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barnskiblog

Barney's blog. Just a load of old shite really.

Saturday, October 29, 2005

Remember the 10,000 balls bouncing picture? - here's the Sony commercial featuring 250,000 superballs bouncing down a San Francisco street.
Awesome. I just loved this so much that I had to blog it.
(I recommend that you watch this on the most powerful computer you have to hand - my old G4 550 powerbook struggled with it a bit).

read more | digg story

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Random web snippets this week:
Mozilla Lightning will be an Outlook-killer (hopefully) as it will feature the functionality of the Thunderbird mail client and the Sunbird calendaring engine. Even better, this is all cross-platform and Open Source, using open standards. You'll even be able to interact with iCal calendars as they use the open .ics file format. It's all very young though (Sunbird is still a bit basic to be honest) - version 0.1 is hoped to be out in November, but it'll be buggy :)

The Rolling Stones latest album will be the first album sold on SanDisk’s microSD ™ (TransFlash ™) card, meaning that you can get a DRM-protected flash card version instead of a CD or download. Why you'd want to do that (other than for the geek kudos) is beyond me, but there you go.

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Also news today that VMWare released a new, free VMWare player, which is basically a cut-down version of VMWare workstation. The fundamental limitations are that you can't create virtual machines or modify the virtual hardware of VM's, but you can run VM's built on a full version of VMWare.
This is pretty cool - I can now take VM's built on VMWare Workstation in the lab and run them on my laptop in the field without having to buy an additional VMWare license.
read more | digg story


Update:
Check out this recent digg - A perfectly free way to create and use an XP Virtual Machine - all free, all Legal.
This guy uses the Open Source QEmu emulator and the free VMWare player to run an XP VM. Note that it's not really free as you need a Windows license, but the VM technology is zero-cost.
read more | digg story


Apple just keep 'em coming at the moment don't they?
Updated powerbooks, a new photo post-production tool called aperture and (best of all) new power mac G5 specs, including dual core processors on the high-end model.
This is where it still guts me a bit that the road-map takes Apple to Intel. I mean, when they announce a new quad processor Intel Power Mac in the future the sheer grunt of the thing will no doubt be impressive, but it just won't be as cool as a G5 quad is today, you know?

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Systm episode 4 is out and it's all about podcasting, including a look at the TWiT setup. I haven't seen it yet, but Bittorrent is busy doing it's thing.
On another note, I was surprised that this wasn't on digg.com yet, and got quite excited about being the first to submit it (yeah, like that was ever gonna happen!). When I tried, I got an error (screen grab below) - looks like someone has reported revision3.com as being a bit dodgy on digg.com.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Ubuntu Linux 5.10 is out and available for download.
This is currently one of my favourite distros, and they have also just announced that they will be supporting IA64, HPPA (1.1 and later) and SPARC (UltraSPARC only) in addition to Intel x86, PPC (Mac) and AMD64, which is nice.


Now that is a bit more like it! - finally, some tech news with some weight to it, and from Apple which is always a good thing.
The video iPod was kind of expected, but still welcome. They've ditched firewire for USB2 only, which is a shame, but otherwise this looks like the next generation of personal media devices done perfectly, as is Apple's way of doing stuff.
The most significant thing in my opinion though is the supporting infrastructure and services, notably the iTunes music store now offering video content including TV shows (only in the US for the time being) and FrontRow (only on the new iMac at the moment).
Don't get me wrong - that new iMac is a thing of beauty, but it is just a product update. The iPod video on the other hand is a market-leading product evolution, and the video content delivery (iTunes music store) and multimedia management (FrontRow) is an industry-changing revolution.
What this really does is starts the ball rolling on a whole new way of doing stuff, just like the original iPod, iTunes and iTunes music store set the bar for online music distribution and playback. It's especially great to see the Apple Remote and FrontRow deliver a solid kick in the nuts to Windows Media Centre. Apple were a little late, but they have done it better because they designed it well. There is no way I'd consider Windows MCE now.
So, you can now use iTunes on your Mac to buy TV shows online and then watch them from the sofa using FrontRow. This is a new delivery model, and might well turn out to be to BitTorrent what the iTunes Music Store was to Kazaa; a delivery mechanism that is karmically better and cheap enough that most people will pay the fee instead of downloading for free from P2P. There's similar DRM to iTunes music (although you can't burn to disc), and I can see this snowballing like the iTunes Music offering did. It doesn't work like Tivo and Sky+ subscription services, and can co-exist with those so there's really no competition yet - once again, Apple are ahead of the curve, and by the time everyone else wakes up and gets an offering to market, Apple will have a comfortable market share advantage.
The question is, after the success starts snowballing, how long before feature movies become available?..... BlockBuster should be watching this with great interest.

