Category: Web Services

  • Leica Digilux 2: Uglier Than the Original, But Oh So Fine

    DPReview:

    Leica today announced the Digilux 2, a five megapixel compact digital camera with a 3.2x optical zoom lens. Leica are promoting this camera as the “analog” digital camera, in essence this is driven by the camera’s design and control layout which is almost identical to a standard manual film camera (such as aperture ring, shutter speed dial etc.) The lens is also pretty special, a 28 – 90 mm equiv. with a maximum aperture of F2.0 at wide angle and F2.4 at telephoto. The Digilux 2 has a magnesium body, a trans-reflective 2.5″ LCD monitor, Electronic viewfinder, stores images on SD card and is powered by a 1400 mAh Lithium-Ion battery.

    Check out the article at DPReview for more info and pics of this ugly beast.  Of course it’s ugly in that retro-non-ergonomic-but-I-want-one-anyway sense.  The basic design is similar to the Digilux 1 with the exception of a monster 28-90mm lens.  The previous lens was nice.  This lens is a monster!  It’s a shame that the lens does not zoom more, but you’ve got that quality not quantity thing going on here.

    Just like its older brother, the Digilux 2 has one of the bigger LCD screens out there, and it also retains the ability to manually control shutter speed, aperture, and focus if you like.  Couple that with a 5 megapixel sensor on a platform most likely done by Panasonic, and you’ve got a great albeit ugly camera.

  • Weekend Almost Over

    The weekend is almost over.  I’ve been a bad boy and have not been keeping up with the couple hundred or so feeds that I monitor.

    I did a bit of moblogging this weekend though.

  • Javascrypt

    Via Slashdot, Javascrypt is just that: cryptography tools written in Javascript.

    Cool idea.

  • Mobitopian Conference Call

    I just got off the phone with Martin, Russ, Rafe and Jim.  (Thanks for connecting us, Martin!)

    Now that’s how technology is supposed to work.  The only hard part was figuring out who was talking on what phone!

  • Gobble Gobble

    Happy Thanksgiving.  I expect to be offline most of the day.

  • Sexy 7700

    I was poking around the Nokia press page and stumbled upon a new picture of the 7700.  It really has that geek sex appeal.

    More! I want more!

  • Thoughts on Mobile Multimedia

    I sat in on part of the Nokia 2003 Capital Market Days last night, along with Russ and other scattered throughout the world.  Particularly I caught the end of Enterprise Solutions [pdf] and all of Driving Consumer Multimedia.  This is good, since I’m a one man 7700 fanclub.

    I was thoroughly impressed with the way the webcast was handled.  There was a small but bearable image of the webcast on the left, the current slide to the right, and resources (pdf files) below.  It made sense, I didn’t have to guess what was on the slide, and it was fast.  During one presentation, the speaker asked to go back to the previous slide, and the webcast did too.  I think I was 10 seconds or so behind Russ on the feed, but this was Close Enough to realtime for me.

    A few things screamed out at me during the presentation.  I’ll try to go in semi-chronological order as I look at the slides again. 

    Some of their stats were impressive, but they’re just stats, so you can go ahead and read them too.  They’ve definitely got their market share and are taking the long haul approach.  It looks like Nokia is trying to divide devices up in to several categories while at the same time noting that the lines are blurry and that there is tons of convergence.  I think it’s more of a safety net for the suits: show them that revenue is coming from more than one ‘section’ of the ecosystem.

    Interesting note: According to Nokia, there are two types of fun: active fun and passive fun.  A little shocking, I know, but interesting nonetheless.  Of course, this really just means that Nokia sees that different people use different devices differently, but the wording was interesting.  I believe that this is the point where Mr. Vanjoki noted that rowdy teenieboppers had different usage scenarios than say business users on a train (Hi Jim!).

    Slide 11 has some goodies.  There is a new word in my vocabulary now: Multiradio.  The near-term next-gen mobile media devices are going to have to deal with many different ways of connectivity.  You’ve got your cellular based voice stuff, your cellular data, Bluetooth, digital video, and WLAN, among others.  Multiaccess is going to be key in any mobile device of the near future, but is a necessity for a mobile media device.  Time will tell if some more ways of connectivity sneak their ways in to media devices on their way soon (like the 7700 perhaps?).  Eventually you’re not going to ask if a phone can connect via WLAN, it will be a given feature on all but the cheapest of phones.  Ideally I’d be able to connect via my home wireless network to stream the latest news report from the BBC and catch up on my RSS feeds via EDGE when I’m away.  I can’t wait.

