consolejockey

September 19, 2008

The Segway May Be Lame, But Its Inventor Is Not

Filed under: Cool, Design, Technology @ 2:08 pm

I just got through watching this series of videos of Dean Kamen from the All Things D: D6 conference, where he talks about his team’s work on the mind blowingly cool prosthetic arm nicknamed the “Luke Arm.” Due to the increase in effectiveness of body amour and huge advances military field medicine, wounded soldiers are far more likely to survive serious injuries than they were even in the first Gulf War. Though more soldiers are coming home alive, they often do so with missing limbs. Kamen and his team were tasked to create a new generation of prosthetic arms that come as close as ingenuity and technology can to replacing a missing limb.

The results of Kamen and his team’s work shown in the videos is inspiring and a reminder of two things. Design is all about problem solving and due to that, design, along with engineering and a host of other disciplines, can make a huge difference in people’s lives.

July 11, 2008

Apple is Just Another Electrontics Company

Filed under: Technology Tags: , — @ 12:46 pm

In the 90’s I was a serious Apple fanatic. I grew using an Apple IIc, which lasted me from middle school all the way through high school. In college I got one of the first PPC Macs, a Powermac 6160. From then on out I was a total MacHead. One of my earlier jobs was working for Power Computing, probably the most successful of the short lived Mac clone manufacturers. When Apple pulled the rug out from underneath the clone industry, and thus got me laid off for the first time, I became pretty disillusioned with Apple.

I bought myself a Dell PC and used Windows NT, then 2000 and now XP (sometimes even Vista.) I was a PC guy from then on, and over the years as I went from NT to 2000 to XP and Vista I’ve become pretty disillusioned with the PC platform and Microsoft. I tried various distributions of Linux which my experience I can only sum up with the phrase, Linux is pretty cool… considering it’s free. I still have hopes that Linux will someday be every bit as good as the Mac OS or Windows, but it’s just not there yet. And Abobe really needs to support Linux before I can use it as my main platform. I’m hooked on Photoshop, Fireworks and even Dreamweaver. Today I use a Mac at work and Windows at home. Occasionally I’ll check out the latest release of Ubuntu. I’ve become pretty comfortable in any OS, I’m not loyal to any particular brand.

I did break down and buy an iPhone though. My old smart phone was slowly dying and the price on the iPhone dropped so I jumped on the bandwagon. And pretty much immediately was reminded why despite all the hype, despite all the fanatics calling it the “Jesus Phone,” Apple is still just another electronics company. The iPhone lacked many of the features my three year old Windows Mobile smart phone had. The iPhone also had restrictions on it’s use that to me were unreasonable (you can only sync with one machine, you can’t use it as a drive, no MMS, no shooting video, up until yesterday no third part apps, etc.) and it cost more than my previous phone. Not that it didn’t do some things well, like web browsing and playing music and videos, but nothing that would make me consider it to be the best smart phone ever, or even a great smart phone.

And today, when I went to update my iPhone to the latest firmware, the long awaited and widely talked about version 2.0, and my phone was essentially bricked. In order to upgrade to the latest firmware, an iPhone owner has to reactivate their phone online. Apple apparently didn’t anticipate the load on their servers that millions of iPhone owners across the world would cause by trying to activate their phone all on the same day. Apple, a company that manufactures servers, apparently didn’t have enough servers. I’ve heard that those buying the new 3G iPhones are having to spend hours waiting in line, then hours waiting in store to actually purchase a working and activated phone.

Complain about Microsoft all you want, complain about Dell, HP or Sony, but you’re going to have to make a pretty lengthy and strong argument about why I should think that Apple is really any better, and in some cases not actually worse.

BTW, after about three hours my iPhone is working again, but I still can’t sync it to my computer.

June 18, 2008

Firefox 3 Portable Edition

Filed under: Coding, Technology, Web Tags: — @ 1:59 pm

I was wondering how long it would take before a portable version of Firefox 3 would show up on PortableApps. The answer is about 24 hours. If you’ve never heard of PortableApps, you should check out their site. They host a multitude of useful standalone applications that can be run off a USB drive or the like. It’s a handy way for web coders like me to have both Firefox 2 and Firefox 3 installed on the same machine and not have them interfere with one another.

