Five Things About Me

I’ve been tagged by MHC so that means I’ve got to conjure up 5 things about myself.

1. I was born 26 years ago in the hospital that I now work in – Chase Farm now part of Barnet & Chase Farm Hospitals NHS Trust. I nearly died before I was born because the umbilical cord got wrapped round my neck choking me. The registrar had to be called in to help deliver me using forceps and saved my life.
2. I have run a website for over 10 years. This has become stonysleep.com, but did exist as various names, hosts, guises and mirrors from 1997 to 2002. I’ve owned stonysleep.com since 17th January 2002 after Big Cat Records and then V2 Records didn’t renew the ownership. So it turned 5 years last month at it’s current address. The site is long overdue for an overhaul, but I never seem to have the time to do it. The plan is to run it through wordpress and link it in with the blog.
3. In real life I am an incredibly introverted and shy person. I’m a deep thinker and a continual observer. I sometimes hold grudges and regrets for many years after an event has happened but rarely reveal my true feelings especially if it involves other people. I have convinced at least 2 people that I was insane – this is not true, but I am certainly not what would be considered normal by far.
4. The thing I am most proud of is my music collection. I don’t know how many CDs or days that I own because I haven’t transferred it all onto my iPod yet and it’s increasing all the time. It was over 300 CDs last time I updated the list on my site but it’s continually growing.
5. It was not until I finished University and started working full time that I realised what a good memory I have compared to other people, and in particular what a knack I have for remembering small (and often trivial) details. I think I have a partial photographic memory. Having said that i always seem to forget where I’ve left the most mundane of items when moving from one room to another

This now leaves me with the tough task of who to tag:
Shamik, Ravi, Camilla
There’s a couple of others I know who have blogs, but I don’t know their sites, so will have to add them at a later date

Italian Vacation & iPod

Hi all,

It’s that time of the year again when I like to head off away from everyone in the UK for a bit of peace and quiet in Italy where we have a modest size appartment. We say it’s in Venice, and while technically it is, it’s not the place you’d stay if you were coming to Venice for a holiday. The block of appartments is on a natural island in the Venice lagoon called The Lido or more correctly Lido di Venezia.

It is technically larger than Venice itself and is home to approximately 20,000 people. The region we live in is called Malamocco. It is where the locals of the lido live, and parts of it are very rural. All the others in our block are italians, and while the majority of people speak english it isn’t brilliant, so one day we will need to speak italian decently. Travel to the main part of venice is a 20 minute bike ride/10 minute bus ride/a long walk followed by a half boat ride from the vaporetto station Santa Maria Elisabetta.

Anyway, that’s the background to the place.
On arriving here I’ve been listening to all the songs I’ve put on the ipod i bought in september. I now have about 7 days or 3000 songs on there and having spent a good few hours travelling by taxi, coach, plane, boat and car to get here along with plenty of time hanging around in the airport I’ve had a lot of time to come up with opinions on the ipod.

As you have no doubt realised, I’m a late commer to iPods for a number of reasons:

  1. I always had a scepticism about them
  2. There was something I liked about actually putting a cd in
  3. I never wanted to commit the hard disk space to mp3s
  4. Until recently there was something very irritating about iTunes, and I still secretly pine for Cassady & Greene’s SoundJam to return

I finally gave in when it became impractical to carry 300 cds (well, I used to bring 100 of them with me on holiday) around with me. And the price and size of the iPods just got too tempting to resist and I got the 80Gb 5th gen iPod Video.

As I said, I’ve got quite a lot of my music on there, but I’ve decided there are still a few things I would find really useful in an iPod:

  • Viewing Song/Video Details on the iPod – currently you can only see the song name, artist and album. Other details such as year, genre, bitrate, track number etc are not visible. This is particularly useful for a TV series as the iPod simply orders everything alphabetically. If the name does not contain the episode number you’re stuffed!
  • I’ve been playing with the rating system and gradually rating all my songs on the 1-5 scale. This will no doubt take as long or longer than it will take to import the remainder of my songs. But, it would be nice to view all songs that have not been rated to make this easier
  • It would be good to be able to create playlists and modify ID3 tags of the tracks. The iPod can clearly do that as it can do the ratings. I do not have my mac with me on holiday, and would like to customise some of my smart playlists but cannot do that except through iTunes. If I plug my iPod into the computer I am writing this on it will more than likely wipe the contents of my iPod as it has tracks for my dad’s iPod. On the subject of customising the tags this is useful because CDDB/Gracenote can often get things wrong, especially with the more obscure albums and cover discs which are not often used. I could not find a way to submit a change to gracenote so when I do notice a mistake I have corrected it on iTunes but don’t always spot this
  • I thought of a feature which I would find useful when in shuffle mode: to switch to the album/artist that has come up in shuffle mode
  • Finally, an option to switch on/off the backlight at will and also to make it switch on at the start of each track. This would be particularly useful in shuffle mode.

