the roymond blog

iPad

Here's a "review" of sorts based on the videos, articles and announcement. For someone who doesn't like the Kindle and their ilk, which premiered at $399, here's a device that apparently far exceeds Kindle for $100 more. And in 2010 dollars, it's about the same as the Kindle was in 2007 ;)

An iTouch on steroids - A large multi-touch screen with extended gesturing, that runs all existing iPhone "apps" out of the box. I don't think it will be long before a DAW controller app appears.

A re-worked iWorks suite - Word processing, spreadsheets, presentation slides. The optional keyboard dock provides a standard mechanical input device, but the virtual keyboard provides on-the-go keyboarding.

eBook reader/bookstore - 5 large publishers (plus McGraw Hill who leaked specs and so seems to have been cut from the launch party). A color, touch screen eReader without the slow crappy screen redraw of a Kindle, but also without the soft e-Ink. But with search and extended media capabilities that puts Kindle in that awkward "why bother" position (not unlike having a 13" b&w TV with no remote). It uses the open ePub format (should be interesting to see if B&N and Sony ebooks can be used). It also reads native PDF, which none of the others can. So, for technical documentation, whitepapers, and consumer device manuals, this rocks.

BlueTooth & Wi-Fi, optional 3G - no contract, a monthly data plan for 3G for those who need it. Wi-Fi for everyone else. Plus free access to all AT&T hotspots. "But you have to pay for 3G, and Kindle's is free". How long does the "I can spontaneously download a 1700 page novel" thing last? I live in NYC, where wi-fi is almost everywhere, and where it's not, it's close. For the purposes Kindle needs connectivity, this does not need 3G. But for what this can do that's way beyond that, it's certainly a nice to have.

This is exactly the wrong form to be a phone or a camera, so I don't miss that. What I do miss is Flash. Very disappointing, but hopefully that will change.

Posted January 27, 2010 by roymond 
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Sleevelessness

Advertising blog

Posted January 26, 2010 by roymond 
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Home | PBS Video

Nature, etc. full length epsodes

Posted January 18, 2010 by roymond 
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LOONEY TUNES: Porky in Wackyland

Looney Tunes on WB web

Posted January 18, 2010 by roymond 
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NYC

     
Click here to download:
nyc-jIuGHgiywIEjgEaHdBce.zip (1155 KB)

Posted December 12, 2009 by roymond 
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TV without cable

Verizon DSL (Download up to 7.1 Mbps/Upload up to 768 Kbps) = $42.99/month

Vonage (Unlimited calling in the U.S.) = $25/month

eyeTV Hybrid USB TV Tuner = $120 (one time cost)

Mac Mini = $600 (one time cost)

Hulu Desktop, Boxee.tv, iTunes, Joost

Check what the taxes/surcharges are for Vonage and DSL

Posted December 11, 2009 by roymond 
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Vevo - who am I?

Vevo is trying to keep streaming this week, after a soft launch. It's video and audeo quality is impressive, and the layout is, indeed, very Hulu-esque. However, it's hard to find content. Lots of genre and artist pages are blank. Many seminal music video artists simply don't exist (Peter Gabriel...hello?). Also, after watching a video the displayed videos below have nothing to do with thevideo I just watched, or the search results I picked from to watch it. Subscriptions are the only way to keep my desires even remotely represented.

To make matters worse, there are no settings to state my preferences, so if I really don't like a genre or artist, I can't get them out of my face. And in my face is exactly what the "top" videos are.

The embed, link and other options stop the video when you use them. And to change volume you slide the lever and have to let go to hear the change. Seems they could have spent a little time on the UI.

I assume many of these things will change and functionality will evolve, but it's really hard to imagine launching a video service like this without thinking about how people want to build a familiar setting for themselves. Youtube, the engine upon which Vevo is built, does this pretty well. Why did they overlook basic preferences?

Like, what boat were they on, anyway?

Posted December 11, 2009 by roymond 
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TV online

Working on a strategy to get off cable. I'd like to use Vonage and/orSkype for phone. This NYTimes article is inspiring.

Need to secure high speed broadband in NYC, and get a digital receiver for over-the-air digital.

I've got a Joost.com account, where Rocky & Bullwinkle and others are available :) Also, some interesting music videos.

Also have a Boxee.tv account for CNN, PBS and others. And Hulu desktop for network episodes.

This, along with iTunes for the occasional movie rental, should cover us.

Posted December 11, 2009 by roymond 
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mobile photos

     
Click here to download:
mobile-photos-FGJCoyCpDHjFkdaiblCb.zip (231 KB)

Posted December 11, 2009 by roymond 
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AT&T ads - back to the future!

Love the comment: "Haha. This is funny because tons of these things are right, but AT&T sucks too much to bring it to us"

Posted December 10, 2009 by roymond 
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