Thursday, November 29, 2007

Microsoft Sued; Christmas Comes Early for Z4 Technologies

This is the reason why you should patent everything.... and why innovation in the US is probably a bad idea.

Not that asking for 2 passwords is an innovative thing.  How did that get patented?

Microsoft is succumbing to patent trolls today, as they’re being ordered to pay over $140 million for, get this, asking for two passwords.

Microsoft Sued; Christmas Comes Early for Z4 Technologies

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Monday, November 26, 2007

George Bush is a robot from Mars

 

This explains everything...

In the enhanced photo of the first debate, Nelson says, look at the horizontal white line in middle of the president's back. You'll see a shadow. "That's telling me there's definitely a bulge," he says. "In fact, it's how we measure the depths of the craters on the moon or on Mars. We look at the angle of the light and the length of shadow they leave. In this case, that's clearly a crater that's under the horizontal line -- it's clearly a rim of a bulge protruding upward, one due to forces pushing it up from beneath."

The Time Vault: Bush wore a device during debate according to NASA

Sunday, November 25, 2007

OCAD - Events Calendar - Book Arts Fair

Worth a look.  

Book Arts Fair
Ontario College of Art & Design

10:00am to 5:00pm, Sunday December 2, 2007

Work by book artists, printmakers, papermakers, and private press printers available for purchase

Every year in December, book artists, printmakers, papermakers, and private press printers gather at OCAD to show their work and demonstrate their skills in OCAD's Central Hall and Printmaking studios. The university community and general public are welcome to come and watch artists at work making paper, printing from litho stones, screen printing, hand typesetting, book binding, wood engraving, etching and much more. Many items are available for sale, providing unique ideas for holiday gift giving. Admission is pay-what-you-can.

Ontario College of Art & Design

100 McCaul St.

Toronto, Ontario

416-977-6000 Ext. 268

www.ocad.ca

bookartsfair@gmail.com

Source: OCAD - Events Calendar

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Why the Kindle Will Succeed: Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device

 I have been wanting to get an e-ink reader for the last couple of years now.  Only recently have they become more mainstream, but they're still not ready yet in my opinion. 

The Amazon Kindle is unique in that it downloads subscriptions and e-books using EDVO rather than USB or Wifi.  EDVO is a cellular network technology, and Amazon is eating the wireless costs (for now).

With free access to Wikipedia and $9.99/book access to all the NY Times Bestsellers, and 80,000 other books, and access to Word documents, it really provides a case for buying an e-book reader, and could be a success on the level of iTunes.

The word Kindle seems to indicate that this is really the beginning of what is to come.  Now if only if I could use the thing to copy directly from my PDFs or even CHMs (Help files) to the Kindle, without any conversion steps or loss of formatting.

Truly innovative products should promote either a strong need for or a strong aversion to adoption.  Change both excites and frightens people, and a truly innovative product (the automobile, electricity, the computer) should provoke these reactions, and not a sense of mediocracy.

Plus it supports newspapers and blogs... and audiobooks... and photos.

And it provokes strong reactions, with over 500 reviews and a 2 1/2 star rating.   But it's #1 in the Kindle Store!

1.0 out of 5 stars A disgrace to every book-lover! (no stars), November 21, 2007  

What I don't understand is why a supposedly "book-loving" person like Jeff Bezos can think that digitally "improving" books will work. If he is such a book-lover, then why would he disgrace the book by creating the literary equivalent of an iPod? Now, I myself am a big fan of the iPod but it is totally different. it's ok to have all your music in one place, but books? A book is one of the most priceless things on this planet. Books shouldn't even have a price, and only should to benefit the author, who, unlike many people, took time out of their lives to create this masterpiece for people to spend hours reading it, the spine cracking as the story progresses, the sweat of the hands smeared on the cover, its edge slowly curling up. How could anybody replace this with a wireless gizmo that doesn't even allow someone to buy an actual physical book ,let alone touch it, smell its pages. Surely there is an explanation and here's mine: humans are getting more stupid each day because of pointless technology such as this, which in turn keeps us from partaking in intellectual things like reading. Books are becoming extinct, and if this is the only way to help bring them back, then God help us. This device is not a helping hand...it's an abomination.

Source: Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Kindle: Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device

 

3.0 out of 5 stars Good idea, but need to be improved., November 21, 2007

 

. I want touch screen.
. I want a electronic pen.
. I want audio.
. I want video.
. I want multiple language dictionary.
. I want it can store more books.
. I want it cheaper.
. I want the eBook cheaper.
. I want .....

