Archive for February 25th, 2008

25
Feb

The Madness Continues — 13.6 Megapixels!

Fine, Sony. Don’t listen to us and others who care about digital camera image quality. Go ahead and cram yet more unneeded megapixels into a compact camera, in this case the newly announced DSC-W300 (available in May for $350), which boosts resolution to a rationality-shattering 13.6 megapixels. Just don’t crying to us when customers start asking why their images don’t look so good when viewed at full size.

We are amused, though, that you decided to add a scene mode called "Real," which supposedly minimizes post-capture processing. Makes us wonder if previous models shouldn’t have included more realistically labeled scene modes such as "Oz" and "Unbelievable Frickin’  Head Trip."

New Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W300 Features 13.6 Megapixel Resolution  [Cameratown]

25
Feb

eBay hires new CEO for Skype

eBay continues their upper management shake-up that began in January with the exit of longtime CEO Meg Whitman by hiring new CEOs for both internet telephony service Skype and Shopping.com. Current Shopping.com president and Evite co-founder Josh Silverman will take the reigns at Skype. Andre Haddad is replacing Silverman at Shopping.com. Haddad has been with eBay since his startup iBazar was purchased in 2001.

Silverman is replacing the temporary Skype CEO Michale van Swaaij who has presided over Skype since co-founder Niklas Zennstrom left amid eBay’s unfortunate 1.4 billion write down of Skype.

The online auction giant has been suffering some ugly moments recently with sellers organizing a boycott over new rate structures. It remains to be seen if Silverman has any new ideas that will help eBay find a way to make Skype a more coherent part of eBay’s business structure.

Read [CNET]

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25
Feb

Pioneer to drop 42-inch plasma panels

Hoping to turn around its unprofitable TV business, Japanese auto and consumer electronics manufacturer Pioneer has decided to halt the production of its 42-inch plasma panels and other smaller sizes effective March 2009.

According to the Asahi newspaper, it will purchase these smaller panels from other established players like Hitachi and Panasonic maker Matsushi ta Electric Industrial. On other hand, 50 inches or larger plasma panels will still be manufactured at other plants.

It is undeniable that Pioneer is no match against its bigger players such as Matsushi ta and LG Electronics in this segment. This year, the company’s sales target is 480,000 units of plasma TVs or a mere 10% of Matsushi ta’s 5 million annual target.

Pioneer is no stranger to outsourcing strategy. In fact, it is the company’s goal to move away from vertical integration and this strategy will help recover some of its losses. Last year, the company turned to Sharp Corp for manufacturing liquid crystal display (LCD) TV’s. 

Read [Reuters]

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25
Feb

Nokia E51 Review - MobileBurn

MobileBurn reviews the Nokia E51 and writes, “…the Nokia E51 includes a 2.0MP camera, which is pretty much the baseline for any device these days. While the camera is usable, it produces quite a harsh green hue over images, and a large amount of noise in anything but perfect outdoor lighting conditions. I didn’t expect much on the imaging front from a business device, but Nokia really could have put a little more effort into the camera. Despite these shortcomings, there is a surprising amount of tweakable options supported in the camera user interface. Features include a night mode, sequence shooting mode, a self timer, four white balance settings, and four color tone settings. The camera application includes a handy popup toolbar and several shortcuts that make navigation easier.”

Read more about the Nokia E51.

25
Feb

SCENE It? The DVD Game. Version 2

SCENE It? The DVD Game. Version 2
Scene It? is the hotly anticipated successor to the best selling DVD game of all time. This all-new second edition starts where the original left off, funnily enough, making it the ultimate interactive quiz for movie-buffs of all persuasions. It’s jammed solid with a host of the latest movie clips, festooned with trivia questions and lavished with brain-teasers from some of Hollywood’s finest offerings.

