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What Netflix On the PS3 Actually Looks Like [NetFlix]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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The tale of Netflix on the PS3 is sad: Sony’s solution is only now shipping after sitting pretty on the Xbox for more than a year, and to add insult to injury, it comes on a disc. Thankfully, it’s slick.

The interface is technically new in that it’s visually catered to the PS3, but it should look familiar to anyone who’s used a Blu-ray player or connected TV with a Netflix widget. This means it’s pretty basic: so far as I can tell there are just “Instant Queue” and “Recently Watched” tabs, with none of the additional—though admittedly kind of useless—category views Xbox users are used to. One thing Xbox users aren’t used to, though, is not having to pay for the privilege: Netflix-subscribed PS3 owners can just order a free disc and be done with it; Xbox owner need to have a paid Live subscription as well. (Ballmer’s gotta eat, right?)

In any case, the experience is smooth from start to finish, with a fast-loading interface and the same near-instant streaming you get on any other platform. It’s just a shame you need a disc—until this is part of the PS3 firmware, it’ll feel more like a hack than an new feature. [Engadget]



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Google and the Deadly Power of Data [Comment]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Today, as soon as Google showed off its beta GPS navigator, the stocks of Garmin, TomTom and other companies in that industry fell into the toilet. It’s hard to compete with free Google apps, but that’s not why they’re screwed…

TomTom owns Tele Atlas, who drives the roads of the world in order to make maps, and until recently was a major map provider for Google. Nokia owns the only major competitor, Navteq, who has also provided maps for Google. Look at Google Maps now, though, and you’ll see that the entire US bears just one single copyright: Google’s.

Street View wasn’t just a neat way to get imagery to accompany the data already found in Google Maps. As it happens, it was a way to drive the same roads that were already in Google Maps, tracing them with Google’s own road teams, and—through efficiency and brute force—do away with those costly map licenses. Google has mapped the US, and will surely map the rest of the world soon enough.

This is just a timely example of Google’s monstrous growth, and the destruction it causes. Any business that trades in data or packages it for public consumption may one day face the same issues. It’s not just whether or not to compete with the behemoth, but even whether or not to go into business with it. In either case, there is a chance of being destroyed.

Garmin might have a long-standing relationship with Navteq, but they don’t own any maps. How can they compete with a free Google app when they still have to pay? (Worse, Garmin is still stuck in the hardware business, where profits are extra thin.) TomTom owns the maps, but charges $100 for their own app because they also make money licensing maps to car makers, competing GPS makers and web services—like Google. Before, Google was a fat revenue source for TomTom; now Google is a sprightly competitor.

If a unique supply of data was the only thing keeping TomTom and others on the Google chuck wagon, who will be next to fall off?

I was always afraid of spiders growing up, not because of the eight legs or the umpteen eyes, but because of the way they kill their prey. They get them in a nice convenient position, then they use their venom to hollow out their victim’s insides, until they’re just dead-eyed shells. To be killed in such a manner is my worst nightmare; perhaps I should ask TomTom how it feels.

I am a fan of Google products, and a daily user of them. This is not an attack of Google’s business practices, but an explanation of the sort of destructive innovation that has made them so huge so fast. (It’s also a warning to consider carefully any entities that gets this strong, especially if you plan on going into business with one.) Though predecessors like Microsoft experienced similar explosive growth, and grew a similar sudden global dependence, we’ve never seen the likes of Google. The GPS business isn’t the only one that will be consumed by its mighty maw before it’s had its run.

We’ve already seen the devaluation of the office apps that make Microsoft rich; we’ve already seen how Google’s experiences with Apple and others helped it create telecommunications platforms (both mobile with Android and completely virtual with Google Voice) that threaten its former partners’ existence; we’ve already seen how Google converts photos, videos, news wire stories and other former commodities into freebies by smashing the false notion of scarcity that “service” providers had literally banked on.

So who is next? What other hallowed brands will go the way of Garmin and TomTom? Corbis and Getty? Reuters and AP? Warner and Disney?

This is a tale already told, bound to be told again, but the fundamentals are worth studying—even if we use Google Docs spreadsheets to do it. I have never spoken with a spider, but I am certain they’re not evil, despite what fantasy lore tells us. They’re just doing what comes naturally, and doing a hell of a job.



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I Want to Go to Nepal to Fly with Hawks [Sports]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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This seems straight out of a Terry Gilliam film. The guy flying with the two really big birds is Scott Mason, who uses them to detect thermal currents to fly his paraglider through the skies of Nepal. It’s called parahawking.

That is an Egyptian vulture, a Neophron percnopterus. Mason has been rescuing them since he was 11, and now he keeps doing that and trains them as his fly instruments. This is how it works: He carries one at take off. Once he is airborne, he frees the raptor, who starts looking for warm, ascending air currents.

Mason—who usually flies with another person, charging $147 per flight—steers the paraglider following the vulture for a while, enjoying the paths traced by the bird. Every now and then, he will use a whistle to call the vulture, who returns to him from behind the paraglider, landing on his arm like an F18 would land on an aircraft carrier.

Mason has other birds too. In fact, he rescues, nurtures, and then frees them into the wilderness as soon as they are in good shape.

Yes, I so want to do this too. [SFGate]



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And the Award for First Country to Establish Broadband as a Legal Right Goes To… [Broadband]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Finland! Not only they have good universal health care—including dental—and free daycare and great public education at all levels, but now they also got broadband as a legal right provided to every citizen. And not any crappy broadband.

The policy will be active in July 2010, when every Finn will get a one-megabit connection. But that’s just an intermediate step towards their final goal: By 2015, everyone will have a 100Mbps—yes, a hundred megabits per second—available.

Now, before the political debate starts in the comments, please watch this.

