Archive for the ‘Life’ Category

Crazy 150 mph A320 crosswind landing

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Whoa, check out this crazy attempted landing of an A320 aircraft at Hamburg airport in Germany. It’s amazing the pilot got so close to the ground, he was way past the front of the runway by the time he touched down. According to someone in the comments the winds were clocked gusting to 150 mph (130 knots)!

More pictures at this German forum.

[ From Jeremy Zawodny's blog ]

HD-DVD Officialy Dead: Ho-hum

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Toshiba announced today that they will, “no longer develop, manufacture and market HD DVD players and recorders.” according to this Engadget article.

So Blu-ray it is I suppose. I’m hoping that we can just start to download 1080p soon though. I’ve been dreaming of a multi-terabyte storage array with a Mac Mini sitting at each TV in my house to hook into it. That’s not really far off as XBMC on OS X continues to improve. Hopefully they will get 1080p decoding working on currrent gen Mac Mini’s. That would be sweet!

I love Star Trek Next Gen!

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

I watch them all over and over again!

HD-DVD: The End is Near

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

I got this from Netflix in my inbox yesterday:

“Toward the end of February, HD DVDs in your Saved Queue will automatically be changed to standard definition DVDs. Then toward the end of this year, all HD DVDs in your Queue will be changed to standard definition DVDs.”

No more HD-DVD from Netflix. It comes as no surprise though, I’ve had HD-DVD movies sitting at the top of my queue for months and never gotten them. I think that this is just another chink in HD-DVD’s last stand. It won’t be too long now before HD-DVD is off the shelf.

Now, If I could just get my hands on a sub $200 blu-ray player :)

iTunes Movie Rentals: Not Enough

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

As I type this Steve Jobs is still giving his Keynote presentation at Macworld in San Francisco. The most interesting thing that I was looking forward to was anything to do with movies on the iTunes store and HD. As it turns out, they will be supporting HD movies in the movie store, at least for rentals. Here are the rental specs:

iTunes Movie Rentals

  • HD quality
  • $3 library titles, $4 new titles, extra $1 for HD
  • 30 days to start watching
  • 24 hours to finish watching
  • Movies can be streamed

$4 for new releases?! What are they thinking? Here’s a quick comparison with my Netflix account. In December, I rented 8 movies, and it cost me $15.07. Some quick math: $1.88 per movie. And that’s in HD!! That pricing scheme is absolutely ridiculous. I don’t know about anyone else, but I’d never spend that much to rent a movie anymore, not with great alternatives like Netflix around.

Macworld and DRM on movies

Sunday, January 13th, 2008

With Macworld starting up on Tuesday, there are lots of rumors going around about what Apple plans to introduce. Lots of blogs predict a sub-compact notebook, with USA Today reporting that it may be 50% thinner than existing MacBooks. The announcement I’m looking forward to the most however, is movie downloads. Movie rentals are expected to be announced on Tuesday, but I’m more interested in what Apple plans to do with their Apple TV set-top box and what extra may be had in the iTunes Store.

Steve Job’s intro’s iPhone

The battle between Blu-ray and HD-DVD is seemingly at an end. But, I think that we’re going to be downloading movies quicker than we think, making Blu-ray not really all that exciting. That’s why I’m looking forward to what Apple might have in store. I’m hoping that they’ll introduce HD content into the iTunes Store. That would finally make movies on iTunes exciting to me.

One problem remains though: DRM. The music companies have just now figured out that DRM on music is bad for business. But, the movie companies haven’t learned that yet. If you bought the latest movie release on iTunes, you’d have to plunk down $9.99 to $12.99. And then you could only play it on an Apple approved device: like an iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, or iTunes itself.

I don’t think that movie downloads are really going to take off until DRM is removed. It’s just too risky to spend $10 bucks per movie and be looked into a device that you can’t control. Until the studios realize that though, they’ll probably just fracture the market with many different DRM schemes and end up confusing the consumer. Just like they did with HD-DVD vs Blu-ray.

Happy New Year’s!

Friday, January 11th, 2008

So it’s been 11 days since New Year’s, but better late than never, right? I had a great time over New Year’s up in central California, near San Luis Obispo. From playing a lot of Rock Band to finding 14 new geocache’s to going on a 2 mile hike, it’s probably the most active New Year’s I’ve ever had. And by far the best too!

The hike we went on was great, pretty strenuous at the start, but worth it in the end. The views of Pismo Beach and the ocean were spectacular, just check out the picture below! We started the hike at the southwest end of the mountain, and followed the ridge up to its peak at 630 feet, then descended through a great tree covered valley to the Sycamore Mineral Springs. There we sat in naturally hot mineral springs to sooth our aching muscles!

What a great trip!

Pismo Beach from the hike - thumb


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Facebook is a monster

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

I’m getting really close to closing down my Facebook account. After reading this article, I’m even that much closer. Here’s what I don’t like about Facebook:

  • Pokes & Application requests. Stop sending them. They’re annoying.
  • Privacy issues like crazy.
  • Never ending feed of what I change on Facebook. I think I got that to stop tracking my activities, finally.
  • Pages and pages of privacy settings. All of which is open by default.

The Future of TV: Miro

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

Miro logo

I just downloaded Miro 1.0, which used to be called Democracy player. It combines an RSS news reader, with a Bittorrent client, and specializes in playing video files. There are many built in video RSS feeds to choose from, including many that are in HD, and all of them are DRM free.

The idea behind Miro is awesome. Instead of watching (or recording) live TV and tuning in to a program at the right time at the right channel, you just subscribe to it. Kinda like how season passes work on a Tivo, any new programs will just appear in the player. Internet+RSS+Video=No more TV.

The big problem right now is content. The shows I want to watch: CSI, Heroes, etc. Are all owned by Big Media, who have no clue how to use the Internet, and so I can’t just subscribe to the Heroes RSS feed and watch each new episode when it comes out. If that ever happens, then I’ll be in “TV” heaven.

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

I’ve seen a few episodes of Avatar: The Last Airbender at a friends house. It’s a great cartoon! I’m really surprised at how good it is, and that it’s on Nickelodeon and meant for kids. Haha. Oh well, it’s definitely a fun show to watch.

Avatar intro snapshot

It’s about Aang, the Avatar, who can master all four martial art forms: air, water, earth, and fire. He can manipulate them to do what he needs: fly, form earthen shields launch gusts of wind or water, etc. His mission: simply to save the world by reuniting the four nations (Earth, Wind, Water, Fire). For a show for kids it has a great story, in addition to the cool moves and animation (based on true martial art forms). Each season follows a story arc and each episode adds to the overall story. Very cool for a kids carton! There is a lot of great info about the show on Wikipedia.

I’m hooked!

UPDATE: According to the Wikipedia article, M. Night Shyamalan is going to make a live action movie trilogy based on this cartoon.