I’ve also found a glitch which I guess isn’t too much of a glitch, but all the same isn’t quite right in the logic:

If you are playing a song in shuffle mode then browse for that same song through the artist/album/genre/search and choose it from there while the song is playing it will restart it from the beginning. This is not how iTunes works so should not be how the iPod works. It should not affect the songs playing and simply bring the song up as if you chose “now playing”.

Apart from that, I think this iPod is great. I’m going to struggle to fill the 80Gb with music alone at the moment, the battery life is good, and it makes transporting music much easier. I’ve been a latecomer to the iPod but I do like it and know what I want.

To all those who I don’t get a chance to see before the new year: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year

Internet Exploder 7

I’ve been a very bad netizen recently and haven’t posted in ages, but I’ve got a goodun today
I had the opportunity to use Internet Explorer 7 on windows the other week thanks to microsoft bundling it with my dad’s laptop
It was slightly reassuring to read that Microsoft like to produce apps that violate whatever HID they must have
I am of course referring to Apple’s Brushed Metal window design in the Finder which I still believe must violate it’s own HID guidlines

Anyway, back to M$ bashing – IE7 – nasty, mostly because of what it does with the menubar
OK, i’ve always hated how in windows the menubar goes with the app and the window – why? Apple’s method of having a static menubar at the top of the screen that doesn’t move makes so much more sense.
IE7 does the most ridiculous thing of all, it moves the menubar below the address bar and makes the address bar part of the window and immovable
Compare with IE6 where you could move the address bar where you wanted and if you liked you could move the menu bar below it, but nobody really did it.

Have a look for yourself:
Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

There are a plethora of hacks that describe how to do a registry hack to bring the menubar to the top again. The downside of this is that it results in the address bar being at the bottom of any other toolbars you might have below the menubar. Here’s an example of a blog entry which describes how to make the change. Remember Regedit is a dangerous tool and shouldn’t be used lightly

Coke iTunes offer

I remember this from ages ago that it was coming to the UK but saw it for the first time today
Really mundanely in the canteen at lunch I was hastily buying some lunch I noticed the offer on a bottle of Diet Coke
I’ve never bought a song on iTMS and since I now own an iPod & was in need of some liquid refreshment thought i’d give it a shot

So, I now have a barely legible Song Code to claim my free song – it appears that every bottle redeems a song as opposed to one of the US offers where it was only selected ones.
Here is the outside of the label lazily taken with my 1 megapixel mobile phone camera (so the quality is rubbish):
Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

What to buy will be a difficult one as it’s only one song. Would have to be something that I would want to have on my iPod.
I notice in the small print it says 1 code=1 song
but also says Offer limited to 5 free songs per person
Meaning if I do find myself buying more bottles of diet coke to redeem songs I can only get five
Also, being DRM’d AAC I will be pretty stuck with it on digital media

Time for a bit of iTunes browsing I think

Homeward Bound

It’s 8am EST on Saturday in the New York Amtrak station and am beginning my return trip

By the time I get back it will be 8am GMT on Sunday after a 3 and a half hour train ride to Boston, a transit, checking in time, and flight back to London Heathrow. Add on the 5 hour time difference and you get to about 7am. An hour’s journey home and I won’t know whether it’s morning or night

It’s been a great 10 days which seem to have been non-stop. Think i need a nice beach holiday to recover from it.

The wedding went well, Boston was good fun and New York was great – Empire State Building, Central Park, China Town, Broadway, Times Square, Museum of Modern Art, and everything else that I can’t remember at the moment.

