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Why Must the RIAA Harm All that is Good?

by ThePete 12:13 pm 2008-08-19
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This morning I saw a Twitter post that said simply "Say it ain’t so, Muxtape!"

My heart skipped a beat–Muxtape.com is my favorite site for sharing music. It allows users to upload twelve songs from their computer, then creates a playlist and a URL they can share with there friends. I’ve been dutifully waiting for their iPhone app to arrive but after seeing the above screencap, can we believe we’ll ever see an app or even their website again???

Why must the RIAA be so draconian? I understand protecting copyrights, but I’m not sure how Muxtape makes their money, so I can’t imagine what grounds the RIAA has for threatening the site when all it ends up being is a site that allows users to share mixes of the favorite audio tracks–hell, at http://thepete.muxtape.com/ I have a handful of straight audio clips that aren’t even music.

And is it me, or does behavior like this from big business just make them look bad? What about the folks that actually buy music that they hear for the first time on Muxtape?

Something similar is happening with Pandora.com. Rather than looking at the site as a massive commercial for music, Sound Exchange (the group in charge of collecting royalties for musicians) is now demanding royalties so high from online music sites that the peole behind Pandora are considering shutting down.

Pandora is a site that allows you to create your own custom radio station based on the artist or song name you enter. Essentially, it’s exactly like the process you go through when choosing a traditional radio station–you know, you pick the one the plays mostly music that you like (if you can find one). Pandora.com does this all for you–pretty cool, huh? Except the royalties Pandora.com has to pay, I’ve heard, are twice what traditional radio stations have to pay. I think the excuse is that on the web so many peole can listen to the music.

I’m just going to come out and say it: fuck the free market–it is stifling the growth of music and is cutting off innovation.

The system as it is now creates boring, unrisky, music that doesn’t push art (and therefore humanity) forward. I gave up on traditional radio over a decade ago and have been getting introduced to new music through movie soundtracks and friends who are musicians. Thanks to sites like Pandora and Muxtape, I’m actually listening to new music again. Well, I WAS.

Who thought greed would be a good business model, anyway?

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Killswitch for the Killswitch on the iPhone

by ThePete 1:41 am 2008-08-18
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So, I was checking for updates for my jailbroken iPhone last night and lookie what I found! Boss Prefs v2.12b was available on Cydia (one of the alternative "App Stores" you can use after jailbreaking your iPhone)!

BossPrefs is a cool little utility that allows you more control over settings on your iPhone–and more settings to set, too. This latest version gives users a cool new button to press that claims it can beat the killswitch Steve Jobs says he has at Apple HQ, at the peak of Mt. Doom, in the heart of Mordor.

Well, that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but the gist of it is true–Jobs has admitted to having this killswitch ( http://thepete.com/…-my-iphone ) and therefore I’m mad.

I may not fully own my iPhone outright, yet, but when I forked over my $200 last month, I did not agree to Apple having the ability to reach onto *my* iPhone and turn stuff off. The ability for them to do this is positively anti-American.

Imagine GM being able to reach into your car and change the radio station or turn off the headlights or disengage the seat belts. I could be using my iPhone to call for help after an accident and he could go "hey, you’re using Fring, an app that lets you use Skype over the Internet connection on your phone! Not cool!"

He cuts it off and you’re left with having to redial the call for help–or worse if you happened to have canceled your voice plan.

Of course, they don’t *let* you cancel your voice plan and Fring doesn’t work on 3G iPhones yet, but you get my point.

After all, who is Jobs to tell me what I can run on my phone and what I can’t? Can I control what he has on his phone?

No, so that’s all there is to it. If I had the ability to wirelessly shut down apps on my own phone remotely I might not mind as much that he could do it to me, but, essentially, he has more power over something that sits in my pocket than I do.

Not cool.

Also, if he had only overtly warned us that he had the ability, I could have made the choice of whether to accept the killswitch or not, before I even bought the phone. Instead, it’s probably buried in the contract someplace.

Again, not cool.

So, enter the Boss Prefs app for jailbroken iPhones. If it’s to be believed, activating it shuts down Jobs’ ability to shutdown any app running on your iPhone that he doesn’t like.

THANK YOU, BOSS PREFS!!

We, the Jailbreakers, SOLUTE YOU!

OK, well, *I* solute you. I assume other jailbreakers appreciate it, too.

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MyValidas.com Review: TheVerdict: Useless for Me

by ThePete 1:36 pm 2008-08-17
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So, the other day, I posted on my site about my huge-ass iPhone bill and did my best as a vaguely educated (I went to film school) person to decipher what I was being charged for. You can check out this post here: http://thepete.com/…ned-huzzah but only have a look if you feel like reading my confusion as to what the hell’s going on with it. It looks like there’s both state AND city sales tax assessed on it and I don’t understand how that can be legal.

Regardless, a commenter called "lsoc" explained that: "Dude, this website could not be more perfect for your issues. www.myvalidas.com they analyze all these charges and explain them to you. In a lot of cases the charges are wrong and they will even help you get a credit on your account."

Dude, really? That’s funny, because when I signed up for their "free trial", their site told me that I could save NOTHING (see above screencap).

I’m just going to guess that "lsoc" is a comment spammer for the MyValidas.com people. Especially considering the site was of ZERO HELP AT ALL.

There’s a "free trial" link on their main page, so I signed up, followed the video on how to download my bill from the AT&T site (said video is out of date, BTW–AT&T has changed the layout of their site) and then uploaded the PDF of my bill to the MyValidas.com site. What I then saw, after their "Validas software" was done "analyzing" my bill was the above image.

0% Yearly Savings
$0.00 My Savings Annually
$0.00 Savings With A New Carrier

About the only helpful thing this "free trial" did was show me how much my iPhone will cost me over twelve months. The catch is, THEY’RE WRONG.

This, my first, bill $167.23 multiplied times 12 months works out to $2006.76, right? However, my first bill was prorated 2 extra weeks (who knows why–AT&T is like God, they work in mysterious ways) and there’s a $36 "activation fee" added.

So, that means that my next bill will be at least $56 cheaper than it was the this bill and it’ll probably be cheaper if the other taxes and fees that we all get stuck with are percentage-based, which I believe they are.

So, in the end, the MyValidas.com service is useless.

Oh and FYI, when you click on "Start Saving" you end up going to a page where you can actually start paying–the cheapest plan with run you $5 and it covers a one-time audit. The cost goes up for more in-depth plans. Check ‘em out:

For $24 (adorned with the "Best Value" ribbon) you get, and I quote (comments in bold are mine):

* Includes 24 reports ($120) value
* Entry in the "Worst Cell Phone Bill in Americatm" Why would I want that???
* Monthly Newsletter with $ Saving Tips and industry information you should know. Your service won’t save me enough already?
* Audit every line on your bill and continue auditing every month to ensure the highest savings. Wait, so is the $24 a monthly charge or what?