    I think they’ve pegged the digital camera industry pretty well, but they’re a little too focused on themselves to see the big picture.  I am almost certain that they have underestimated 100 million still and video camera devices annually.  The figure is just too low.  I don’t really think that the megapixel race will ever really be over, just like the Megahertz race will always be around in one form or another.  Granted, you’re probably going to get a less noisy picture from a 4 megapixel chip as compared to a 5 megapixel chip, but customers have been taught that more megapixel == better quality.  It’s going to take a lot for them to think otherwise.

    Which reminds me, why does my cel phone still take images in 640×480?  The image quality sucks compared to my little 2 megapickle DSC-U20.  I think that Nokia is going to have to put higher quality imaging sensors on their phones in order to stay competitive.  If they know what is going on, they will.

    Anothing thing that jumped out at me while watching this presentation is that Nokia “gets” blogging.  I don’t remember Mr. Vanjoki using the word ‘blog’ but he definitely referred to it many times.  They know that posting pictures and annotating your life is going to become commonplace.  They know that you’re going to keep track of your friends and what they’re doing via your mobile phone.  Clue++;

    Again on slide 19, they’re alluding to high speed connectivity (including WLAN) with several screenshots of series 90 devices.  Can I safely infer that at some point in the semi-near future, Series 90 will mean WLAN connectivity?  I sure hope so.

    Now to the N-Gage.

    During the question/answer session, a reporter asked Mr. Vanjoki to elaborate on the 400k N-Gage units that Nokia claimed to have sold/shipped last quarter.  I don’t remember his exact words, but it came across as there are 200k happy N-Gage users out there.  So did he admit that they have only sold 200k units to end users by accident?  Did he mean to say 400k?  I’m not sure, but Russ and I both heard 200k.

    Another interesting development on the N-Gage front is Nokia-as-game-distributor.  He spoke many times of having to deal with a distribution system that already had its ways and its royalties.  They way he spoke of it, he made is sound like the game industry is as bad as/worse than the music or movie industries.  Nokia has a long way to go on the gaming front.  Hopefully N-Gage Arena will both boost sales and add to the positive gaming experience.  GPRS is too slow for all but the least network intensive (read: turn-based) games.  EDGE is the logical worldwide gaming solution, but I think that Bluetooth gaming is going to become the Next Big Thing in mobile gaming.  If I were a kid on a playground right now, I’d so be playing several friends in some locally mutliplayer shooter or strategy game.  Comeon now, you would be too.

    That’s about all that I had to write up after watching the press conference.  I’m really psyched about mobile multimedia, series 90, and the 7700.  I’m also excited to see the lines of device categories blur more and more.  I might end up being off on some of my predictions, but it’s going to be a cool world if I’m not.

    Now where did I put my 3g transmogrifier?

  • UIQ to Pocket PC Total Conversion

    Why on earth would you make your P800/P900 look like a Pocket PC?  That’s just wrong, and a little nausiating.

  • CERT Quarterly Update

    Here’s a synopsis of the latest regularly scheduled CERT Summary:

    Since the last regularly scheduled CERT summary, issued in September 2003 (CS-2003-03), we have documented vulnerabilities in the Microsoft Windows Workstation Service, RPCSS Service, and Exchange. We have also documented vulnerabilities in various SSL/TLS implementations, a buffer overflow in Sendmail, and a buffer management error in OpenSSH. We have received reports of W32/Swen.A, W32/Mimail variants, and exploitation of an Internet Explorer vulnerability reported in August of 2003.

  • T-Mobile Launches V300; Nokia Sprint PCS Phone

    DC-Baltimore Metro T-Mobile stores are going to start selling the Motorola V300 tri-band flip phone tomorrow.  I wandered in to a store this afternoon and overheard a bunch of T-Mobile employees asking about it and when they could get their hands on one.  Detailed specs can be found at Phonescoop, but if a bunch of T-Mobile employees are excited about it, Moto has got to be on the right track.

    I’ve used a bunch of cel phones in both flip and candy bar flavours, and I’m currently in quite a candy bar mood, though Americans tend to favor the flip.

    In other randomness, I saw an ad for the current lineup of Sprint phones in the paper today, and it was absolutely weird to see a Nokia in the lineup.  I think it was the 3588i CDMA2000/1xRTT phone.  It’s one of those phones that has decent specs, but I’d never plop down cash for it.  Of course the lineup of Sprint PCS phones has improved a lot since I dropped them as my carrier.