Thank you. [YLE News via Into Mobile]



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Russian Casemod Freak Builds a Miniature Living Room Inside His PC [Casemods]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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Because the one sentence written about this miniature-living-room-inside-a-PC-case was composed in Russian, i’ll just say this—whoever created it is awesome, but they might also be a serial killer.

There’s a painstaking amount of detail inside the scene, including intricate housewares such as a vase, flowers, the newspaper, and a gumball machine (?!). Anyone with this much time on their hands must also spend hours thinking of the perfect way to get away with murder.

But I do love how the circuit board nearly blends in as wallpaper if you don’t pay close attention. I’d like to see this turn into a trend…I think. [Modding.ru via Technabob]



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One China, Three Stories [Image Cache]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

China has celebrated its 60 years since its unification under the communist fist of the dictator Mao. The country has advanced dramatically and it’s now becoming one of the biggest techonomical superpowers in the planet. Some things, however, never change.

Above you can see a humble man trying to get a clear signal in an crappy TV. Below you can see the contrast, the results of their industrial prowess: A TV shop—in which most of the country’s population can’t buy anything—and the mall, with a massive LCD display showing the parade itself.

Check out the Big Picture’s graphic summary. It’s impressive and scary at the same time. [Big Picture]



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One China, Three Stories [Image Cache]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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China has celebrated its 60 years since its unification under the communist fist of the dictator Mao. The country has advanced dramatically and it’s now becoming one of the biggest techonomical superpowers in the planet. Some things, however, never change.

Above you can see a humble man trying to get a clear signal in an crappy TV. Below you can see the contrast, the results of their industrial prowess: A TV shop—in which most of the country’s population can’t buy anything—and the mall, with a massive LCD display showing the parade itself.

Check out the Big Picture’s graphic summary. It’s impressive and scary at the same time. [Big Picture]



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Microsoft’s Anechoic Chamber: The Place Where Sound Goes To Die [Sound]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Yesterday, while touring a new building on Microsoft’s campus, I came across an anechoic chamber: A room designed to eliminate all noise from outside—and in. I spent about 5 minutes locked inside, and man is it freaky.

The chamber is actually its own “box-in-box” building, like the Time Warner Center’s Rose Theater. It rests on a cushion of massive springs and is linked to the rest of the building with a metal gangway and nylon netting (so you don’t fall down into the gap). There are two doors, massive ones that were, according to my guide, “a huge pain to install.” When I went to close one, I was startled by its resistance.

Inside, it’s like the Star Trek version of the proverbial padded room, with wedges that act as sound and RF-proofing. The second massive door is covered with these, so when it is closed, the only way to tell where the exit is is the almost-hidden release lever. The “floor” isn’t a floor at all: The real floor has to be covered with the same sound-damping wedges, so you actually stand on a mesh trampoline. (Good thing I didn’t wear my high heels.)

The company who built it, Eckel Industries, also built Steve Orfield’s lab in Minneapolis, Guinness-certified as the quietest place on earth, at around -9dBA. Microsoft says that theirs measures something quite similar to this, except on the very lowest end, where it’s really hard to eliminate unwanted sound.

Since I entered the chamber with two other people, the first thing I noticed was how voices changed. They became clipped, truncated, like someone was holding the mute pedal down on a piano. The subtle atmosphere and depth associated with room reverberation that we come to expect when hearing the human voice was totally gone. No echoes, hence the term “anechoic.” My own voice sounded like it was having trouble coming out of my head.

For a moment, I felt genuine disorientation, like the light-headedness you can get with low blood sugar. The guy who showed me the room said that, even though he works in there a lot, he still has moments when he loses his balance, because the ear uses sound reflections—in addition to inner-ear leveling—to position the head and body.

Microsoft uses this newly built chamber to test all kinds of hardware products—microphones on webcams, audio outputs on Zunes, even the clicking of buttons on just about anything—because if you want to hear a sound clearly, this is where you go. They bring in the Xbox and PS3 to see which one wheezes the loudest, and some people have already inquired about squeezing the slim PS3 in for a quick listen, to see what’s changed. (Needless to say, Microsoft wouldn’t make the results of this test public.)

I have heard that being in an anechoic chamber for too long can drive you mad, and now that I’ve stood in one, gently bouncing on the wire-frame trampoline, starting at the pointy sci-fi wedges and hearing nothing but the blood rushing in my head, I believe it.



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Volution Bluetooth Headset Concept Almost Makes Headsets Cool— Almost [Headsets]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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Bluetooth headsets suck, mostly due to the fact that they’re butt ugly and turn users into talking-to-themselves crazy people. But this latest design takes care of the first issue—so long as you’re a lady (says designer Fandi Meng).

As you can see, the headset is more earring than funky robotic ear leech, and it actually looks kind of nice in a futuristic fashionista kind of way.

Like a traditional headset, you tap the sensor to answer an incoming call, and talk into the air like a idiot as normal. But you look good, especially if you happen to be a model. [Fandi Meng via Design Blog]



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Perhaps the Most Impressive Computer Rig On and Outside the Planet [Space]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

We have seen veehee cool personal computer rigs. Seriously, really fraking amazing personal computer rigs. And then we saw a lot more of them. But this one beats them all. Because it kicks ass in space. See them in video:

Jump to 8:40 to see this impressive array of laptops and screens, upside down in the International Space Station. Or downside sideways. Or left to right to back and then up bit. Or wherever the hell they are. The video shows some of the highlights from the seventh day—September 3—of space shuttle Discovery’s mission STS-128, now docked to the ISS.

I wonder if they transmit their Wi-Fi signals using their pointy nipple antennas—because you know that in space it’s cold, so your nipples get hard, and therefore conduct wireless signals a lot better than relaxed nipples. [Boing Boing]







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