For $20 you get (and, again, I quote):

* Includes 12 reports ($60) value again with the illegal use of parentheses! Is English even your native language??
* Entry in the "Worst Cell Phone Bill in Americatm" Again, WHY WOULD I WANT THIS?
* Monthly Newsletter with $ Saving Tips and industry information you should know. this is just like the $24 plan. BORING.
* Audit every line on your bill and continue auditing every month to ensure the highest savings. Same here, for just $4 more, why WOULDN’T I go with the $24 plan? Ohhhh… that’s just what you WANT us to think!!

So basically, you can pay for 12 months of the service for $20 ($1.66666667 per report) and for four bucks more you can get 24 months of the service (for $1 per report). That other crap beyond the reports seems like, well, crap. Who cares about a newsletter? Who’s got time for it? And the listing in the "Worst Cell Phone Bill" thing?? Who’s idea was this? Why would you be proud of being taken to the cleaners by your cell phone carrier?

But wait–there’s still the bargain basement plan:

* One time bill auditing and savings report. Save on average 25% per year with one report.
* Entry in the "Worst Cell Phone Bill in Americatm"

Wow–with one report the average savings is 25%?? I think that must be a LIE or they have precisely ZERO iPhone customers to skew the average.

I can see how over a couple of months, this would be a good idea to do just so their service can get an idea of what your calling habits (and your carrier’s charging habits) are like. But one month isn’t enough and more than a few months seems like it would be pretty useless, to me.

Considering you can get 12 months for $20 (a ($60) value!) and 24 months for $24 (a ($120) value!) it would seem like these reports cost very little to actually produce–for one report it’s $5 and for 24 it’s $1 per report. That’s 500% mark-up for the low-end plan. Seems like they could probably charge $6 for three months and both make money and be of, you know, actual service to their customers. Right now it seems like a rip-off–especially since their "free trial" told me exactly nada.

What’s amusing to me is how overkill this service even is. When I saw Lsoc’s comment, I figured it was just somebody linking to a blog post they read someplace. That’s all that is really needed here–or at most a wiki that allows you to search your for your state’s legal carrier charging practices (ie, what is legal to charge in your area). I’d do something like this, myself, if I had the time or the technical knowledge, or the willingness to keep the thing updated.

For now, it looks like I’ll just have to pay this whole damn bill since it’s due today. I just reeeally think that there’s something wrong with getting charged both city and state sales tax. o_O

Oh and note to anyone considering a new Internet startup company. Try to come up with a name for your company that is both memorable AND has not had it’s domain name bought by someone else, already.

For instance, This website "MyValidas.com" is actually for a service called "Validas." It turns out that the founders of this startup used neither of my suggestions.

The only way "Validas" is memorable to me is if I imagine an extra "s" on the end of it making the company name "ValidAss". I just have to remember to remove that extra "s" when going to their website. EXCEPT, they’re not at "Validas.com" they’re at "MYvalidas.com". How lame since I’ve never imagined myself having a Validas (maybe a valid ass, but…) so how can I just roll into the concept of wanting to discover "MyValidas"??? It’s just bad marketing, in my mind.

OK, enough complaining out of me. Just don’t bother with this service, dear readers. It makes more sense to do the research yourself and based on their free trial, I have no proof that your service works at all.

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My iPhone Bill Mysteries Explained! (Huzzah!)

by ThePete 12:06 pm 2008-08-14

Up until July 11, 2008, I was a prepaid customer at T-Mobile. I had two phones with them–a (product) RED Motorola SLVR and a Sidekick 3. Loved them both, but needed GPS in this new city I live in called New York (note to Mayor Bloomberg: How about tax incentives to the Thomas Guide people?). Plus, I’m a gadget freak, so I was happy to choose GPS over, you know, a map, anyway.

The thing is/was, I HATE contracts. When I was with Sprint they were the biggest dicks in the world about paying late. Yes, I’m a struggling artist. Yes, I often have little money in the bank. But, yes, I always end up paying off my bills (yes, it wasn’t always that way, but that was more than 7 years ago, so my credit report should be none-the-wiser!). Yet, when I would be late with my payment, Sprint would often suspend my account. I’d be out, suddenly finding a huge need to call my wife but unable to.

“Good thing this wasn’t an emergency,” I’d say to myself.

Sure, I could call 911 in that case, but not my wife. That seems odd to me.

ANYway, so something else I always hated about mobile phone service with a contract was that I never really knew how big my bill would be from month to month. I knew approximately, but with taxes and fees and whatever, all I knew for sure was that it would cost me more than I initially signed up for.

Likewise, when I signed up for my iPhone’s voice and data plans, I knew going in that there would be extra fees attached. But I was awoken this morning to a worse surprise–I got charged more than just “taxes and fees.”

But first things, first. Here comes the mystery charges–the stuff that always seems to change from plan-to-plan and even month to month (that conveniently goes away when you go pre-paid):

iPhone bill pt1

The above is a screencap of part of my bill. That top part is a $0.60 charge for three text messages because I didn’t want to pay extra for something I hardly ever use. Of course, that was before I realized there wasn’t a reasonable IM client for the iPhone yet–but that’s another story. Below that are the fun fees for my home state of New York. Well, plus the $36 “Activation Fee”. That kind of fee always cracks me up. We have to pay extra for them to “turn on” our account. Just a wee bit greedy there, Mr. AT&T!

Then we’ve got a true puzzler:

COUNTY GROSS RECEIPTS SURCHARGE $3.00

The county I live in needs $3 per bill? Why? I just moved here, but I wonder if this fee is something that my neighbors voted on. I mean, what person in their right mind would be like “Yes! I think the county should be able to charge my wireless carrier $3 for… for… something, knowing full well that my wireless carrier will pass that charge onto me!”

Couldn’t we just get an extra $36 taken out of our taxes every year?

Same goes for the following:

FEDERAL UNIVERSAL SERVICE CHARGE $2.96

What the hell does this even mean??? Seriously, I have no idea.

MTA TELECOM SURCHARGE $0.91

Uhhh, the only MTA I know of is the company that runs the subways. Why would they be charging me money? From what little I could find on the ‘net about this, it seems like the MTA charges cell phone users in the NYC area for the MTA. WOW, that’s LAME. So, rather than taxing EVERYONE for MTA they punish JUST the mobile phone users. Weak. After all, mass transit helps everyone–cheaper bus and train fares encourages more people to stop driving and therefore helps cut down on traffic–so everyone benefits from everyone helping.