See price

25
Feb

A floppy drive that might actually be useful

I spent several years of my life as a PC technician. I did many tasks which ranged from selling and building new computers to troubleshooting networks and general PC repair. One thing that you quickly learn is that the people that tend to have the most problems are also the ones running the oldest hardware. Needless to say, I worked on plenty of machines running Windows 95 and 98, which also meant I worked with a lot of floppy disks. I hated keeping a floppy drive in my computer, but sadly it was essential to my job. I don’t think I’d mind it quite as much if the drive served another purpose like reading multiple memory cards.

While most computers have no shortage of free bays for installing floppy drives and such, it’s somewhat less embarrassing to have a multipurpose drive. If someone laughs, just tell them that you keep it around because of your digital camera. There’s no need to mention that you have a fascination with backing up small bits of data on the world’s least dependable disk format. The price it a bit high in my opinion, I don’t think I could justify paying nearly $40 for a floppy drive, even if it does read six different types of memory.

Source: RedFerret

25
Feb

MyQuire.com: online project management and networking

I’ve become quite cynical about online project management tools. With each new brand that comes out, I’m either underwhelmed (because there aren’t enough features) or overwhelmed (because there are too many features - but most of them I’ll never use - and the system is too complicated for my project partners to bother with). Yet, I remain persistent in my search for the perfect application that will free me from having to use four diffrent methods for communicating with people on a given project.

I just became aware of MyQuire, a web application with standard fare project management features: calendar, projects & task assignments, file and photo upload, notifications, and online chat. But MyQuire distinguishes itself from the crowd of other project collaboration and management applications by combining these features with a social networking element, so that you can set up different groups as well as networks to draw from for various projects.

Though I’m not that impressed with MyQuire from a pure project management standpoint, I can see how it could be very useful for charity projects (calling upon a group of people to help rebuild a school in a third world country, for instance) and community events, as well as for organizing social events for enthusiast/hobby groups (like those emerging out of Meetup.com).

I like the concept, and hope that it becomes part of a trend towards building online social networks around causes.

25
Feb

Sony intros the Cyber-Shot DSC-H50 “super zoom” camera

Posted Feb 25th 2008 8:59AM by Joshua Topolsky
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Sony is no stranger to digital cameras, as the company has professed in its press release detailing the Cyber-Shot DSC-H50, a new 9.1-megapixel shooter that should have camera fans perking up their ears. The new model — a successor to the DSC-H9 “super zoom” camera — sports a Carl Zeiss 15x optical zoom lens, a 3-inch tilting LCD display, ISO to 3200, and a long-distance flash (capable of lighting subjects from 55 feet away). The DSC-H50 also has an “advanced sports” shooting mode which allows it to utilize ultra-high shutter speeds (like 1/4000 of a second). The camera is expected to go on sale in May, and will only slightly break the bank at $400.

25
Feb

Panasonic upgrades its 103-inch plasma: sorry, early adopters

Posted Feb 25th 2008 11:20AM by Paul Miller
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Well, don’t you feel silly. After springing for that 103-incher last year, Panasonic has made a mockery of your spendy home theater with a 150-inch display at CES, and now an upgraded version of the original 103-inch behemoth. The new TH-103PF10UK upgrades the video processing, anti-reflective coating, “wireless presentation capabilities,” media card reader and adds dual HDMI, but the actual display seems to be the same as last time around. There’s also a 100,000 hour warranty included, which is only fitting since we’re guessing this new 103-inch won’t be selling for much less than $70 grand.

[Via Crave]

25
Feb

Review: Honestech’s VHS to DVD 3.0 Deluxe

If you have any kind of video collection dating back even to the 90s, then you probably have a number of VHS tapes collecting dust once you stopped using your VCR and switched to using your DVD player exclusively. Without having to go out and spend the same amount of money or more restocking your collection with DVD versions of your movies, you can obtain a hw/sw solution such as VHS to DVD 3.0 Deluxe and convert your collection to DVD yourself at the cost of about 4-6 movies. We tested out this product from Honest Technology (honestech) and found a very capable, complete solution that works without much fuss.

