Monday, August 20, 2007

this Sony camera ALMOST got me to buy Sony

http://www.sonystyle.ca/html/multimedia/DSC/T200_microsite_html/feature_4.html

Virtually endless potential for photo creativity

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So small, slim, stylish, and supremely capable! From taking pictures to viewing and enjoyment, the HD-compatible DSC-T200 revolutionises your whole photo experience.

Many fun ways to enjoy your images
iconMulti Resizing
Change your pictures to suit your needs.This function allows original images taken in 4:3, 3:2 or 16:9 aspect ratio to be easily resized in-camera and their mode altered according to the application. Images taken in 4:3 and 3:2 can be resized into 16:9 at 2 Mega resolution for viewing on HDTV; images other than VGA (including 16:9) can be resized into 4:3 at VGA resolution for uploading to a blog or attachment to an e-mail. Fine tuning the trimming position is also easy with the 4-direction button displayed on the Touch Screen, and there's no need to import images into a PC to make all these transformations. Simply resize — and enjoy!

Note: It is not possible to upload the screen image from the camera body directly to a blog.

    HD (16:9)   WEB (VGA)
iconWide zoom display
Change your viewer to fit viewing opportunities. A "wide zoom" function allows photos to be displayed in 16:9 aspect ratio. Even 4:3 and 3:2 aspect ratio photos can be displayed in 16:9 aspect ratio when viewing on actual HDTV or on the full wide-screen LCD display of the camera — for a feeling of HDTV viewing.
Note: Movies are shown in 4:3 aspect ratio.
Wide & Touch Screen experience
Enhanced user-friendliness
iconRelax and enjoy the shooting experience

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DIY: Build a solar water heater for under $5

solar-water-heater.png
DIY site Instructables details how to build a solar thermal water heater on the cheap using parts from a recycled refrigerator grill and a few other bits and pieces. So how well does it work?

I let this guy run for a couple of hours one hot sunny day and heated up a five gallon bucket of cold water (measured at 70 degrees F) to over 110 degrees F. The temp that day was about 76 degrees F. If the water is allowed to sit in the panel for several minutes and then forced out (by blowing in one of the hoses) the water was measure at 170 degrees F.

The actual device isn't currently the most practical way to heat water for an entire home (it's more of a prototype), but it's a very cool idea. As for the price, you're going to have to do some salvaging to hit the under $5 mark, but even if you don't the materials should be rather cheap.

Solar Thermal Water Heater For Less Than Five Dollars [Instructables]

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Windows Tip: Restart Windows without restarting your BIOS

My alma mater, CodeJacked.com, explains how you can shave 30 seconds off of each reboot by holding the shift key while restarting Windows XP or Vista.

Sometimes, you need to reboot Windows (e.g. when installing new software), but there is no need to restart BIOS, too. However, the default is to reboot both. (That's called doing a "cold boot," rather than a "warm boot.") There's a trick that works on both XP and Vista to get it to do a warm boot instead, thus saving you 30 seconds per cycle.
As a heads-up, if you've got a complex hardware setup you could possibly run into some trouble with a warm boot. If any BIOS experts out there can shed some light on when you would (and would not) want to use a warm boot, let's hear it in the comments.

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Stuff We Like: decTOP $100 personal computer

decTop.png The decTOP (originally created by AMD) is marketed as a personal internet communicator made specifically for browsing the web. In actuality, decTOP is a fanless personal computer that weighs in at three pounds and runs off of eight watts of power. DecTOP comes without an operating system (though it supports Windows CE and Linux) and although it comes with low level specs (128 MB RAM, 10 GB hard drive, 366 MHz processor), its hard drive and RAM are both upgradeable. DecTOP sells for $100 and includes a mouse and keyboard. If you're looking for a cheap computer for the kiddies, a Linux server, or a computer to run without a head, decTop is a great candidate. Mine will be shipping in 24 to 48 hours!

decTop [Data Evolution via jsco.org]

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Wells Fargo Invests in Nevada Solar One

Wells Fargo (WFC) said this morning that it has invested in Nevada Solar One, a 64-megawatt solar plant southeast of Las Vegas. A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to disclose the size of the investment. JPMorgan Capital led the equity investors, which also included an affiliate of Northern Trust (NTRS); Spain’s Banco Santander and BBVA and Portugal’s CAIXA were responsible for the debt financing.