STATE TELECOMMUNICATIONS EXCISE SURCHARGE $3.82

Looks like another tax, this time from the state, instead of the county, that the AT&T is charged but passes on to us so they don’t lose any money. Still sounds like it should come out of taxes.

Oh, this is probably my favorite:

REGULATORY COST RECOVERY CHARGE $0.91

OK, this is likely one of two things:

1) It’s the money AT&T spent in complying with regulations.

2) It’s the money the state/county/USG charges AT&T to help the state/county/USG pay for regulating wireless carriers.

Those are my guesses and either way, it’s pretty lame to charge us for the cost of business.

So, all that equates to $47.60, but since this is my first iPhone bill, the $36 “activation fee” should be missing on my next bill dropping the cost of this section down to $11.60–possibly less if the fees in this section are based on percentages. That’s not too bad, but wait–there’s MORE! You also get:

NEW YORK STATE FEE $1.20
STATE SALES TAX $5.99 (!!!)
LOCAL WIRELESS SURCHARGE $0.30
CITY SALES TAX $6.55 (!!!!!)
TOTAL $14.04

WTF is all that?? More damn taxes including TWO WAVES OF SALES TAXES!! How does both the state AND the city get off charging us sales tax?? That’s just not fair!! I should get a PO box out in Jersey and change my mailing address to that on my AT&T account and see what happens.

When I buy a bag of chips, here in Manhattan, do I get charged city sales tax AND state sales tax? I don’t think so. I think I’ll ask for a receipt next time just to be sure.

So, there’s the big mystery part of the bill solved–total charges for seemingly-unrelated-to-mobile-phone-service fees? This month: $61.64. Next month (sans activation fee): $25.64. That’s still an awful lot of money on top of a $70.00 basic charge. Hopefully that’s a little high, but we’ll see in 30 days.

The thing is, that’s not the end of the rude surprises in my first iPhone bill. I’d imagine the next surprise hit every single person who bought an iPhone on July 11, 2008. I can’t imagine why this would happen at all, but on those grounds, I can’t imagine that this happened to just me.

Check this out:
iPhone bill pt2

Isn’t that nice? For some unknown reason AT&T decided to push my billing cycle back to the 26th of each month, rather than just having it start on the 11th, which happens to be the day I actually started using the service.

So, sure, those two weeks they’re charging me would have been charged to me anyway, but who said I wanted to pay for those two weeks in my first bill?? Why not just do a billing cycle of 7/11 to 8/10? Why play games like this for no apparent reason and without my permission (or knowledge)?

See, this is why I hate contracts. When I prepaid my minutes with T-Mobile, they may have cost more, but–hey, wait a minute. I wonder if they really do since all those taxes and fees are folded into the prepaid minute charges. I can’t be sure, since my AT&T voice account was divided into day minutes and night/weekend minutes, but considering I spent about $30 a month on my Sidekick and about the same on my SLVR, I definitely think I came out ahead on that. Which means I’m probably paying more than I’d have to.

Sure, you could argue that AT&T should charge more since they’ve got 3G (which I turn off because it sucks battery and actually gives me crappier reception) and I use my data plan a LOT more than I did with the Sidekick. Then again, do you think they’re really charging us what they should? Do you think AT&T is charging us just enough to survive? Or do you think their goal is to get rich?

So, the same way that it’s their right to charge what they want as business people, it’s our right as consumers to pay as little as we can get away with. If AT&T were about innovation, their 3G network would be everywhere and Apple’s phone wouldn’t have so many glaring flaws.

To top it off, I only found out about this “bill” because I got an email from PageOnce.com–a service that keeps track of things like your cell phone bill and your bank accounts. So, AT&T’s default setting for people who opt into the “paperless billing” feature is “no email.” Isn’t that nice? My bill is due in three days.

Yes, I know that I’m an adult and I can tell how long 30 days is, but enough apologisting for the giant corporation! It takes NO effort whatsoever to program a script that will automatically email customers when their bill is ready.

So, there you have it.

Mobile phone carriers never fail to depress me. :) As soon as there’s a way to unlock the iPhone and as soon as I have that $175 early termination fee, I’m jumping ship on AT&T and returning to my contract-free ways. Hell, I might not even wait that long since GPS works without a carrier and open wifi networks aren’t that uncommon here in the big city.

Why must cell phone companies suck so much?

And don’t ask me “why are you so cheap?” or “why don’t you want to pay for anything?” because I’m being just as economical as corporations are.

I’ll probably end up back with T-Mo on one of their month-to-month plans. The 1g iPhone worked on their network. I’m sure eventually the 2g (3G) iPhone will, too.

The really sad thing is, I didn’t use anywhere near my total minutes! So not fair!

My Mega iPhone Review (or Why Steve Jobs is Full of Shit, the iPhone Sucks and Why I Still Love My iPhone)

by ThePete 7:27 pm 2008-08-11

OK, everybody knows there’s no such thing as bad publicity, so we know that no matter what Steve Jobs does Apple Inc. will probably only benefit from it, no matter how shortsighted, shallow and controlling it is.

Steve Jobs is full of shit, in part, because of something he recently said (as reported by TUAW.com here: www.tuaw.com/2008/08/11/steve-jobs-discusses-app-store-with-wall-street-journal/ ) “Hopefully we never have to pull that lever, but we would be irresponsible not to have a lever like that to pull.”

What’s the lever he’s referring to? Well, it’s a killswitch, of sorts, that, when flipped, can shut down any app on your iPhone. Do you have control over this killswitch? No. Where is this killswitch? It’s at Apple HQ, of course. Only Steve and those he deems worthy of the responsibility can access it.

Who does this fuck think he is?

HEY STEVE, you’re not talking about the Nuclear Red Button.

What’s the concern here, Steve? That Khan Noonian Singh will get a hold of my iPhone and try to, what? Destroy a fictional starship? WTF?

You’re just NOT THAT IMPORTANT, STEVE. DEAL WITH IT.
More…

Jailbroken iPhone

by ThePete 11:30 am 2008-08-10


Jailbroken iPhone, originally uploaded by thepetecom.

I now have access to even more bells and whistles, yet still no video
recording, VoIP, or unlockage. Supposedly, these will come in time.

iTunes Overkill for Ringtone Syncing

by ThePete 12:35 pm 2008-08-05
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Here’s a cap I took of my iTunes last night after clicking "Sync Ringtones."

