Technology


It’s been a truly annoying morning at Chez Rhymer — one of the worst offenders being my iPad.  The thing was refusing to synch with my laptop this morning.  iTunes (bloated crapware that it is) would find the device, start the synch, get through the backup, then hang on the synch.  The iPad would then go to sleep because of Itunes not responding.  iTunes, would then lock up because there was no iPad to find.  It did this repeatedly.

My steps:  change the charging/synch cable to another:  same issue.  Not the cable then.  I reinstalled iTunes — no change, BUT the warning I used to get when it would boot up asking if the firewall should allow it to get info from the internet stopped.

I take it down to the Apple Store.  Works just like you would expect a car at the shop to:  perfectly.  So now I’m thinking it’s a network/iTunes issue.

I head home and it synchs fine.  So I download the new iOS 4.2.  It stalls at the end of the install…while synching files again.  Sigh.  Now, iTunes goes nuts everytime I try to get it to talk to the iPad.  Finally, it synchs again and sets up my folders, etc. etc.  then stalls at the last minute, once again.

So:  not the cables.  No the network, because Safari and Mail are connecting fine at the same time.  Not the iPad, because after the update on the OS it’s working well (excellently, point of fact.)  So…once again, the issue for Apple hardware comes down to the bloated shitware that is iTunes.

So if you’re having problems, the fix seems to be perseverance, a lot of swearing (throwing things is optional), and in order — reload iTunes, restart the computer anytime there’s an issue with iTunes stalling, and probably some actively pummeling of your table/desk surface.  Or not buying a Mac.  (I didn’t have these issues with the Dell PC and iPad.)

 

Artist Michael Tompert, who’s first exhibit of Apple-inspired artwork opens today, tried to destroy an iPad by hitting it with a sledgehammer.

“I hit it with a sledgehammer about 10 times,” said Tompert at a preview of his art show, which opens today. “It did nothing. It’s incredible. It was really, really hard to destroy.”

Instead, Tompert took a blowtorch to the iPad.

“I had to blowtorch it for 15 minutes until the inside boiled and it exploded from inside,” said Tompert.

I guess I shouldn’t be as concerned about the screen as I have been.  (I have managed to scratch it, however!)  Makes me wonder how robust the aluminum bodied Macbook Air I have is…

I called this a “quick impression” over at the personal blog…but realized it was hardly “quick” at about 800 words…

Scott did good!  After busting my ass for the last few weeks putting together the house, my girlfriend ordered me a Macbook Air 13″ (the new one) for a Christmas/thank you present.  It arrived today all shiny new…

So, first impressions:  It’s bloody thin!  The thickest part is the same as the iPad, the front is practically flush with the table, making typing incredibly easy.  It fits quite well in my backpack — although in the box, it barely fit in my Maxpedition sling bag (one of the zippers could not be fully closed.)  And it is very, very light — about the same weight as the Walther P99 fully loaded that was sharing the bag with it.  Maybe a shade under 3 lbs.

Opening the box, you get a power cable, including an extension cable.  You get a small box with the warrant info, instruction booklet, and a USB restore “disk.”  The computer fires up immediately — they have it in sleep mode coming from teh factory in China and it’s darned impressive.  You open the lid and boom! you’re up.  The screen is bright, crisp, and has a 1440×900 resolution.  It looks great.  The battery had only suffered a 20% or so drain on it’s trip to the States.  I can believe you’ll get the advertised month on sleep out of it.

I played with it for about 5 hours or so — including synching my iPad and downloading docs and pics from a USB key.  I still had 13% of the battery left when I plugged it in.  The fan has not kicked on once — it’s superbly quiet, well made — the aluminum body is thin, but there’s no creaking when picked up or typed on.  the keyboard is comfortable and responsive.  The touchpad took some getting used to.  I couldn’t get it to respond until I gave it a good press and heard click! — there’s your left button.  Two fingers together and click for right button, PC folks.

There’s a learning curve on moving from PC to Mac, and I still think the PC stuff makes a bit more sense for how they do things — especially in Windows 7, but the Air is nicely easy to use.  Mine came with the iLife and iWorks installed.  It’ll read .doc and .dcox files, .pdf, and for the old WordPerfect stuff I downloaded Open Office 3.2.  With all of my documents, some of my music, the downloaded movies from iTunes for the iPad (more on that in a moment), and a few picture files (I’m keeping most media on an external drive, if I don’t use it a lot) — I’ve got 93GB of 128 left.

Speed: it’s fast — on par with my 2.26GHz, 4GB Ram Dell Inspiron 14.  Maybe a bit faster on opening programs.  Start up from off is about 13 seconds, and it’s about 3 seconds from sleep.  The solid state drive makes things smooth, swift, quiet, and cool.  I like it.  A lot.  Granted, I do primarily heavy word processing, page layout, Acrobat stuff, with heavy web surfing and email, some picture manipulation…it’s more than enough, but I could see where games might be a bit jumpy on this platform.  But then again, a lot of graphic intensive games on the iPad work just fine and it looks like Apple is angling to use a lot of the same app design for the new OS X upgrade.

iTunes — the bane of most people’s computer use:  the new iteration is good and smooth, but it’s still a kludged mess, overall.  HOWEVER…you can set up home sharing and move the stuff you purchased on iPad or cut to iTunes from your PC to your Mac.  It took about half an hour to move a few movies from the old Dell to the Air.  No issues.  Firefox, Thunderbird, Dropbox, and Open Office loaded no issues. Fonts transferred with no issues.  Merging my contacts from the iPad — no issues, but the iCal doesn’t look to synch with the iPad.  I’ll look into it later.