Nevada Solar One is a $266 million, 400-acre solar project with more than 182,000 panels that was developed by Acciona Energy. The plant uses concentrated solar technology, which utilizes parabolic trough-shaped mirrored panels to concentrate sun onto fluid-filled tubes, powering an electricity-generating steam turbine. The electricity from Nevada Solar will be bought by Nevada Power Co. and Sierra Pacific Power Co. (SRP) through purchase-power agreements.

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Tilera’s 64-Core Processor: Power-Efficient, or Just Powerful?

If you’re a tech geek and you’ve spent all morning pulling up your jaw, we bet you’re recovering from today’s news that Tilera Corp. is shipping a Linux-capable 64-core processor.

Developed at MIT, the processor is more energy-efficient than one would expect for a chip with that many cores, but we wouldn’t go so far as calling it green. The chip uses between 170 and 300 mega miliwatts per core, which is impressively efficient. But don’t forget to multiply the per-core energy drain by 64. The processor delivers 10 times the performance and 30 times the performance-per-watt of the Intel (INTC) dual-core Xeon processor, claims the company.

With that many cores, though, the chip needs to be energy efficient. Otherwise, the energy bill required to run the computer or electronics powered by the chip would probably cost more than the chip itself.

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Some People Benefited From the Skype Outageac

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Alexa stats up to August 17 show a massive rise in traffic to Skype competitor Gizmo Project and a more modest rise for Grand Central at the peak of this weeks 36 hour Skype outage.

The SIPphone owned Gizmo Project offers a nearly identical package to Skype, but with added features including built in recording, and cross platform compatibility. Gizmo's traffic tripled in the space of three days and rose to a rank of 8,561 in Alexa from a 3 month average of 19,102.

The Google owned Grand Central offers a one number everywhere telephone service. Whilst the service doesn't compete with Skype in the softphone market, the service does provide functionality that competes with Skype services such as Skype In. According to Alexa, Grand Central hit a 4 week high on Friday with a 33% increase in rank over its 3 month average.

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Entertainment Biz Now Uses P2P For Branding

The entertainment industry has been hiring companies to pollute P2P networks with phony files for years, and now some of these very same companies are going into marketing. Instead of sabotaging file transfers, they offer their own media for download, and instead of corrupted files, suddenly it's all about branding. Santa Monica, Calif.-based Mediadefender is at the center of this shift.



Written by Janko Roettgers
Posted Saturday, August 18, 2007 at 12:00 AM PM

Mediadefender Moves into P2P Marketing

You're trying to download the latest Madonna album, only to find the pop queen calling you…a thief? Welcome to the odd and oftentimes annoying war against piracy. The entertainment industry has been hiring companies to pollute P2P networks with phony files for years, and now some of these very same companies are going into marketing. Instead of sabotaging file transfers, they offer their own media for download, and instead of corrupted files, suddenly it's all about branding.

Santa Monica, Calif.-based Mediadefender has been at the center of this shift. The subsidiary of ARTISTdirect is known and hated in the file-sharing world for its anti-piracy work, but has recently gotten a lot of press for an upcoming campaign involving ad-supported MP3 downloads. Mediadefender has been experimenting with P2P marketing for a number of years now, and they've learned a few lessons along the way. VP Jonathan Lee agreed to share some of them with me.

Mediadefender has thousands servers in co-location facilities around the globe; the decision to put them to use for marketing has been brewing for some time, Lee tells me. With such an abundance of resources, he notes, "What else can you do with it?"

Distributing actual content was an obvious idea, but for the longest time the entertainment industry wasn't ready to utilize P2P. Companies felt they would undermine their position in legal conflicts if they distributed their own files through these networks. But all of this changed when the Supreme Court ruled against Grokster in the summer of 2005. "After the ruling those gloves came off," says Lee.