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Peekaboom: Play this game and teach computers to see.
Basically, computers are really good at maths, which can be used to represent and manipulate all kinds of stuff, including your music, photos, videos, documents and so on. The problem is, computers are pretty crap at interpreting that stuff the way we do, so whilst they can change tones and colours in a photo for example, they can't actually identify what the photo is of. In fact, computers generally can't even scan images for the tell-tale signs that we use to differentiate between people and objects, so whilst a computer can manipulate an image as instructed, it can't tell if the picture is of Winston Churchill or a Land Rover.
This is particularly relevant if you've ever spent time adding metadata to your photos - I have spent hours adding keywords to iPhoto, and still have a way to go before my photo library is completely up to date. This is really useful though, as once I have added a keyword for "beach" to all the pictures that are of a beach then I can instantly find all those pictures using that keyword. Even better, Spotlight reads those keywords, so if I do a Spotlight search for "Mum", then my results include not only e-mails and documents but also all the photos of my Mum in my library (or at least, all the ones I have tagged with the appropriate keyword).
The point is that I have to do the work of adding the keyword metadata to the photos myself, as my computer is not capable of understanding what the subject or content of a picture is. That's where Peekaboom comes in - it's an online picture guessing game created at Carnegie Mellon University. The cool thing is, all the guesses and data you supply whilst playing is used as training data for algorithms that are being developed to address the problem I just described. These algorithms will hopefully develop into a form that can be implemented in the future to help computers identify what is in a picture.
I like stuff like this :)

read more | digg story

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Jimbo beat me to the blog, but Apple's holding another special event next week.
I just can't be bothered to speculate really (iPod video, iTunes video store, Think Secret reckon it's PowerBooks and PowerMacs), but I hope it's something cool as Apple are slowly losing points in my little black book of tech kudos - OS X Tiger is still not as rock-solid as Panther was for me, plus the Intel switcheroo is still an unresolved cloud of mixed possibilities and my generation 3 iPod does not remember where I am in a podcast (although my shuffle does) . I'd also like to know why I still can't play from iTunes to multiple Airport Express devices simultaneously, and don't even get me started on the sync services in Tiger. A new (easily scratched) trinket in the product line and an upgrade on my paid .Mac subscription to half the data storage capacity that Gmail give me for free just haven't got me that fired up, no matter how pretty they dress it.
In fact, I'm beginning to get seriously worried that Apple are investing too much time in the new cash cow that is the iPod and not enough time in the bit that really matters to me, which is OS X.
Also, I guess I'm still grumpy because google and Sun didn't announce anything revolutionary yesterday when I really thought they were going to change the way things are in the world of tech. Maybe they still will (in fact I'm pretty sure Google will), but it still sucks when the hype turns out to be just a big bag of air.
Hurrumph!

read more | digg story

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

"Google And Sun To Promote Each Other - No Google Office": No Google was announced, but Sun and Google announced an agreement to promote and distribute their software technologies.
Gutted. :(
.....although.... the article does go on to say that the relationship "kicks off further collaboration between the companies on projects like OpenOffice.org, the open source productivity suite that is the world's leading suite on the Solaris Operating System (Solaris OS) and Linux--and the leading alternative suite on Microsoft Windows." So that could still lead things in the right direction.......