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Academic Productivity » Speech to Text: timesaver or time waster?

 

Could Microsoft One Note & a speech PowerToys be the ultimate idea capture tool?

Some advantages of Audio from the Academic Productivity blog...

  1. The first advantage is that audio forces linearity on you.
  2. The second advantage is that dictating also prevents multi-tasking; that is, when you are doing your audio recording, you cannot be working on all things at the same time.
  3. The third advantage of audio is that it removes a barrier of entry for developing an idea.
  4. A fourth advantage of dictating is that it is actually hands-free; so you could do something, -again, only if you really have to multi-task while you are dictating-.

Academic Productivity » Speech to Text: timesaver or time waster?

Start with Audacity.

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

Hit MS for the SDKs or grab Dragon Dictate.

http://www.microsoft.com/speech

Dig up a speech to text OneNote powertoy.

http://www.mperfect.net/oneNoteToys/

And see what happens...

More info here.

http://blogs.msdn.com/chris_pratley/archive/2006/03/16/audio-transcriptions-and-annotations-with-onenote.aspx

Microsoft Sql Server 2008 & its ability to work with unstructured data may shine with audio and video-based applications.

There are plenty of applications for speech recognition as both an idea capture tool, and a transcription tool for things like voice mail (Skype's doing it now) & accessibility.  If you don't feel too strange about talking to yourself, that is...

Of course, it's probably more fun to make Holograms in One Note...

The Personal MBA Recommended Reading List: Mastering Business Through Self-Education (Recommended Business Books)

 

The path to higher learning is through... reading?  Do you learn better through listening, reading, or doing?

Business schools don’t have a monopoly on worldly wisdom. If you're serious about learning advanced business principles, the Personal MBA can help. The Personal MBA recommended reading list is the tangible result of hundreds of hours of reading and research, and features only the very best books the business press has to offer. So skip the fancy diploma and $150,000 loan - you can get a world-class business education simply by reading these books.
To learn more about the Personal MBA, read the manifesto.

The Personal MBA Recommended Reading List: Mastering Business Through Self-Education (Recommended Business Books)

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

MIT alleges flaws in Gehry building - Yahoo! News

Uh oh.  The Art Gallery of Ontario looks strangely familiar to this building...

So it has a few problems and cost over $315 million dollars.  It looks cool... 

The school asserts that the center, completed in spring 2004, has persistent leaks, drainage problems and mold growing on its brick exterior. It says accumulations of snow and ice have fallen dangerously from window boxes and other areas of its roofs, blocking emergency exits and causing damage.

Source: MIT alleges flaws in Gehry building - Yahoo! News

The AGO is estimating it will cost $500 million to redo their design.  I hope it will handle the snow load!

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

» Killer traffic: By the numbers • Spacing Toronto • understanding the urban landscape

 

Something tells me we need to move... *cough* *cough* 

Cross-posted from Eye Daily.

1,700: The number of premature deaths in Toronto that exposure to smog pollutants contribute to each year.
6,000: The number of hospitalizations.
85, 69: The percentage of carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide, respectively, that vehicles are responsible for emitting into Toronto’s air.
35: The percentage of the total greenhouse gas emission contributed by the transportation sector in Toronto.
75: The percentage increase in the number of vehicles traveling into and out of the city each morning over the past two decades.
67: The percentage of trips into Toronto made by single occupant vehicles.
20: The percentage of trips made by public transit (including GO bus, GO train, regional bus and TTC).
440: The number of premature deaths Toronto traffic pollution contributes to each year.
1,700: The number of annual hospitalizations associated with traffic pollution in Toronto.
1,200: The number of children estimated to experience acute bronchitis episodes per year as a result of traffic pollution.
67,000: The number of acute respiratory symptom days associated with traffic-related pollution.
200,000: The number of restricted activity days during which people spend days in bed or cut down on their usual activities.
30: The percentage reduction in motor vehicle emissions in Toronto that could save nearly 200 lives and result in $900 million in health benefits annually.