That’s right–all existing songs, movies, and TV shows on my iPhone (I call her "Kurochan") will be wiped JUST so I can sync my ringtones!! What the hell is that?

Why must I wipe all of my media just for ringtone-syncage? It’s bad enough we have to pay to have ringtones added. It’s also bad enough we can’t just use songs in our music library for ringtones (not to mention not being able to use them for the alarm clock!) and now we have to go through the effort of dumping all of our media back on the iPhone?

I love it when a corporation tells me what to do.

It means I don’t have to think as much.

I just wish it didn’t hurt so much when I do it anyway. :(

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iPhone App Store Not as Vetted as Claimed

by ThePete 12:17 pm 2008-08-05

utterz-imageOne of the annoying things about the App Store, Apple’s method for delivering Apple-sanctioned applications to your iPhone, is the inconsistency. I’ve read that many developers are having a helluva time dealing with Apple. Some apps are rejected because of typos in the descriptions, while others are rejected out of hand with no explanation at all.

Then there are the apps that make it on to the App Store when they really shouldn’t. I have lost count of how many apps I’ve downloaded only to find that they refuse to open or work at all once they do open.

To be sure, most of the apps I’ve tried have worked fine. I just don’t understand how apps that so obviously suck don’t get filtered from the system while others get through–as in the case of the above screencapped app. It’s an app called "Codes Retard." At first, I thought it was some sort of reference app for programmers. You know like "Coding for Dummies" or something. Then I tried to find out what it was and… whoops!

I’m not sure how Apple can justify rejecting some Apps for typos when this thing made it into the US App Store with the entirely wrong language–AND with the claim that it’s in English.

I just hope Apple makes the NetShare app available again. I’m so annoyed I didn’t know there was an app that allowed you to tether your iPhone before it was yanked.

Tethering, FYI, is when you plug your laptop into your cell phone and allow your laptop to use the cell phone’s data connection to surf. Yeah, it’s obvious why Apple yanked NetShare, but leaving it up would make them look like they actually cared about what their customers wanted.
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SocialMedian.com Default User Icon

by ThePete 11:55 am 2008-08-05
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So, I signed up with SocialMedian.com and found that they had discovered the best way to get people to add a custom user icon.

I took one look at Oprah, above, and updated my icon seconds later.

SHUDDER.

I then had to shower immediately.

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So, my online pal PixelFish left a really cool reply about this post over on Utterz, so I thought I’d repost it (and my reply to her reply) here. Check it out:

I actually like Oprah for the most part, but yeah…wouldn’t want that as my icon. (Just because it doesn’t fit my mental image of myself.)

I have a friend whose blog gives everybody an icon automatically and randomly. She blogs a lot about racism, and so every user icon is a person of colour. (I got Book from Firefly, I think. He’s awfully tiny so it’s a wee bit hard to tell.) At first, I was annoyed because I wanted to change my avatar to match me, but then I started thinking about how the world related to me when they saw my words coming out of Book’s mouth. How much had I relied unconciously on white privilege. How I could change my avatar most places to be whatever I wanted and how I shaped how people saw me on the net. So now I don’t mind the icon….I found it thought-provoking, and I think it’s helped me change a little bit of how I relate to other folks.

I thought that was really interesting and, really fascinating–I’d never once thought about how not being a minority on the web might change other netizens’ opinions on me. Very thought provoking! However, I was (and am) concerned that people might think my post had something to do with race. It doesn’t. So, here’s my reply:

Very interesting point, for sure. It certainly wasn’t the race angle I objected to (I’m not saying that’s what you were suggesting, just being clear). I don’t like Oprah just because she’s one of the most powerful women in America and she seems to waste that power on making herself look cool. She gives away cars to her audience, and does it in a way that makes it clear she knows how awesome she is for doing it.

She opens a girls school in South Africa that ends up in the news for all the wrong reasons (here: www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL0510385520071105 ), which is a shame, because I’d love to see her do more things like this, just so long as she does her homework beforehand (in other words, does the research, hires the right people, etc, so that stuff like this doesn’t happen).

She’s on the cover of every damn issue of her “O” magazine. Usually, it’s worse than a comic book cover, too–it’s just her posing. Like just her very image sells paper. She doesn’t even bother to look like she’s making an effort.

I remember reading something about her buying up a cable TV network with plans to name it the “Oprah Winfrey Network” aka OWN.

This makes me want to start a TV network called “Pete’s Wonderful Network for Entertainment Delivery” aka “PWNED”.

>_< And "wow," how "amazing" was it when she called out that writer guy who lied in and about his book.

Perhaps someone with her stature could speak out against the lies of a particular administration? I mean, whose lies will harm more people? Some guy who wrote a novel and pretended it was an autobiography? Or the lies of the leader of the free world?

This is why I hate Oprah. She has the power to do almost anything, yet she squanders it.

I *love* that an African-American woman is as powerful as she is. I hate what she does with that power.

So, to reiterate, I don’t have any problem with black people who have power, just so long as they use it well. I don’t have a problem with ANY person having power, just so long as they use it well (aka for the betterment of humanity).

Cuil.com Takes on Google, Huh?

by ThePete 9:02 am 2008-07-28


Cuil.com Takes on Google, Huh?, originally uploaded by thepetecom.

So, they claim to want to take on Google but they can’t handle the
traffic Drudge sends them at 9:16 in the morning east coast time??

Wait until the rest of America gets to work–then we’ll see some REAL
404ness!

Also, taking on TheGoog with no mobile version? No desktop suite?

Google is way more than a search engine these days. Seriously taking
them on requires more than just a better search engine, folks.

I mean, what am I supposed to do, check my Gmail then jump over to
Cuil just to search the Web? Add an event to my Gcal and then type on
“Cuil.com” to do a search despite already being at Google?

I don’t like hegemony either, but come on, people–how are we to know
even how to pronounce your name? It doesn’t look like it rhymes with
“cool”–I bet most folks will guess it’s “Kweel” or “koo-ill” or maybe
even “koo-eel.”

I’m guessing “kewl.com” was taken?

Good luck, guys! You’re going to need it.

Testing Out WordPress for iPhone

by ThePete 12:06 pm 2008-07-22

So, WordPress released their app for the iPhone and it seems cool enough. It’s very basic, however–it doesn’t let you do any real admin, sadly. Like no plugin tweaking, no theme editing, and, worst of all, no way to troubleshoot if something goes wrong inside of WP.

Like that ever happens! :P

Of course, the other issue is how the WP app works with the iPhone itself. Just in the process of writing the above I’ve learned the following:

1) The WP app needs a landscape mode badly. Typing with one hand gets really tedious really quickly and, sadly, my thumbs are too big to work together (accurately) in portrait mode.

