system sound or something :-). I'm a tad curious if he managed to get it in one take or if he started laughing half way through. I can't help but find both ads slightly amusing. Every time I hear them they remind me of his narration on Peter and the Wolf, which was quite good I might add.




Home Life | Media
Tuesday, March 23, 2004 12:31:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Saturday, February 28, 2004

Windows XP Reloaded... Yes, it was all a lie.#
Yes the rumors are true, I know this because ever since the Microsoftrix video was released on my website I've been disseminating information, truth and lies surrounding the next release of Windows XP. I've used all of my Borg like abilities to assimilate information from all of my inside sources at Microsoft and slowly but surely used my ESP to tip Paul Thurrott off so he could write this article Windows XP Reloaded. I deliberated for ages over who deserved the exclusive more, Mary Joe Foley or Paul Thurrott. In the end I sent my telepathic messages to both of them so as to not break my NDA by revealing the information via normal forms of communication. Paul just received them quicker so obviously he got the exclusive. But now you know. It's all one big lie, there never was or will be a Reloaded, you have all been caught up in the Microsoftrix!




Ideas | Internet | Longhorn | Media | Microsoft | News
Saturday, February 28, 2004 12:01:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Friday, February 27, 2004

Why I bitch and moan and rant about Microsoft.#
I've spent a good hour today just ranting to a few people within Microsoft about all the little things that piss me off. Mostly to do with Windows Media Player, but in various Office apps like Outlook (still having the hanging problem), Word (Grandma still thinks PFS Write for DOS is easier to use), FrontPage (don't get me started). Surprisingly, I don't have many complaints about the product I'm a MVP for, Media Center, it's not perfect but I have yet to find any particular bug or undeveloped feature to complain about. That's a good thing! It won't last though, trust me :-). Most likely my head will start heading into the avenues that MCE could take in terms of integrating the entire digital media experience, something I've become totally obsessed with.

Anyone that really knows me knows how I would give my entire life and future professional career (hint) to be able to have ALL my media in the Windows Media format and to have all that media perfectly organized complete with meta data. And BTW I definitely include photos when I talk about media. I know I've probably become so overzealous with this idea that it's actually slowing me down in finishing up my site which is specifically designed to help others who have the same passion.

Anyway, I sincerely apologize if I'm actually rambling on irately and I definitely must apologize for taking so damn long with my new site. I've definitely had enough content now since late November/December. My original design was inescapably crap so I totally scratched the entire thing and started over.

One thing I realized though is that it's better to have one loud voice complaining (for the most part) rationally rather than infinity plus one. I genuinely hope that even just one (okay maybe two or three :-)) of the things I've complained about in the Windows Media Player make it into WMP10. Not just for me, for every poor user that has to put up with “the thing that should not be”.




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Friday, February 27, 2004 3:25:19 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Tuesday, February 17, 2004