Reloading the battery took about 2.5 hours from 13% percent, and the power cable has a cool magnetic clip — the cord snaps to the side of the Air by it’s own volition and if you accidentally kick the cable (not that I did, mind you!) it simply unplugs and doesn’t drag your machine off the table.

So, for the 1.86GHz, 4GB Ram, 128GB SSD Air (late 2010), I found my first day with it to be, in a word, delightful.  It’s incredibly light and thin, the keyboard and touchpad are excellent, as is the general build quality, the screen is bright and clear, and the performance is top notch for the average, non-gaming user.  Style/design is unbeatable — this thing is stunningly beautiful.  For a PC user, the Mac interface will take some getting used to, but the next update promises to move the look and feel closer to the iOS devices like the iPad (which I am in favor of), so those issues might disappear.  Was it worth the $1200 or so?  Yes.  Unequivocally.

The US Air Force is looking to replace the F-22 with a remote-piloted fighter craft (a UCAV) by 2030.  Here’s Boeing’s concept of the vehicle…

And here’s the solicitation sheet.

 

The HRP-4C gynoid…dancing.

I’m not a big fan of Apple’s war 0n Flash, but I’ve gotta say — it’s time Adobe got their act together and fixed Shockwave, because I’m tired of it crashing, and taking my volume control, access to any kind of media, and Media Player with it.

Enough, Adobe — fix your crapware!

…what the f#$k is up with the Japanese?  Tentacle porn as charging device:

…and mechanical tumors…

All the brainchild of Mio Izawa.

Here’s the 15 finalists for the James Dyson Awards — yes, the vacuum cleaner guy with the proper amount of suction…

Minotaur Fire Nozzle System (New Zealand): Instead of holding a fire hose, the Minotaur Dire Nozzle is strapped onto fire-fighters with a harness. This counteracts the opposing water pressure and makes it easier to control.

Water Donut & Ultra Pipe (Germany): A pipe that purifies contaminated water with UV light. During sunless periods, the Ultra Pipe can filter the water through a pressure driven membrane.

Flo2w (Ireland): A new way of delivering oxygen to a hospital patient. The device is fitted on the patient’s head using an adjustable headpiece. Flo2w is more efficient and comfortable than a big, intimidating one-size-fits-all mask.

Reanimations (Switzerland): A resuscitation vest that compresses a patient’s chest as regular intervals and pushes the blood into the brain more effectively and evenly than with a manual cardiac massage

Butterfly Micro Scooter (Switzerland): Butterfly is a compact mobile micro scooter that can be folded away so it fits into a bag. When closed, dirty wheels are enclosed inside a smooth outer shell.

Seakettle (US): A life raft that provides shelter and fresh drinking water for those stranded at sea.

Mantis (US): A portable dental chair, that collapses into a trolley so it can be used to transport heavy equipment.

The Copenhagen Wheel (US): A sleek red hub in the rear wheel contains a motor, batteries and an internal gear system. It stores pedal power to power a hybrid electric motor – and can be controlled from a smart phone docked on the handlebars. Cyclists can use data to plan bike routes and see traffic and pollution levels ahead.

Tablet seed (Japan): A capsule made from water-soluble manure that contains vegetable seeds. When the tablet seed is buried in the ground, surrounding soil dissolves the capsule and chemical changes occur in the soil to promote growth.

Move-it (UK): A simple kit of self-adhesive cardboard parts, which the user sticks on to a cardboard box, turning it into a lightweight, easy-to-use trolley.

Air Free Intravenous infusions (UK): A drip chamber which prevents air entrainments in intravenous drip lines, reducing the chance of fatal air embolisms. It gives visual warning when an infusion has stopped.

Long Reach (Australia): A hand held device which expels a compressed emergency buoyancy aid up to 150 metres out to sea. Longreach helps people remain buoyant during an emergency situation.

BIQUATTRO (Austria): A pedal-assisted electric bike that can be turned into a tricycle when you need to carry a heavy load.

Wanderest seat (New Zealand): A seat designed to be strapped to public spaces such as a lamp post. It is portable so can be easily carried by the elderly.

Pure (UK): UV sterilization water bottle: a water bottle that filters and sterilises the water from a lake or a stream in two minutes. An outer chamber of the bottle is filled with dirty water from a lake, stream or puddle. The inner chamber plunges through the outer chamber, filtering water particles as small as four microns. Once the water is clear of sediment, it is sterilised for 90 seconds using a wind-up ultra violet bulb.

I downloaded Blio — a new ebook reader/store that was promising a superior experience.  While I wasn’t falling for the hyperbole, I did like that it was available for the Windows 7 platform.  Problem:  there’s no matching app for readers; you have to read your shiny ebooks on a computer.

There’s a lot of people that have computers and no reader — this program is for them.  Unfortunately, much like iBooks, there’s not real selection.

I downloaded a couple of free books that caught my eye and was going to use Calibre to transfer them over to the iBooks program on the iPad.  I hadn’t used Calibre for a few months, and was displeased to find the program couldn’t find my iPad with its new iteration.  When I hit the online FAQ, I found that you had to shunt any ebooks set up through Calibre had to go through a proprietary reader on the iPad, rather than the very simple prior system.  I understand that this is to better service other readers, but it’s a pain in the ass — I already have several reader programs and the last thing I need is another app to read a book (especially as it’s in the same bloody format iBooks uses.)

In other words, Calibre and Blio…a duo of FAIL.  Honorable Failure Mention goes to Nook, Barnes and Noble’s reader for iPad.  It crashes more than one of those old three-wheeled Reliants from the 1970s.

Homebuilt…

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