And with that, the learning curve began. "We're throwing things at the wall and see what sticks," he explains. Early attempts to do advertising on P2P networks involved what Lee describes as a "bait and switch". Files were mislabeled in order to get people to watch ads or load Web pages. "Obviously there are tremendous problems with that," he acknowledges. Most brands just don't like to frustrate their customers –- except, of course, porn companies, which still use this technique heavily to spam P2P networks .

Another strategy involved sending people to iTunes and similar download stores to make them buy legitimate copies of the content they were looking for with Limewire and other clients. "That really hasn't worked so well," admits Lee. Same goes for the idea of mixing ads with search results in order to get people to buy concert tickets and ring tones. He believes that people are just too suspicious to click on anything that remotely looks like an ad in a P2P network, which is why they tend to ignore them.

So what does work? "Things you can't buy online," says Lee. It turns out that P2P is actually really good for branding. Mediadefender had a lot of success with a campaign for a soft drink maker that offered people videos they actually wanted to watch. Music works well, and so does goofy stuff. Funny commercials –- the stuff that people re-post on YouTube and then forward to their friends — are a big hit on P2P networks as well.

Does this mean people should just abandon their annoying anti-piracy tactics and instead post some goofy clips on P2P networks? "You are already dealing with your anti-piracy issues if you are doing promotion," admits Lee. He doesn't think that the anti-piracy part of his work will go away anytime soon, though.

In fact, Mediadefender is still making most of its money by polluting P2P networks with spoof files, which is why the company will remain be one of the most hated enterprises in the file-sharing world for the foreseeable future. Jonathan Lee doesn't seem to mind, and he doesn't think it impacts their marketing business at all. Successful P2P marketing campaigns always looks very viral, he tells me, and the focus really isn't on his company. "If it is good content, then it's gonna carry itself."

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GTalk Conference Chat for Connecting with Multiple GMail Friends

gmail chat conference DI reader Aravindan is currently using a combination of Google Talk and the collaboration features of Google Docs for chatting with more than one GMail friends simultaneously in one browser window. He writes:

I always wondered why google does not have a text or voice conference feature in their google talk software, and I found that a handicap a few times. Yesterday, I had to collaborate on a Google Spreadsheet with 5 of my friends, and after setting up the file and inviting them, the discuss option was enabled in my window, and I would see all 5 of their email's listed.

There was a shoutbox like feature embedded in which the 6 of us were able to conduct a discussion while editing the spreadsheet. Therefore, to have a live conference using google chat just follow these steps in Google Docs & Spreadsheets : Create a dummy document -> invite friends as collaborators -> click on "Discuss" option near top right -> start conferencing.

That's innovative but there's a more simple method for group chatting with more than one GMail contacts inside the same GTalk window.

First, open the talkgadget client webpage (or load Google Talk in Sidebar) and sign in using your Google Account / GMail credentials. Next, initiate a conversation with any of your Google Talk contacts who's online and then click the "Group Chat" button.

That's it. You just have to invite your other Google Talk friends to this private Google conference room. And there's no limit on the maximum number of participants that can join your Gtalk conference session.

Like other internet chat rooms, Google Talk will also announce each new participant as they join with a message in the chat window. And you can also use tons of interesting smileys (emoticons) in your group chats which are otherwise missing in the desktop Google Talk software.

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The Most Relevant Video Search Engine That Indexes All Video Clips

If you enjoy exploring video content on the web, you'll absolutely love Truveo - an extremely impressive and powerful video search service from AOL that helps you find video content from all other video sharing websites (like YouTube, blip.tv), content portals (like CNet, iVillage) and most mainstream media websites (like CNBC, ABC News, BBC, etc).

jenna bush video

Truveo provides an amazing array of options (like Google advance search operators) to further refine the video search results. For instance, you can limit the search results based on categories (like Technology), source of video or even the relative importance of the video (like most viewed, rated, recent).

Every search results page comes with an RSS feed, a feature that's missing even in the popular YouTube. And if you are in a mood to browse videos not search, Truveo is again useful - all the viral videos, TV shows, breaking news videos, movie clips, music videos and sports videos are neatly organized in categories.

With Truveo in town, there's little reason for you to use any other video search engine. Competitors include uLinkx and Blinkx.

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