2) The iPhone’s incessant need to correct what it determines to be spelling errors makes blogging with HTML an annoying process. I tried to add emphasis tags and it kept replacing them with the word “email”. Sure, I can tap the insanely tiny “x” when the “correct” word pops up but I’d rather not have to do that EVERY time.

Of course, if there was a way to turn OFF the auto-correct feature you can bet I’d do that over expecting the WP guys to come up with a solution.

3) No tactile keys makes typing really hard, even with “click” sounds on. I find that I type MUCH slower on my iPhone than I did on my Sidekick 3’s pfysical qwerty. Also, having to go to different keyboards for certain (very) common keys is a serious drag.

4) No caps lock. No web-rant is complete without a sentence or two typed in all caps. How else are people to know that I’m yelling at them?

5) If you’re like me, you make mistakes. Like, just a moment ago, I was proof reading this post, realized I needed to add something to part of a sentence to better make a point but ended up adding it to the wrong part of the sentence. I then had to backspace out the entire addition and retype it again elsewhere thanks to NO DAMN CUT AND PASTE. (That last bit was really annoying to type without a caps lock, BTW.)

So, while it’s obvious blogging on your WP blog is possible through their official app (I’m doing it right now), I don’t think it is very easy or fun currently. Much of that is Apple’s fault not the WP guys, but I think the WP guys could do a few things to make WP-blogging more fun and easier to do.

Good first try, though, and with the WP guys you know there will definitely be updates. Hell, they probably put one out while I was typing this. :P

13 Things I Don’t Like About the iPhone

by ThePete 3:10 pm 2008-07-14
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OK, it’s been a full two days with the iPhone and, despite my smile in the above pic, I’ve already got a nice little list of problems I have with it. Here we go:

1) I don’t need a web page to reload every time I go back to an already opened web page. I can’t easily find a way to STOP this from happening. This kind of thing is *particularly* annoying in the subway because when it realizes there’s no connection, it just throws a blank page at you rather than reverting to the last cached page. If you can find an app version of the site (like AP.org’s Mobile News Network) you can sometimes compensate for this, but you know what? ThePete.Com doesn’t have an app version and I doubt it ever will. :\

2) I wish I could turn some of the auto-correction off. It keeps trying to "correct" my spelling of "eee pc" by spelling it "see of" and there’s no obvious way to stop it from auto-correcting or to turn it off entirely (or ideally telling it correct only certain things).

3) Despite there being a HUGE amount of really great apps for it, there’s still no decent IM client. The AIM app functions, but it doesn’t seem to make the iPhone vibrate when you get an IM when AIM is not on screen. My Sidekick 3 would vibrate twice for IMs, once for emails–even if the screen was off and it was in my pocket.

4) So far, I can’t get it to vibrate when new email arrives.

5) So far, I can’t get it to check mail except when I put mail on screen.

6) You can’t get rid of the main stable of apps that come with the iPhone. So, even though I will NEVER check stocks on my iPhone, I am stuck with the app.

7) As I’m typing this, it’s plugged into a dock (that I had to buy separately) but it doesn’t seem to be charging. The dock is plugged into a powered USB hub which is plugged into my MacBook. iTunes sees the iPhone, yet the battery meter hasn’t budge a millimeter in a half-hour. Last night I had the phone plugged into the same place and it charged just fine. Don’t know what’s up, now.

8) What’s with no hard disk mode? I’ve got 8 gigs of storage space, I’d like to use some of it for my important data (like my manuscripts, personal info, etc). Looks like I have to carry around my custom Sonic Thumb Drive (see: http://hacks.thepete.com/…-usb-stick ) STILL. Weeeeak.

9) No video playlists. At least, I can’t find where they are. That means that despite all the really cool stuff I can do on my wide screen iPhone, it’s actually easier to watch multiple videos on my 5g iPod. Too bad it’s *harder* on the eyes.

10) When I’m out someplace and I need to surf for info on where I’m going I have found that it will try to find an open wifi network first, rather than just jumping on the 3G network (or even the 2G network). Really, this thing should look for the first available connection and then, while it’s pulling data for you, it can be looking for another connection in the background. Stopping to ask you which wifi network to piggyback on (isn’t that illegal in some states?) is a pain in the ass when all you’re looking for is the address of the nearest Starbucks or the zip code you’re standing in.

11) Really wish there was a faster way to adjust the screen brightness. As of now, I have to hit Home>Settings>Brightness. Seems like a long way to go for an adjustment you might need to make in a pinch, quickly, without disturbing someone (like a sleeping spouse, perhaps).

12) Like in Apple’s Mac OSX, there’s a dock on your "home" pages (sort of like a desktop for your iPhone, it’s where your apps reside). However, the dock only holds 4 icons. I’d love for the icons to shrink a bit if you decide to add a fifth. Or perhaps the dock could function like the Mac’s dock and it could get larger depending on where you’re touching (much like the iPhone’s on-screen keyboard, actually).

13) Why can’t I dump tracks on my iPhone from different computers?? I don’t "sync" my iPhone to any one stack of files because I have WAY more media than would fit on my iPhone–what logic would that be to have 8 gigs on your iPhone AND on your computer at the same time? I have my media backed up on external drives and only drag over media that I want to watch over the next few days. I encode video so that two hours roughly works out to a gig, so that’s a whopping 8 movies I can fit on my iPhone. Why do I need to "sync" 8 movies??? And why can I only dump media on my iPhone from one machine? Both my 3g and 5g iPods let me dump tracks on from any of my computers.

OK, I think that’s it for now. Of course, I still have the standard gripes everyone has about the iPhone:

a) STILL no cut and paste (though I’ve been blogging from it a bit and this hasn’t been a huge issue).

b) Battery life drains quickly if left in 3G mode (left the AIM app up while I napped for two hours today, woke up and found my battery life had gone from something like 60% to 20%).

c) No video recording??? Come on, Apple, by now there should be a way to record video through a line-in port by now.

It looks like the official 3G iPhone dock may not be designed so well–after getting fed up with the aforementioned lack of charging I pushed down on the iPhone while it was still in the dock and suddenly the little battery icon went from almost empty to the lightning bolt that tells me it’s charging. Sheesh.

I should admit that I have only read a bit of the online manual for the iPhone so some of my gripes may have been answered in it. However, Apple is known for it’s highly simple, highly intuitive products. I think my gripes above are largely common with the average iPhone user. After all, the only smartphone I can compare it to is the Sidekick 3 and we all know the SK3 ain’t exactly a smartphone. It’s more like a "street smartphone" in that it does more than a regular phone but MUCH less that a Blackberry or iPhone. The point is, I’m astounded by how great the iPhone is. I’m more astounded that I can’t do the above things.

