Sunday, March 25, 2007

Random junk at the mall, including the Apple TV, GAP, a movie, and other thoughts.#

Went to the Bellevue Square today. Ran into Zach, last place I'd expect to see him, not sure why, always thought he was way too cool for "the mall". Walked by the Apple store and noticed they had a big screen in the window showing off The Incredibles, Julie didn't seem to mind going in to take a look at the Apple TV so we did. Some idiot kid at the other demo unit played some music at full volume and got everyone staring including the "big fat security guy" **. Don't think the kid could figure out the context sensitive remote.

First thoughts were the album art looked pretty, reflections are getting old though hardly could complain. Also I don't know anyone other than myself and those others that know me who actually have proper album art. So I kinda figured that this would ruin the pretty experience for most people since apparently not many buy crap off iTunes anyway.

The UI was simple and all, couldn't really complain. It did remind me of the Freestyle days of Media Center with a 2007 Apple UI. Julie even commented that she liked the verticle UI vs. the 4 way UI of Media Center in Vista (she's only just started using that since we got the DCT up and running). I pointed out that Media Center had a verticle UI from the first version until recently.

Watched some demo video, thought the OK Go video looked like crap, loaded up The Incredibles, thought that looked incredibly bad.

The unit itself was nice and small. No smaller than the actual physical boards and additional hardware inside the v1 MCX units though. For those who don't know they actually made these units bigger than they needed to be so they'd stack well with DVD players and other equipment.

One thing I did note was how bloody hot the thing was, I picked it up to take a look at the back and thought to myself, "oh great here comes more Engadget posts with pictures of heat stressed and cracked Apple TV's.

We left the Apple store. Headed to GAP walked by the RED stuff, including the $60 fake leather wallet (note to the youth of today, giving and helping is not some "cool trend", quit being so superficial... yes, that means you Ms. I only eat two bites of my salad and drink my Evian so I can look like a proper Abercrombie girl). Bought some trousers and a shirt...

Really can't help but think that there's something profound happening with people these days, haven't decided if it's a good or bad thing. Did stop and wish I had time and the ability to do nothing but contemplate crazy stuff day and night and not have to worry about work and all that. Saw Reign Over Me, which was pretty good imho.

Anyway back to the Apple TV. Some I'm sure will buy it because it's a great solution if you're a iTunes or Mac person. Great fine, shut up already. It's a different approach than the Media Center and Xbox 360. Personally I think in the long run it's a easier but less fulfilling solution. I don't see the Apple TV as much of a threat to eHome. In a lot of ways comparing them is dumb. Especially when people sit and compare the 360 to the Apple TV. I'm not going to get into it yet since I've still got this massive post I've been putting off revising and finishing that goes into my thoughts about the stupidity in being a fan boy of x. One line summary would be, who the hell cares what you use as long as it works for you.

Lastly, I honestly can't understand why anyone would be happy with what they're paying for in a iTunes + Apple TV solution or similar. I know there'd be a lot of pissed off business big wigs in the world if the following were to happen. On the flip side what's more important? Keeping those filthy rich jerks at the MPAA and RIAA happy or keeping a couple billion customers pleased? Maybe we'd be without a bunch of those new teen movies and the Avril Lavigne's. Maybe there'd be media, information, and content overload with anybody and everybody contributing. Maybe we'd end up paying more for our connections to that content, and maybe because of that Comcast TV wouldn't exist and instead we'd be paying $90/mo towards a 30/5Mbps IP connection.

When I look at the content the real businesses are putting out, and compare it to what's available on the underground, there's just no question which is the better experience.

Go through legit channels and you get DRM, various technical restrictions, low quality, less selection, slow distribution (time to release), unreasonable cost ($10 for a license to a low quality digital movie as an example), you're working to earn the extra money to stay legit.

Go through the underground and you get, no DRM, no restrictions, excellent to lossless quality, seemingly limitless selection, near instant distribution, virtually no cost, you're doing a bit more of the work since you have to find good sources and maintain your P2P status, your technical ability needs to be above average, you deal with sometime poor content sources, there's also illegality of it.

In my honest opinion neither are good solutions. What is however is a system totally different than we have today. It'd probably mean a whole lot more P2P but run by businesses isntead, probably a lot more targeted advertising, fatter IP pipes, the death of DRM, the MPAA and RIAA pulling their heads out of their asses, and people paying flat and reasonable service fees for usage. It'd mean Instant Winner could be bigger than Muse if enough people enjoyed it, and not some idiot record exec. It'd mean Independent films being dependent on the quality of their content and not the contents of their pocket books.

Who knows what else it'd mean, what it'll all look like, if and when things will make a polar shift.

It's fun to think about. Big picture thinking always is.

** When you need a bit fat security guy at your store at all times you've got serious issues.




Ideas
Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:18:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [4]

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Microsoft LifeChat ZX-6000 doubles as Xbox 360 wireless receiver and headset for Skype.#

Jon ordered a new Microsoft LifeChat ZX-6000 from Amazon (using some major credit) which arrived today. There's little information about this headset, I didn't even really know it existed till he brought it up. So yeah, no real information about the base unit but we figured it was free credit so might as well try. Opened it up and sure enough the base unit reads Microsoft Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows. Plug it in, Vista sees it, it doesn't find drivers, Jon downloads the drivers from Microsoft Hardware. Install takes a good 5 minutes for the 3MB setup, totally lame, especially on Vista. The headset worked perfectly, pressed the button and up came WLM8.1, we then tried pairing the Xbox 360 Wireless controller, it paired just fine as well. Then did a short Skype call after setting the input and output to echo123 and that also worked perfectly. So awesome, a good solution to kill two birds with one stone. Only caveat that I can see is that after testing with the Xbox 360 itself I can't find a way to pair the headset with the 360. Regardless considering the receiver is $20 normally getting a nice headset and a good way to do wireless calls with Skype is worth the $30.