» Killer traffic: By the numbers • Spacing Toronto • understanding the urban landscape

Sunday, November 04, 2007

dlM VST plugins - gotta have more cowbell

 Check out the demo track from Van Halen...  still needs more cowbell.

http://www.audiofudge.com/content/music/dynamite_demo_1.mp3

dynamite cowbell brings you more cowbell than even Gene Frenkle can deliver
6 cowbells mapped to midi keys
5 velocity layers
close and room mic levels
damping control
5 bonus digibells
1 cow

Source: dlM plugins

Slave to the machine

The PC is not yet a utility. It is not a light that you turn on when you want to read. It is a seemingly-aware piece of machinery that likes to piss you off.

Is it the machinery, or is it the software inside the machinery that really likes to mess you up? That depends on whether you've ever had a hard drive failure, your new monitor doesn't turn on, or it does but the screen turns blue every time you click your email icon. Mostly it's just self-installing spyware, poorly installed applications, viruses, broken updates, and other software bugs that get the best of us. Usually we do it to ourselves, though it's easy to blame the PC for why we don't have a backup of our important files or haven't updated our virus definitions since 2001.

I spent 3 days trying to reinstall Office 2003 after uninstalling a trial version of Visio 2007. When I installed the trial to learn more about the software for an upcoming exam, the Windows Installer kept popping up whenever I checked my email in Outlook. Visio 2007 must have some powerful Outlook 2003 integration, because I could not get rid of that popup box for the life of me.

I uninstalled Visio 2007. Piece of cake, except that now all of my Office apps except for OneNote (my favourite app) stopped working. This wouldn't have been a problem, if I didn't need to use spreadsheets, email, and documents every once and awhile. Reinstalling Office just hung the installation package. Uninstalling office failed with an unexplainable error.

I downloaded the Windows Installer Cleanup Utility, which ominously warned that it shouldn't be used to uninstall Office 2007. No problems there, Office 2007 uninstalls like a champ. :) I ran the cleanup utility, checked off the Office 2003 install, and removed it.

Removing the add/remove programs link got me one step further, since I was now able to step through the install without it taunting me with a progress bar that went back and forth endlessly. I proceeded with the custom install (deselecting Office Assistant - die clippy, select everything else) and clicked the usual Next, Next, Next. As soon as it checked for free disk space, it told me I had 0 bytes free on the highlighted drive.

Since I have something like a terabyte and a half of disk space, I was a bit concerned. I checked the highlighted drive, and, sure enough, no disk space.

It was the DVD drive.

Not sure how you free up space on a DVD drive, but I put a blank DVD in anyway. No go. Not going to happen. I was not going to free up space on that one. There's no way I could find to disable the drive letter from software either. Power down the computer, unplug the DVD, power up. Run the reinstall. Now I was getting a failure on drive I:, my DVD drive. Search the registry for I:, see a bunch of references, give up.

Give up? Not quite. If the I: drive was missing, I had 26 other drive letters to choose from. Moving D: to I: solved the issue. Halfway through the install, the PC threw up another dialog in my face - can't find SKU11.CAB or something like that. Searching the install media I found no files called SKU11.

Searching Google brought me to a page where 1000 other people had the same issue. Apparently this is something to do with the DVD drive and caching of files during the installation process. Hacking the registry some more solved the issue, and I was able to reinstall.

Email? Check. Word? Check. Excel? Check. DVD Drive? Nope.

Power down, install DVD drive, power up.

My Leopard-meter just clicked over a few notches.

Link to Apple - Mac OS X Leopard

Thursday, November 01, 2007

OneNote Testing : A tool to import texts from Project Gutenberg

Speaking of Project Gutenberg... if you're not using OneNote you need to get it. 

Here's the tool I wrote to import "Project Gutenberg" (link: http://www.gutenberg.org) texts into OneNote. The first link goes to the setup files, and the second has the code if you want to see that.

http://johnguin.members.winisp.net/Shared%20Documents/GutenWinSetup.zip

http://johnguin.members.winisp.net/Shared%20Documents/GutenWinSource.zip

OneNote Testing : A tool to import texts from Project Gutenberg

The Amazon Kindle e-book reader unveiled - TECH.BLORGE.com

Still have to convince me that it's worth the $400-$600... but with Project Gutenberg offering 17,000 e-books for free it shouldn't be too hard. 

Amazon is believed to be planning to launch an Amazon-branded e-book reader in October.

The "Kindle" e-book reader will go head to head with the Sony Reader, a 64 MB e-book reader with a six-inch "paper-like" display that can be viewed from nearly any angle in full daylight.

The Amazon Kindle e-book reader unveiled - TECH.BLORGE.com