Couldn’t resist a stop to the Apple Store on 5th Avenue, and am now the owner of a shiny new 80Gb iPod Video (but shhhh! Don’t tell customs – they need to believe I had it before I went out) and a nifty app called Popcorn 2 so I can convert some DVDs easily into H.264 (mpeg4). Oh, and I’ll prob convert some of my huge music Video collection too so i can view it on the iPod

Thought I’d make one post on the blog while I had a few minutes to kill in the departure lounge.

Speak to you all tomorrow (I think!) or later on in the week

Seven Deadly Sins

I haven’t posted anything for a while for various reasons – it’s not that i haven’t got anything to say. I’ve been plotting a few good things that i could combine together particularly about music sampling. But largely it’s been due to laziness, so thought this link was fairly appropriate:

Your Deadly Sins
Sloth: 80%
Envy: 40%
Pride: 40%
Lust: 20%
Wrath: 20%
Gluttony: 0%
Greed: 0%
Chance You’ll Go to Hell: 29%
You will die with your hand down your underwear, watching Star Trek.

I also took the liberty of doing a few others on the same site:

You Are 40% Happy

You’re not miserable, but you could stand to be a lot happier.
Focus on what’s right in the world, and you’ll be happier than you ever thought possible.

How Happy Are You?


You Are 76% Cynical


You’re a full blown cynic… and probably even skeptical of these results.
You have your optimistic moments, but most likely you keep them to yourself.

How Cynical Are You?

Apparently i share a similar music taste with Dale Earnhardt Jr whoever he is – though it’d prob be a pretty tenuous similarity as it was largely the best of a bad batch of artists. Looking at his playlist on iTunes and i definitely wouldn’t listen to many of those tracks, though it’s prob the closest they could match me with


Your Musical Tastes Match: Dale Earnhardt Jr.



See his whole playlist here (iTunes required)

What Celebrity Matches Your Taste in Music?

WorldWideWeb

WWW
I forget how i stumbled on this entry on wikipedia about the web browser WorldWideWeb
It was written for the NeXTSTEP platform in 1990 on a NEXTcube and later renamed Nexus. I had never heard of it before, and it was the first ever web browser.
I remember NCSA Mosaic but this wasn’t made until 1993

But it doesn’t stop there, because this got me thinking…. does this mean the first person on the world wide web was using a NeXT Operating system?
I can see no way that this isn’t the case – and potentially this was the case for nearly 2 years as it was the only web browser on general release between 1990 and 1992. Am guessing the first person was the creator of the app, Sir Tim Berners-Lee who was the one to link the hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) with TCP and DNS.

NCSA Mosaic was the first browser to run on windows and on an Apple Macintosh when it was released in 1993, though it was originally programmed for UNIX, ported to the commodore amiga and then to windows and the mac later in the year.
Perhaps the reason I had heard of NCSA Mosaic is because of this plaque:
Mosaic Plaque
I suppose what it is saying is that it was the first browser which ran on an operating system that home users would have. I don’t know how many people were running NeXTSTEP in the 1990’s, but I’m guessing it was less than either windows or even apple’s operating system (probably system 7 at the time)

I still find it a little bit misleading especially with the number of unix-like OS’s available these days

Just as an addon and to further back up the origins, this text can be found on wikipedia:

This NeXT workstation (a NeXTcube) was used by Tim Berners-Lee as the first Web server on the World Wide Web. Today, it is kept in Microcosm, the public museum at the Meyrin site of CERN, in the Canton of Geneva, Switzerland.
The document resting on the keyboard is a copy of “Information Management: A Proposal,” which was Berners-Lee’s original proposal for the World Wide Web.
The label on the cube itself has the following text: “This machine is a server. DO NOT POWER IT DOWN!!”
Just below the keyboard (not shown) is a label which reads: “At the end of the 80s, Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web using this Next computer as the first Web server.”
The book is probably “Enquire Within upon Everything”, which TBL describes on page one of his book Weaving the Web as “a musty old book of Victorian advice I noticed as a child in my parents’ house outside London”.
Photographed on August 10, 2005, by en:user:Coolcaesar.