It’s like Apple is going for bigger, cooler things before it gets the smaller, not-cool things right. Imagine a baby who crawls across the stadium floor to the starting line of a marathon it can run in a few hours.

But again, maybe the manual will have some answers. We’ll see, though.

Haha, OK, the iPhone, minutes ago, told me that it was unable to receive phone calls and needed to be repaired (!!). So I shut it down, powered it back up and it flashed a low battery/lightning bolt screen at me. I plugged it directly into my MacBook’s USB 2 port and it didn’t change. A quick check of the PDF manual (which is MUCH larger than the one that comes with the iPhone) and I discovered that the screen it was showing me was the "needs charge" screen. So I tried swapping out the USB cable and that did the trick. Seems the dock is fine, but the extra USB cable I bought Saturday at the Apple Store is flaky. Lovely.

Thankfully, the iPhone APPEARS to be charging, though when it gets back to full power, I’ll be happy.

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Despite Naysayers, Apple Sells LOTS of iPhones

by ThePete 3:40 am 2008-07-14
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Ironically, I read about this on my iPhone, which I had no real trouble picking up last Friday. Sure, the AT&T store I went to first was sold out before the line of about a hundred even made it in the door, but after making it to the 5th Ave Apple store and standing in line for three hours, I had my iPhone. Another 40 minutes later, my iPhone was activated and I was out of the store.

Sure, it could have been smoother but what do you want? It’s the frakkin iPhone! You think there was demand like this for the RAZR?

So, it’s now been two full days since I got mine and I must say that it’s pretty damn cool. I loathe adding to the hype-machine, but the iPhone really is an amazing little thing. It’s not perfect, not by a long shot, but it sure does some kick-ass stuff.

Oh, did I mention that this post was:

“Sent from my iPhone”

?

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Jaiku Lifts Twitter Imagery (Twitgery?)

by ThePete 7:50 pm 2008-07-10
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So, a couple days ago I was going over the feeds for my lifestream (now visible on ThePete.Com’s main page compliments of Profilactic.com) and was reminded that I have a Jaiku account. Go figure.

I guess they’re still in beta, which makes sense seeing what happened to me. See, I noticed I had left my Jaiku account so that it was still importing a few feeds from Twitter, Tumblr and a couple other places and since I was setting up Ping.FM to post to Jaiku, I decided to delete some of those feeds to avoid double posting. When I deleted a feed, I got the above error message.

Yeah–what the hell??

A bird?

A pithy little metaphorical comment about the condition of the servers?

No wonder Jaiku is still in beta. They’d probably get sued with that error message. Sheesh.

Come on, Google! What’s up with you guys these days?

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Firefox Download Day Certificate

by ThePete 7:00 pm 2008-07-10
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I’ve been mired in the process of moving from LA to NYC and barely remembered to take part in this last month but I DID completely forget to post about it. I think it was pretty cool that Mozilla was able to get in the Guinness Book for most downloads in a day. And hey, according to the above "certificate" I helped! Sweet!

I know, I know, big deal. Hey, I dug it.

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2g 3G iPhone (!)

by ThePete 5:58 pm 2008-06-09
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Soooo, the 2nd generation iPhone that uses 3G technology was announced today by his Steve-ness and, as usual, I’m kind of unimpressed. I knew I wouldn’t go with a 1g (1st generation) iPhone because it usually takes Apple a couple tries to get stuff right. However, I expected a bit more from the 2g 3G (!) iPhone. Sure, the GPS is great, the higher data rate (download speed) 3G can bring is also great and the lower pricing (8GB=$200, 16GB=$300) is definitely welcome, but still no Flash support? Still no video recording?

I saw somewhere that you can record video on the current iPhone with a 3rd party app. Usually when something like this happens it only takes Apple one iteration of a product to add the features of that 3rd party app to said product. Not so this time. So, if I get this new iPhone, I’ll still have to keep my SLVR around for mobile video recording. :\ Lame.

Then there’s the lack of a user-facing camera. This wasn’t make or break for me, but it’s so easy to do, you’d think they’d have done it. With the 3G connection speeds low-end video chat is totally doable. Odds are someone will still do it and we’ll just need a mirror to make it work, but Apple could have made it easy for us.

People are also upset about the new plastic casing for the iPhone, but the metal casing of the 1g iPhone probably limited signal reception dramatically. I have a MotoSLVR that is largely metal and while it feels nice and solid in my hand, it’s often hard for me to get a signal, while my plastic Sidekick 3 gets nearly full bars. So while not the metal backing we iPod-o-philes are used to, it will help reception and to be honest, look pretty damn slick, too.

So, where am I going with all of this? Well, for the price, I’ll definitely be picking up a 2g 3G iPhone. I’m living in a new city and just today I got semi-lost trying to find the nearest Starbucks to where I was in the 100+ degree Manhattan heat. I’m all over that new GPS thing. MUST know where I am and where I need to go in heat like this. My head felt like it was going to explode today. I’m not kidding. It felt all puffy and when I made it home today a glance in the mirror made me wonder if my face was always that red-ish/purple. O_O

Yes, a comprehensive GPS feature is very welcome, thanks.

As far as calling plans go, I’m hoping to stick with T-Mo (T-Mo has 3G in NYC now), but if not, I’m hoping to find a pre-paid data plan from AT&T since I will be using the iPhone for data only. I seem to recall, during the early days of the first iPhone, that there was a way to enter all zeros for your social security number and have it default you to some sort of pre-paid account. I wonder if this is still the case.

And what about cut & paste? One of the most basic features in the world of computing was left out of the first iPhone–is it in the second?

Sooo many questions!

But that’s my plan now. My Sidekick 3 has served me well, but it’s time to upgrade and considering that the high-end 2g/3G iPhone is $100 *cheaper* than my Sidekick was when I bought it (almost 2 years ago, now) I think it’s a perfectly reasonable thing to do even from an economic standpoint. Hell this new iPhone will hold 5 gigs less than my first iPod could and that cost me $400 just like the SK3!

The other thing is that because it’s, essentially, going to be the new RAZR (it’s so cheap!) I’m sure there will be loads of people developing apps and hacks for it. I have a feeling we’ll see support for everything short of Flash before too long.

Now comes the hard part–I know I want it, now I’ve just got to wait for it. Four weeks from this Friday is when the 2g 3G iPhone comes out–July 11, 2008. Ugh.