Setup
After installing the software and drivers on your computer, hook up your video (or audio) source to the small box (VID BOX - included with the Deluxe version) that fits easily in the palm of your hand using either composite or S-video cables, and then you attach the included USB cable to your computer. Launch the software application (VHS to DVD Deluxe 3.0), hit play on your VCR and check that you’re receiving the video output in the application.

Usage
Once you’ve performed the hardware setup, you will spend all of your time in the software application, capturing, editing and burning to DVD and/or converting to a compressed video format for storing on your computer. As we’re focused on this application’s ability to convert video, we won’t look a the audio converting features. Apart from the audio feature, there are 2 main video modes to the app - the Easy Wizard and the Advanced Mode.

Easy Wizard very quickly lets you pick a video tape and burn to DVD with a few mouse clicks. I spent all of my time in the Advanced Mode as I was more interested in picking sections out of my tapes and then editing them together with my choice of chapter breaks in the DVD. The advanced mode definitely takes more time, but is worth it if you want to ensure that your resulting DVD has better navigation than your VHS tape could ever offer.

In Advanced Mode (pictured), you can selectively capture pieces of your video content to your computer, then edit those together, including cutting out pieces you don’t want. The Edit feature also offers a few dozen different transition effects between clips such as fade ins, rotating boxes, etc. that would give your DVD a professional look. The 3rd tab lets you burn you video masterpiece to DVD/CD media.

Apart from creating DVDs, VtoD also offers you the ability to create VCDs, SVCDs, and long DVDs. You can also convert to a compressible video format such as WMV or AVI for storing on your computer.

One very nice feature that VHS to DVD includes is the ability to record directly to formats compatible with iPods, PSPs or PDAs. This is also pretty much just a one-click function, and also work right out of the box.

Results & Comments
The manual is actually worth reading and doesn’t take that long to get you quickly up to speed. In general, the application is really quite easy to use and after spending less than 10 minutes reading the manual, I was zipping along like an expert. The component that I found complicated or at least just overwhelming even for a tech savvy user is the sheer number of options available for codecs, and compression rates. At a minimum, there should be a section in the manual that covers these various options, and what the typical user would need. For example, what would be a good codec and compression rate to use if you wanted to store the videos solely on your computer versus needing it to burn to DVD.

Even though I have a pretty speedy computer (dual core CPU, 2GB RAM), I still found that I really shouldn’t be doing much else while capturing data, as it is in fact pretty resource intensive. Consider that every second of video is captured in raw MPEG2 format (at the ‘best’ quality) at approximately 1MB/second. Not only does that means that you need a great deal of space on your system, but that’s obviously pretty heavy processing. Resource restrictions could result in jitter and slight pauses in the captured video.

One issue I have with the installer (and this goes for any software application) - It should tell you what it’s going to install and give you options to de-select certain components. For example, it wants to install Adobe Acrobat & Windows Media 9 runtime files, but I already have those components and don’t want them re-installed or different versions. As with all other applications, they should explicitly display where and what files they are installing. Oh yes, installers should also say up front whether or not you will need to reboot at the end. Ok, enough of my ranting about software installers not being up front and detailed enough.

I had a few minor ‘wish-list’ items. It would be nice if the blue LED light on the unit blinked when it was receiving data. I wish there was a pause function when recording, not just a stop function. Unfortunately, when fast-forwarding on your VCR, it does not show the corresponding sped up video. Strangely enough, it works when rewinding.

Conclusion
The most important thing about this product, both the hardware and the software, and I almost took this for granted, is how easy it was to set up and that everything simply worked. Granted I did not try to ‘wing’ it, but followed the directions closely. Apart from a few ‘wish’ list items I noted on behalf of my perfectionist soul, Honestech’s VHS to DVD does what it claims to and does it without issues. Certainly, there are other products out there, but given the positive results I’ve with VtoD, I wouldn’t bother looking at others.

Gimme!

More info from the manufacturer

Price: $59.99
(Please note prices are subject to change and the listed price is correct to the best of our knowledge at the time of posting)

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