Found this from this NeXT Computer forum at nextcomputers.org

Apple’s WWDC 2006

Well it’s been over 24 hours since Apple’s World Wide Developers Conference in San Francisco
We saw a preview of Leopard, news on apple stores, new dashboard widgets and the latest developments on Apple’s software apps

But I’m going to skip through all that because the most important announcement was the new Desktop Tower Mac officially announced as the Mac Pro
On the outside it looks pretty similar to the Powermac G5 but on the inside it is clearly far superior and has a pricetag that is more down my street
I’ve been belligerently sticking with my current mac because Apple have not released a computer that I have wanted to buy for over 4 years for various reasons (too expensive, no dual optical drives, i don’t need a laptop, all in one when I like my monitor etc)
But this one looks good

It comes in at under £2000 for the mid range 2.66GHz Dual Core 64 bit Xeon (based on Intel’s Woodcrest processor)
It comes with 1Gb ram as standard, and has the option of having up to 2TB of storage in it’s 4 internal Serial ATA hard drive bays
Five USB (two on the front) and Four Firewire (two FW400, two FW800) ports with one of each on the front
Two Gigabit ethernet connectors, Optical digital AND Analogue audio in AND out (so you can plug a normal microphone or headphone into it if you don’t have optical ones)
Four PCIe slots and capacity for 16Gb of Ram
But best of all it has the space for dual optical DVD±RW superdrives
Graphics cards are good and the processor kicks ass

Bluetooth and Wireless are optional extras but in reality you could add them afterwards and for cheaper by going to 3rd party suppliers
If you want to read more It’s all in the tech specs page

Remember, this is essentially a PC motherboard so any hardware that works on a PC will more than likely work in this

I will definitely be checking this out and gonna find out what I would be able to retrofit from my current setup

Posted in Mac

Whatever Happened to…

I don’t know what provoked me to start thinking about this sometime but it all started with me making a mental note of things that were going to be huge (particularly in the 1990’s) and then died a death. It started with a couple of things, and I sat down today and wrote a list. I also took the liberty of doing a google search for “whatever happened to” which has over 12 million matches.

Enough with the preamble
1. The first one that got me thinking was computer Voice Recognition
speech recognition
It sounds like a great idea to alleviate RSI and by telling the computer what you want to do as opposed to typing it or using a mouse seems much more userfriendly. Apple Computer developed a technology in the early 90’s as an extension to System 7 called plaintalk. It is now part of the system preferences of OSX and simply called Speech Recognition. It enables you to use a hotkey to talk into a microphone with certain key phrases and it will follow your instructions. I had mixed results when trying it, mainly due to the fact that it assumes you speak with an American accent. My impressions aren’t very good and it doesn’t like British English too much. IBM developed a program called ViaVoice which was supposed to be very good but expensive. I think the big reason why the whole thing never worked was it looks like you’re mad talking to yourself and doesn’t work well in an office environment. Just my 2 english pence!
Having said that you still get glimpses of it used in telephones for speed dials and I always think of the Odeon cinema hotline that asks you to say the name of the Odeon that you want to book tickets for.

2. Next up we have the paperless office!
paperless office
Having worked for the UK health service for 3 years I can categorically say this is nowhere near to even being a possibility, in fact the opposite has happened thanks to email allowing people the ability to forward pdfs and other attachments eg. this article. The internet now has more information out there than ever before and expectations are high on how much of that information we have at our finger tips. Net result, my desk looks like a pig sty and i never get to the bottom of any of my piles. So much for fax software and handheld scanners for electronically storing any letter or other piece of paper received by non electronic means. I am yet to meet anyone who seriously uses fax software, you can’t buy handheld scanners, those paper port scanners never scan things in straight and if you decide to use OCR you can get some unexpected results sometimes.
office flyer

3. Removable storage (Data, Music and Video) – what on earth happened with this! I originally had them all separate but they’re kind of related.
removable media
Let me list a few:
Floppy Disk replacements such as the SuperDisk (LS120) and Zip disk
Sony’s “SACD – Super Audio CD
Laserdisc
Mini Disc
Just to name a few! I’ll start with the floppy disk replacements because i was so close to yelling at my co-workers when he burnt two files to cd which totalled 1mb onto a CD-R when the computer was a wintel box and had a floppy drive. But i restrained myself and said nothing. My point is that since Apple released the iMac Rev A which was the first commercial computer not to have a floppy disk drive (and others have followed suit though in more limited numbers often having an interchangeable floppy & CD drive) people are more confident that a computer will have a CD drive than a floppy drive. It is ridiculous to waste 99.9% of a CD’s capacity, and there are now more variations than is needed. Iomega came close with the zip drive until they hit a snag with the click of death problem, and Imation tried to market the LS-120 but it was horribly slow. I tend to email/ftp files these days and tend to bank on being able to get an internet connection as everywhere there’s a computer there seems to be broadband internet! Occasionally i’ll burn a CD or for larger files i’ve got my Firewire/USB external drive that i should use for backup but don’t as I haven’t had the time to use any backup software (whoops!)