I’d better have an apartment by then. ;)

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My Digital Media Library Solution

by ThePete 5:18 pm 2008-05-05

So, I’m finally doing what I’ve wanted to do for the past couple of years. In preparation for our big move across the country, I’m packing up not only my belongings, but my media collection. Years ago, I ripped all of my CDs to mp3 and now I’m going through the process of ripping all of my DVDs to mp4. I picked up two Maxtor 1TB externals for $230 a piece (at Best Buy!) and have spent the last few days dumping mp4s and mp3s onto one of them. Yesterday, I noticed I had already passed the 500 gig mark, so I thought I should stop and back them up onto the other 1TB drive.

That’s my plan–since hard drives are so very fallible (as are optical disks), I decided to keep everything on one drive and use a back-up application (I use Deja Vu for the Mac) to automatically back up everything.

The only catch I’ve run into so far is the time it takes to back up 500+ gigs of media–it’s loooong. Notice one of my drives was last modified at 10:46pm last night–that’s when I started the back-up. Now check my system clock–yep–it took that long to finish. I think that’s like 17-and-a-half hours to back up half-a-TB. The thing is, I’m not done yet. O_O

Anyway, I feel like any kind of DVD is not long for this world, what with Blu-Ray having just won the war and holodiscs being around the corner (here: http://snurl.com/hvd ). So, this is my solution. In a perfect world I’d have a third Teradrive that I’d back-up onto once a month that I’d keep under my pillow at night. :D

Now, imagine having your entire media collection in the palm of your hand. Now imagine having *my* entire media collection in the palm of your hand. Yeah, that rocks.

Of course, it’ll rock more once those holodiscs are affordable and I can burn my entire collection to a single 3.9 tera HVD (almost 4 times over!) and then mail them to friends for safe keeping. ^_^

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What’s Up with the XO and OLPC? Nothing Good IMO

by ThePete 4:38 pm 2008-04-21

If you checked out my blog back in November, you may have thought I was obsessed with the OLPC XO laptop–you would be wrong. I was just excited for it. I give my blind faith to nothing and when I see the writing on the wall, I’m perfectly willing to read it out loud for all to hear. I think that’s how that metaphor is supposed to work, anyway…

For anyone just tuning in, the XO is a laptop designed to cost so little to build that 3rd world countries would want to buy One Laptop Per Child (hence OLPC) in their country. Originally intended for sale to only 3rd World countries, NGOs, and domestic government bodies, the OLPC non-profit decided to sell XO’s to us in the 1st world, for just a few months, late last year. The only catch was that you had to pay for two at $200 each–one would go to a 3rd world kid and the other, to you. Pretty cool, really.

My XO was delivered on December 22 and for quite a while I was very excited to have it. However, over the following months I found myself becoming more and more disappointed with it. The hardware is brilliant–it’s got the features of a full-sized laptop from about seven or eight years ago, but costs a fraction of a similarly-sized (9×9.5″) laptop. When I thought back to what I could do on my old laptop from 1998, I thought "and it’ll fit in a small bag? SWEET! I’d love one!"

Mind you, I’d not have even paid attention were it not for the charity aspect of the project.

The hardware also contained features that no other laptop has, even now. Mainly, these are power saving features that allow for a much lower power consumption. I remember reading that a regular laptop pulls something like 50 or 60 watts but the XO pulls 6. Plus there’s a backlight to the LCD you can turn off and still use the display in a black-and-white mode that is completely visible in direct sunlight. Another cool feature in the XO that you won’t find in any other lappie is the Mesh networking capabilities–each XO can connect to other XOs within a kilometer away and share activities and an Internet connection. Pretty damn clever, if you ask me.

Sadly, the hardware is about all the XO has going for it. The OS is a stupified version of Linux and actually seems to hobble the hardware. Despite that old laptop of mine from 1998 having crappier specs than the XO, I can do more on it than I can on the XO. The XO won’t let me novel have my manuscript open and surf the web at the same time (I don’t like to close my word processor just so I can research something on the web). In fact, once my latest manuscript got beyond about 350 pages, the XO’s word processor would crash. I installed a full word processor and it didn’t always crash–but inconsistent crashes are worse than consistent ones, if you ask me.

While the XO does make a passable media player (command line-comfy users only, please), e-book reader and hobby computer (installing other OSes is possible, but pretty challenging), I wanted a cheap, low-end UMPC–which is just not what SugarOS, the current operating system, will let it be. Until a later version of Sugar can handle memory better, the XO is simply not ready for prime-time.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m completely behind the concepts of OLPC and providing cheap computers so everyone can have better access to education (and yes, porn). However, I think the software guys are trying to reconstruct the culture of computing by teaching kids NOT to multitask. While I think having kids learn about computers differently from the way we learned about them is a good idea, hobbling the machine so only one or two things (max) can be done at once I think ill-prepares kids of any country. The world multitasks and teaching any kid to do one thing at a time hobbles them, in my opinion.

Obviously, kids need to learn to do one thing at a time, first, but when they’re ready to do two or three things at once, what do they do? Buy a new computer? Can they do that easily (or at all) if they live in the 3rd world or the inner city? Maybe these kids would be better at hacking the XO than me, but I don’t think it’s a good idea to expect this–I’m no slouch and it took me forever to get Xubuntu installed. Besides, how are they supposed to learn to instal another OS if they’re only familiar with the XO’s OS?

I’m not saying SugarOS has to be windows-based, I’m just saying it needs to be able to do more. If kids need truly dumb computers Radio Shack and Toys "R" Us has them for like $30. Those machines are much better suited to kids who have no experience with computers.

Again, don’t get me wrong, I think where the software engineers were coming from was a good place–I just question their choices. Of course, a lot has changed since I stopped using my XO a couple of months back.

For one, Ivan Krstic resigned. He was the main guy behind XO security. OLPCNews.com quoted (here: http://www.olpcnews.com/…_olpc.html ) Krstic saying in a blog post (here: http://radian.org/…ng-clarity ) that:

OLPC undertook a drastic internal restructuring coupled with what, despite official claims to the contrary, is a radical change in its goals and vision from those that were shared with me when I was invited to join the project.

Adding insult to injury, I was asked to stop working with Walter Bender, without a doubt one of the most stunningly thoughtful and competent people I’ve ever worked with. Following Walter’s demotion from OLPC presidency, I was to report instead to a manager with no technical or engineering background who was put in charge of all OLPC technology.

I cannot subscribe to the organization’s new aims or structure in good faith, nor can I reconcile them with my personal ethic.

Wow.

