Archive for May, 2010

Alabama Hills and Death Valley

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Powder!

Mammoth Mountain received 5-8″ of fresh last night and it looks like it’s shaping up to be a bluebird day.  Pics and videos will probably come after the trip so stay tuned!

Bodie and Mono Lake

IND > SFO > Mammoth Lakes!

I’ve traveled for near 22 hours to get to Mammoth Lakes, starting with a 5:30 flight from IND to ORD then SFO.  Everything seem to all go well until we got to San Francisco where we learned that United Airlines did not put our skis on the plane to SFO so they are going to overnight it to our hotel.   The original plan was to take 120 straight through Yosmite, but that didn’t work since all passes are currently closed due to snow so we rerouted through Lake Tahoe.  Anyways it’s 23:30 PDT (2:30 EST) so I’m off to bed.  Travel gallery below.

Packing for California

As some of your may know, I’m flying out to California on the 26th to ski Mammoth Mountain for a few days and spending the rest of my time in San Francisco until June 6th.

Here’s a little preview of the contents in my suitcase:

Google TV Announced

Google is partnering with Sony, Intel, and Logitech to create a set top box that allows you to search for any media content and easily tune to it. Whether it’s from a content provider such as Hulu or from fyour cable or satellite box, Google TV enabled consumers to quickly look up a show or movie and will find you a source.  In essence,it’s just as it sounds – Google for your TV.

Android 2.2 Froyo Officially Announced

  • 2-5x system speed boost
  • WiFi tethering
  • Flash support (meh.)
  • OTA App and Media sync
  • SD card apps
  • new APIs
  • LED Flash for camcorder
  • Improve Exchange support

iPod Touch with Camera leaked

Vietnamese site Tinhte.vn is at it again, this time with an iPod Touch with a camera.

iPad: A True Game Changer

 

Two words: Game. Changer.It’s one of those moments again when Apple brings the heat on new innovative products.  Okay, maybe not so innovative in the sense of a new idea or concept but innovative in the way they execute things. Reflecting back to some of their earlier products such as the iPod back in October of ’01, we see how Apple changes the game.  Portable digital media players made their mainstream debut starting with the Rio PMP300from Diamond Multimedia back in 1998.  It featured a whopping 32mb of memory for the retail price of $200.  Thanks to Napster and other popular peer-2-peer networks, mp3′s became very popular to what is sometimes called the ‘upload generation’. Fast forwards to October 2001, Apple introduced iPod, a portable media player capable of holding 1,000 songs thanks to it’s 5gb hard drive. Apple since then and continues to maintain market majority for portable media player. Why you ask?  Well partly due to it’s simple clean interface and partly due to it’s sleek design, something that could not be found with any media player on the market at the time.  January 2007 – Apple unveils the long rumored iPhone. Why was this revolutionary?  Well just about every smartphone on the market contained a resistive touchscreen rather than the capacitive we seen on many devices today. While in theory multitouch is possible on a resistive display, it is no match to what capacitive displays have to offer.  Some argued that the iPhone could not do many of the task that were available on the some of the most basic phones such as Multimedia Messaging or record video.  That did not stop the iPhone from achieving world dominance.  Smartphones had already been around for years from RIM’s Blackberry, Palm’s Treo and various Window Mobile offerings.  What enabled Apple to gain such a huge market share is from the way the executed things.  Just as with the iPod, those minor attention to details in both software and hardware set them apart from the competition even if they do lack some of the most basic features. Today we are greeted with the iPad.  Tablet based computing is definitely not a new concept.  Since 2001, Microsoft has been trying to push for Tablet PC’s, but still continues to struggles to put it into mainstream. Again, as with both the iPod and iPhone, it was the way Apple executed it.

THE NETBOOK IS DEAD. That’s a pretty bold statement to make but here’s why. For one, netbooks are simply too small. Yes there are some 10-12″ offerings, but where is the line drawn between a netbook and a laptop?  The idea behind the netbook was to produce a small, lowcost laptop for doing basic web browsing and such; not what Alienware seems to think.   If you ever used some of ASUS’searlier offerings, you’re met with a cramped keyboard and small track pad, all bundled with a less than stellar processor.  There is no way anyone would want to type a whole novel using most keyboards found on these netbooks. iPad allows you to use any bluetooth keyboard of your choice and from what I gathered on the web, Apple’s Camera Kit for iPad will allow you to hook up any USB keyboard and other peripherals alike.  Browsing the web on the iPad is truly a different experience than what any device has to offer.  I thought Mr. Steve Jobs was talking a bunch of crap back in January, raving about how revolutionary and magical the experience was.  Although something I don’t like to admit quite often, I was wrong.  It is very enjoyable to use anywhere.  Often times I would lay in bed and catch up one some news or read a few blogs. The orientation lock was genius! Often times it would feel frustrated when browsing the web on my iPhone because the screen would constantly changing between landscape and portrait. 

The Apps. I know people are sick and tierd hearing about the iPhone and ‘the apps’, but application on this device is what truely separates it from other devices.  Yes, with netbooks you can install a good handful of standard computer programs but it’s not the same.  Gaming for example is not a very good experience on a netbook (unless you pick up one of the Alienware’s “netbook” offerings I suppose).  Games such as EA’s Need For Speed Shift or Mirror’s Edge will change mobile gaming.  The board game is acutally making a comback, virtually.  Scrabble for iPad from EA’s is very slick. There are many multiplayer options but the one I would like to touch base on is the ‘party mode’.  Players can use their iPhone or iPod Touch as the title rack using the  ”Scrabble Title Rack“  advailbe on iTunes for FREE!  Now let’s look at productivity.  Although you can be very productive on a netbook, how effective is it?  Remember you’re doing this on a cramped keyboard and mouse.  How effective is Microsoft Office on the netbook? Okay i’ll admit pretty decent but it’s no where as nice as what Apple did with iWork.  Developers took the same iWork found on the Mac and completely redesign the interface to be very effective on the iPad. A few other apps I’d like to mention are ABC Player, Pandora, FlightTrack Pro, iTeleport, WeatherHD, and Dropbox.

The Future. 2010 will mark the year of a new generation of mobile devices – eReaders (Kindle, Nook), Superphones (Nexus One, 4G iPhone) and most notably Tablets (iPad, WePad  WeTab). It will be intersting to see what the competition has to bring to match or surpass Apple’s offerings.  As for now, the iPad will pave the way to a new type of mobile computing.

Fail: Best Buy Parking Edition