SACD – what the heck is that you are probably asking. Basically it was meant to be higher quality than a CD and instead of an album taking up 500-700mb it would be 4.7Gb – so a DVD. Thought up in 1999 by Sony & Phillips. I have never seen one in the shops and doubt I ever will – it was a complete disaster as it came out just before a program called napster appeared. There’s also a format rivalry with DVD-Audio and like all Sony Products it uses some copy protection which I wouldn’t want to touch with a bargepole – oh, and i’d hazard a guess that i wouldn’t be able to notice any difference since i can’t tell the difference between a 192kbps mp3 and the original CD!

Laserdisc – this was originally patented in 1958 but didn’t appear till the 1970’s but you could still buy them when I was young. I don’t know anyone who owns any or even the player. The nearest I’ve got is a DVD that was made by being copied off a Laserdisc of Star Wars Episode IV with Chinese subtitles. Haven’t seen anything laserdisc related for about 20 years.

Another audio format the minidisc – you still see them around for recording purposes but record companies did try and sell albums on mini disc. It must’ve lasted about 2 years at most, and I haven’t seen them since. I like to record gigs from time to time but record on tape as that’s all i’ve got. I thought about minidisc but they’re expensive and it’s still a pain to transfer to mp3 because sony never made it easy to do so as they are incompatible with Magneto Optical drives and vice versa which use the same technology

4. My final one comes from one i saw on the google search above… Virtual Reality
virtual reality
William Gibson predicted it in his book Neuromancer in 1984 though the credit on wikipedia seems to go to Damien Broderick for his 1982 book The Judas Mandala. Pure and simple – what happened to it? It died a death somewhere in the mid-90s and hasn’t been heard of since

Digital Magazines

I was surfing around today waiting for the tennis to start (Federer vs Nadal) with the prospect of watching the football world cup (Italy vs France) this evening, when I stumbled on something I must’ve missed: Digital Magazines

I know it’s something that’s been around for ages, but a company now looks to be properly distributing it called Zinio
They offer a broad range of magazines which you can buy either as back issues or subscribe to
About the same price as buying off the shelf, and it’s pretty convenient if you want a specific issue and don’t want to go down to the shops. Plus since you pay in US Dollars, the exchange rate works to my advantage eg. MacUser UK is £3.95 per issue over here, but only $3.50 from Zinio
An annual subscription works out at £62.46 by direct debit for a real copy
From Zinio it is only $49.95
When you consider that there’s $1.85 to the pound, it works out pretty cheap

On the downside, the digital version comes in Zinio’s own format, (.zno) and has to be viewed using their viewer. The viewer is available for windows & OSX, though isn’t universal binary yet (but has been confirmed as in development)
It uses some form of DRM called contentguard

A reader program is required to access the magazines, which utilize a combination of technology licensed from Adobe and Contentguard

and if you print anything it puts a pale grey watermark on the page

They offer a free sample section, so i took the opportunity to try it out. The freebies are a little lacking though oddly you can get MacWorld Sweden as well as the US version
You can only view one magazine at a time, as the viewer doesn’t seem to support multiple viewing of documents, and while it is based on Acrobat reader, it lacks a lot of the features you’d expect to have such as scrolling
I suspect you wouldn’t get anything to replace the free CD/DVDs you would normally get though they may have a way of having online links to the content.

The downloads magazines in OSX are stored in your users folder/Zinio Library/
The site itself is a little confusing, as there is an international section, but MacUser UK appears in the US section but not the UK, and there are some publications that they sell which don’t appear on the main site as they are acting as agents for the distributors.

Finally, they offer a US textbooks section for students. It’s a little lacking on variety, and since it’s US textbooks they won’t have scientific books that use metric units like Peter Atkin’s Physical Chemistry the defacto standard text for most university chemistry courses.

They say there are plans for adding interactive features into the digital versions of magazines and books to make them more attractive

Overall i kinda like it, but can’t see myself buying through it – and they do need to add some scrollbars to the viewer.