That’s some seriously heavy stuff.

Then, Nicholas Negroponte, the founder of OLPC, said he would be changing his position in a way that made it sound like he was quitting OLPC entirely. It turned out he just wanted someone else to be CEO. So far, no one has officially taken over the spot. Still, when the CEO decides he’s no longer the right guy for the job, you have to wonder.

Then, just today, I learned that Walter Bender, the president of Software and Content, has quit. OLPCNews.com reported it here: http://www.olpcnews.com/…_olpc.html and Engadget.com here: http://www.engadget.com/…r-transit/

The theory is that Negroponte’s interest in becoming more like Micro$oft and using a version of Windows XP on the XO is at the core of Bender wanting to leave. Who knows, this might have been the real reason Krstic wanted to leave, as well.

So, things don’t look so good for OLPC and the XO. Personally, I don’t mind XP for or on the XO. I absolutely despise Windows XP and Micro$oft, but would welcome an OS that doesn’t hobble the XO. I had hoped to see what the guys behind the SugarOS would come up with, but when two of the most visible guys behind the OS bail, you wonder who is next to leave the Good Ship OLPC and if said ship is sinking.

I really hope OLPC can correct its course and get back on track to helping get computers into the hands of kids. I have no idea what to suggest to get them back on that track aside from making Sugar handle memory better. The last I heard they were planning on retooling the graphics. I’m thinking they should get the code right, first. Then worry about what it looks like.

Back in the mid-twentieth century, a bunch of well-meaning educators thought it would be a good idea to try to teach kids practical life lessons by shooting short films that would be shown in classrooms around the country. I’m old enough to remember being subjected to some of them and even as a kid I remember finding them rather patronizing. As an adult, I realize that the people behind the movies meant well and truly thought they were doing a good thing. I’m concerned the XO will end up in a similar place in our culture. I hope I’m wrong, of course.

I do plan on using my XO again once I’m through with my current manuscript. I do want to keep my books a little shorter, anyway. ^_^
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Sony Brings the Blu-Ray and Hard Drive-Based DVR

by ThePete 2:07 pm 2008-04-19

Way back in December of 2003, my dad bought my wife and I a DVR. It was a Sony and it was a DVD-based DVR and only recorded to DVD. It had a flaw when it came to cutting out commercials (I had been slicing out TV ads on VHS since the 1980s). If memory serves, it wouldn’t actually let you cut out the commercials. Even when recording onto an RW disk, I couldn’t transfer the video onto my Mac to then cut out the commercials. So, I asked my dad if he’d mind if I exchanged the Sony for a DVR with a bit more flexibility. He said it was fine and anticipated it by giving me the receipt along with the DVR in the first place.

At my local Good Guys electronics store (now a Guitar Center) I found a Panasonic that looked like it was everything I had ever wanted in a DVR–almost. It was the DMR-E80H and it came with an 80 gig hard drive (that Sony had no hard drive at all) and allowed for easy commercial-removal. The only draw back to the E80H has been that the only rewritable disk it can use is a DVD-RAM. Sadly, they’re not widely compatible with DVD drives on computers, so I haven’t done that much RAM burning. However, when my mom decided to look into a DVR, she asked me for my advice. I told her to look for something like my Panasonic.

Of course, there was a catch–Panasonic didn’t seem to make mine anymore.

I knew my sister-in-law, Lisa, had bought a descendant of the E80H, but that was the only other Panasonic DVR like mine that I was aware of. I visited a couple different Best Buy stores and checked out one of the three Fry’s Electronics within driving distance of my apartment, here in LA–all with no luck finding anything even remotely resembling my E80H. Finally, I just asked a Best Buy employee if they carried anything like my Panasonic–I even described the exact features:

Big hard drive (for the time)
burns to DVD
records to the hard drive or a DVD

Not much to ask from electronics makers you would think.

The BB employee replied saying that cable and minidish companies are doing deals with electronics companies to force consumers to only get DVRs when you subscribe to cable or minidish companies. Highly lame, in my mind, but it explained why my beautiful E80H had sparse offspring.

Then, a couple weeks back, I stumbled across an April 8, 2008 post at UberGizmo.com talking about Sony’s Blu-ray-DVD/hard-drive-based DVRs. Knowing devices like these are out there makes me so happy. Here’s a bit from the Ubergizmo post:

Sony certainly aims to solidify its place in the living room by launching a new BDZ series of Blu-ray recorders, with the A70 and high-end T90 being capable of picking up unprotected HDTV feeds, relying on AVC (H.264) encoding in order to record shows for future viewing on their respective 320GB and 500GB hard drives. You can choose to record videos to Blu-ray directly if the need arises, and it can also convert videos straight into portable-friendly formats. Sony PSP and other H.264-capable player owners, are you listening yet?

Keeeryst, am I listening or WHAT!!

WANT IT.

Sadly, the A70 and its high-end cousin the T90 will drop April 30 but only in Japan and prices start at $1600+. When I head over to Nippon, I’m going to have to find a job fast so I can pick up one of these bad boys. .5TB HDs with transfers to PSP??

DEWD.

Oh and the other theory I had, thanks to this new line of BD and HD-based DVRs coming out is that perhaps DVR-makers wanted to hold off introducing any new DVR models to see which next-gen DVD format would win the format wars. Not that Blue-ray will be around long as a format, but soon BDs will be as cheep as SD DVDs and will function as throw-away media, like current DVD-Rs do.
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Anyone Using SocialThing? I Love It, but…

by ThePete 1:01 am 2008-04-16

SocialThing is a new service that allows you to follow your friends on various social networks. To me it seems like Twitter and FriendFeed had a kid together but forgot to teach it a few things.

The UI is very Twitter-like, which is good–your friend’s posts show up in chronological order, unlike FriendFeed which posts everything in clumps based on socnet or user. I find this a little confusing. However, a good way SocialThing is like FF is by allowing you to follow multiple services. FF simply imports feeds, but SocialThing seems to be doing things differently behind the scenes. They only have a handful of services available and if adding them were as easy as just adding feeds, the one problem I have with SocialThing would not exist.

I simply can’t follow enough of my friends, so I have to stick with FriendFeed.

Now, both FF and ST allow you to post to any of the networks you have listed, but I like the way ST handles this better than FF. It’s just cleaner and more simple.

I’m really hoping they add more services soon. They say delicious, digg, last.fm, MySpace and YouTube are next in line. I’ve voted for plenty of other sites like Utterz and (ironically) FriendFeed to be added, too. If only they’d just allow RSS feeds (like FriendFeed does) they would cover a LOT of bases.
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