    Back to the weekend.

  • Mainstream Bluetooth Shenanigans

    Bill Thompson at BBC News writes about as mainstream as it gets about bluejacking, bluesniffing, bluedriving, etc.

    On the 2151 train from London Kings Cross to Cambridge I eagerly checked my mobile phone to see which other Bluetooth devices I could find, hoping to indulge in a spot of bluejacking or bluestumbling or whatever else I could get up to, only to find that there were no other Bluetooth devices within range.

    I’m sure that there are even fewer bluetooth devices per capita here in the US.  I tend to leave Bluetooth off unless I’m using it, and even then I usually don’t shout out to the Bluetooth world, “HERE I AM!”  Listening to the Shmoo guys talk about Bluetooth (in)security, I’m a parinoid little user.

    Yeah, I’m no fun.

  • MoGeek

    Jim Hughes (on #mobitopia):

    * JimH_S55 badly needs a phone condom for irc in the rain

  • Boeing 7E7 Interior Design

    The proposed interior design of the Boeing 7E7 calls out to me. It’s retro, sci-fi, and contemporary at the same time.

    Check out more at the Boeing 7E7 photo gallery.

  • All The Best Chips Come From Dresden

    Forbes:

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Advanced Micro Devices Inc. said Wednesday it plans to hold news conferences in the United States and Germany on Thursday for what industry observers expect to be the announcement of plans to build an advanced microchip plant in Dresden, Germany.

    My last Athlon chip (sadly a Slot A 750MHz) was made in Dresden. If AMD is building a state of the art fab facility there, it is guaranteed to put out some cool and groundbreaking stuff.

  • Croydon’s Law of Internet Connectivity

    I came to the following conclusion this morning:

    Croydon’s law of internet connectivity: Do not praise your ISP, as your connection will go down shortly thereafter.

    Luckily remote sibling protocol came through and everything is up and running again.

  • HP’s $1200 AMD64 Deal

    CRN:

    HP is attempting to position the 8000Z below its low-end Itanium-based machines and above its most robust Pentium-based PCs. The 8000Z will be available for purchase Wednesday for around $1200 plus or minus $100 depending on the rebates available. The Athlon 64 is manufactured by Advanced Micro Devices.

    Wow!  That’s a pretty good deal considering that the AMD64 chip alone costs over $400 on the street.  AMD64 motherboards don’t cost a ton more than their XP counterparts.  The rest of the required components are pretty much the same as a regular desktop machine.

    It’s those chips.  They’ve got to come down in price before myself and the many other homebuilders are going to start buying in any significant quantity.

    A desktop with a $1200 price point is definitely the first step.  Thanks, HP.

  • Thank You Comcast!

    Comcast has been slowly upping the download bandwidth on their cable customers across the US.  I received a hot tip yesterday that I should run some bandwidth tests to see if the new faster firmware had been pushed to my cable modem.  Sure enough, it has.  Right now I’m pulling down about 2782kbps.  The thumbnail above links to the full sized table.

    Thanks, Comcast!

  • IBM Powers Every Next-Gen Console

    El Reg:

    IBM has its finger in every next-generation home console pie: Sony, Microsoft and now Nintendo.

    Wow.  That’s what I thought.  Go IBM!

  • DC Area Sniper Convicted on All Counts

    Washington Post:

    VIRGINIA BEACH, Nov. 17 — Jurors reached guilty verdicts on all four charges Monday morning in the capital murder trial of accused sniper John Allen Muhammad after approximately 6½ hours of deliberations.

    It took the jury just over 6.5 hours to come to that conclusion.  The jury now decides John Mohammad’s fate.  Mohammad and Malvo terrorized the DC Metro Area for weeks last year.  One of the shootings took place about a block from where I work.  We pumped our gas in fear of being the next victim.  We were afraid to leave our homes.  Some of us died doing our everyday chores.

    It looks like Malvo’s defense is going to focus on saving him from the death penalty rather than trying to set him free.  Mohammad may not be so lucky.

  • Disney Ditches Animation Project

    The Washington Post:

    The Walt Disney Co. has shut down production on its animated feature “A Few Good Ghosts,” a decision likely to lead to more layoffs at its beleaguered Florida animation facility.

    The project was a mix of traditional and computer animation and honestly doesn’t sound like it had a whole lot going for it if Disney was trying to make money/break even on it.  The article also mentions a trail of layoffs in Disney’s animation division.