read more | digg story


"Google and Sun Microsystems will hold a press conference on Tuesday at which they're expected to announce a collaboration to bring StarOffice productivity applications to Google users."
This kicks ass! (assuming it's true) - imagine desktop productivity apps supplied like Gmail through a clean browser interface. If you can store your documents online, then this is a Microsoft Office killer for sure.
It's not quite clear to me exactly what is potentially going to be offered - it might be browser-based online productivity apps from Google, or hosting and collaboration services from Google that hook into a StarOffice client app installed on the local computer.
I'm getting really excited about this - I just hope that Sun keep it free, or at least cheap, with a support subscription or premium services for those who need it. I have a feeling that they won't though; Sun have been pushing the idea of application service provision for a while - it would suit their model to charge a subscription for this kind of service. Anyway, Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz has posted an article on his blog entitled "The World Changes This Week", so he's pretty excited about it too.
In any case, check out the dugg internetnews.com article that sums one likely scenario up really nicely:
"Imagine StarOffice running on the desktop, and Google perfecting the [file synchronization]," said Edwards. "Then you have your collaboration space carved out immediately for you, and Google is hosting it."
There'll be security and privacy concerns, of course, but I believe that this will almost certainly mix things up a bit, which is always a good thing :)
The live webcast is here, no later than 10.15 Pacific Time today (that's 6.15pm UK time).

read more | digg story

Sunday, October 02, 2005

I was looking at digg this morning and found the post about Windows Vista: The Sidebar is back!!. It looks like Microsoft has updated the Vista website in preparation for the Beta 2: Public Beta. Some have shown screen shots of the newest build with the sidebar.
This just got me a bit riled, as it is a blatant rip-off of the OS X dock. I started to post a comment, but it got a bit long-winded, so here it is:
Microsoft are obviously worried about the competition from OS X in the consumer market, and that's why they're playing with drop shadows, translucency a dock-type app/widget launcher and all of that crap. Unfortunately, for some reason, Microsoft just don't seem to be able to innovate in this space, so it all looks like a second-rate, regurgitated version of other peoples good ideas.
The problem is that most home users aren't familiar or comfortable with OS X or Linux. They'll all see Vista's spanky "new" UI features and be impressed because they won't know or care that someone else did it first or better. Similarly, consumers are generally unaware of the fundamental security and other architecture benefits of UNIX-based operating systems such as Linux and OS X. They think it's normal and acceptable to have to buy separate anti-virus, firewall and anti-spyware software as well as the Operating System, as they don't know any other way. For them, this is all about bringing nice, pretty features to a platform that they know, so they'll buy and use Vista even if OS X is available for their Intel PC on the shelf next to Vista.
Microsoft have therefore played a good move by emulating choice features of the OS X UI - they're stemming the potential flow of deserters leaving for other operating systems, but that's all they can do; slow the move down. Precisely because Windows is technically inferior and always catching up, and because OS X and Linux are raising their profile by capturing mindshare and gaining ground, the market share will continue to change to the detriment of Microsoft. Microsoft won't die, but it hopefully won't be a one-horse race for much longer, and that's a good thing for everyone, even Windows users (Microsoft will have to work harder to make their product competitive and attractive).
The trouble is, it's going to take time. Too much content is only available in de-facto Microsoft standard formats (.doc, .wmv etc) and too many web sites and applications have been lazily coded to only support IE. This makes the case for alternatives more difficult to sell, but it's getting better. I can get by comfortably with OS X as my main O/S at home and Linux at work these days, and that includes use with digital cameras, external firewire disks, cd burning, viewing multimedia, network interoperability and all the other stuff that I typically use a computer for. I'll admit that configuring Linux for multimedia is still a little rough compared to OS X and Windows (mainly because proprietary codecs are not usually included by default), but it's not far off being easy enough for a normal user. Package (software) installation, which has also traditionally been a tricky aspect of Linux is getting better, and with a GUI installer like synaptic being installed by default in Ubuntu, Linux is looking stronger and stronger.
Anyway, back on topic; ultimately the Microsoft product, business model and organisation are outdated and cumbersome. They should play to their strength in the enterprise space where directory services, group policy and integrated back-end services still reign supreme (much as I'd like to see someone give them a run for their money there - come on Novell!).
However, if Apple and the Open Source Community keep the pace of innovation and development up, Microsoft will certainly suffer in the consumer arena, as by the time Vista is actually available, more innovation will have happened in OS X and Linux. I still haven't seen anything in Vista that I believe will be unique to Microsoft., and that's the real crunch I guess - Microsoft don't innovate well, so they'll always be behind the competition.

read more | digg story

Saturday, October 01, 2005

Just found out about another cool geek culture video cast - hak.5. I haven't watched any yet (the torrents are coming down as I type), but Frank Linhares of Techphile reckons that if you like The Broken and From the Shadows, then you'll like Hak.5.
That's good enough for me :)