Ideas | Microsoft | Solutions | Vista
Tuesday, March 20, 2007 6:03:14 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [5]

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Similarities in 300's Returns a King and Titus' Victorius Titus.#

Saw 300 tonight, was totally awesome. If you've got an IMAX showing it, see it there. Certainly was cool. Anyway, I heard this one piece of the score and knew for sure I had heard it before. Got home, popped in the Titus DVD, tried not to get pulled in, then sure enough it's basically the same. Hear for yourself, first the Titus version then 300's. Then I searched for more info to see if there was some underlying classical music tones similar to Nike's campaign with The Second Coming and Mozart's Lacrimosa. You know sometimes this stuff comes from all over. So much sampling and borrowing is done in music today that it's impossible to really know who's actually done what. Heck I bet at the heart of it all they do it to make us do just that, try and remember exactly what came from what and it'll stay with us. So congrats on a job well done.

The search ended up revealing this bit of review:

"Returns a King" brings in the first appearance of the powerful choral pieces Bates wrote for the film, though fans will note similarities to Elliott Goldenthal's Titus score. The choir cues are impressive, sung in a phonetic language and epic on scale.

Ya think!? I mean "note similarities"? You mean other than the few extra notes and more up to date recording? ROFL. Please. Rather than think that Bates' is copying Goldenthal's score as well as using similar musical tactics as Zimmer, I'd rather think or hope I guess, that he's paying homage to Titus and Gladiator. The former of which I happen to think was an underappreciated yet awesome film.

All that being said, see 300 in a theater, it was great.

UPDATE: Looks like Warner Bros. has released an official statement saying sorry for their knowledge that the music was taken from Elliot's Titus score... "Warner Bros. Pictures acknowledges and regrets that a number of the music cues for the score of "300" were derived from music composed by Academy Award winning composer Elliot Goldenthal for the motion picture "Titus." Warner Bros. Pictures has great respect for Elliot, our longtime collaborator, and is pleased to have amicably resolved this matter."




Music | Outside
Saturday, March 10, 2007 2:41:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Friday, March 09, 2007

Shock! Creative finally release non beta drivers for the rest of the X-Fi audio cards.#

Despite the fact that Vista shipped 4 months and a day ago + the 5 years of development time, Creative has just now finally decided to do some work and ship what should hopefully be some quality non beta drivers. Granted this hasn't stopped some OEM's, like Dell, from shipping logo'd systems with Vista and XtremeMusic cards with beta Creative drivers (oh and these aren't even the latest beta drivers Creative made available)! :-P

The new drivers can be found here (narrowed down to the XtremeMusic that I own, oh and if you have an Audigy 2, non beta drivers are available now as well):

The drivers download there supports the following audio devices only:

  • Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeMusic,
  • Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer
  • Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Platinum
  • Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Fatal1ty
  • Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Elite Pro

Oh and to just prove that Creative aren't a bunch of idiots and haven't been sitting on their hands all this time since Vista shipped:

Known issues:

  • This driver does not support the following:
    • Decoding of Dolby® Digital and DTS™ signals
    • DVD-Audio
    • DirectSound®-based EAX games
    • 6.1 speaker mode.
  • SPDIF passthrough is supported on Vista 32-bit only.
  • Applications from the original Sound Blaster X-Fi CD will not work with this download.

Sure the entire bloody audio architecture in Vista changed, but there have been years of ramp up now. To release drivers this late and with a plethora of known issues that people care about, well, that's just unforgiveable. It's no wonder why you're losing the market and everyone just sticks with onboard AC'97 and now the far better HD Audio.

I've been running the beta drivers now on a 4.9 WEI system with my XtremeMusic and I can't even move a file from one folder to another without having WMP or VLC crackle and pop while playing music. All I can say is that unless this driver release or a new driver release in the next 90 days resolve this I will never buy a Creative product ever again.




Humor | Rants | Vista
Friday, March 09, 2007 2:51:36 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]

Friday, March 02, 2007

Finding a new ergonomic chair to replace the Aeron.#

I must admit, I love my Aeron, I didn't pay full price, but I still paid what I think is an insane amount of money for what is just a chair. Regardless it's lasted me the longest of any chair and is still what I think is the most comfortable.

The chair is so comfortable that Julie is constantly stealing it away from me. Totally understandable really considering she's got what I'm sure is a $40 Office Depot special, she did remove the back to try and force herself into a good posture. I'm not really sure it's worked. The chair is pretty much used as a leg prop now. Instead she's now sitting on the IKEA Aron dining chair. Yes it's perfectly fine for dininig but not for long term sitting.

So being the most awesome boyfriend that I am, I'm looking for a replacement for the Aeron that won't break the bank like the Aeron.

Any suggestions? Oh and we don't quite have the room for two huge sitting balls.

 

Just as an aside, the sitting balls actually work quite well, the problem is finding the right size. Anyway I switched to a ball at work and while I got comments anyone walked by my back felt great. Then of course someone rolled the ball back onto a sharp screw then popped it. But yes, it's amazing how a simple little $20 ball can quite instantly replace a multi hundred dollar chair.




Home Life
Friday, March 02, 2007 12:59:29 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

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