L337 h4×0rz have produced stand alone versions of Internet Explorer, also for web coders to test their sites on, but Microsoft doesn’t support them, instead recommending coders test their sites using Virtual PC disk images with different browsers installed on them. The disk images have an expiration date, so you have to re-download them every few months. Not exactly the most efficient solution.

June 15, 2008

The Mother of All Demos

Filed under: Cool, Design, Technology @ 8:27 pm

I saw this posted to one of the many blogs I read, I can’t remember which one. Someone has been cool enough to post Douglas Engelbart’s weirdly accurate demonstration on how people would use computer workstations “in the future.” Originally presented on December 9, 1968 this demo, later called The Mother of All Demos, featured such revolutionary concepts as the mouse (which Engelbart is credited with inventing), copying and pasting, hypertext, video conferencing, and a whole lot more. This demo predicted these features decades before they would see widespread use.

Me vs. Me

Filed under: Funny, Technology Tags: , — @ 8:18 pm

I saw this over on BoingBoing Gadgets, a comparison of the Windows Me versus Mobile Me logos:

Me Logos

“Good artists borrow, great artists steal.” - Steve Jobs after Picaso

July 12, 2007

I’m getting all of you this for your birthday

Filed under: Funny, Technology @ 12:05 pm

Read it and… weep? I don’t really want to know. Get ready for (work safe) Grope on a Rope. There some other fun stuff on this site too (Gun Hair Dryer)

April 5, 2007

USB Drum pads

Filed under: Cool, Technology Tags: — @ 11:44 am

Who doesn’t want USB drum pads? Add one of these M-Audio mini keyboards and you can be Nine Inch Nails on a budget.

February 7, 2007

It’s so cool we can work while we’re on cocaine!

Filed under: Funny, Technology Tags: — @ 9:39 pm

Came across this wacky video on YouTube promoting Windows 386 (Windows 2.1, circa 1988). It starts out with your basic corporate BS, then gets all weird and freaky, 1980’s style. I think I’ve had nightmares like this.

March 23, 2006

The Chrysler Turbine Car

Filed under: Cool, Technology @ 6:41 am

While watching a show about cars on the History Channel I learned about a “jet” powered car Chrysler developed in the mid 1960’s. Apparently Chrysler had tried for a number of years to produce a viable turbine powered car, and in 1963 they finally found a solution that worked. The car had 80% fewer moving parts than it’s contemporaries and could run on any combustible liquid, including vegetable oil. From a Barracuda Magazine article:

Although the recommended fuel was diesel, the Turbine Car would run on ANY flammable liquid. At one point or another, Turbine Cars were run, without adjustments, on unleaded gas, kerosene, jet fuel, home heating oil, peanut oil, tequila and even Chanel No. 5.

For a variety of reasons, such as the odd sounding engine, which apparently sounded like a vacuum cleaner, sluggish acceleration and tightening EPA emission restrictions, Chrysler did not have the confidence to put the turbine car into production. It’s too bad really. I could see an evolution of this car being just as green (if not more green) as the diesel cars on the road today running on bio-diesel or vegetable oil.

Turbine Car

Some links for ya:
Wikipedia: Chrysler Turbine Car
Barracuda Magazine: The 1963 Chrysler Turbine Car

June 10, 2005

don’t fear the pants?

Filed under: Funny, Technology @ 4:20 pm

I just read a wired news article about a group of activists who got naked in the display window of an Eddie Bauer store in Chicago. They had warnings about nanotechnology written on their nude selves. I can’t decide if these people are morons or geniuses.

On the one hand, they were protesting Eddie Bauer because the company sells stain resistant pants. But these are no ordinary pants, they are “enhanced” pants. Say it with me now, “enhanced” pants. The pants are enhanced on the molecular level by a process cooked up by a company called Nano-Tex. Is this stain proofing process nanotechnology, or Nano-Tex’s attempt to capitalize off a buzz word? Nano-Tex says it’s really nanotechnology, so lets just go with them on this one. It turns out the process uses extremely small particles of Teflon, which potentially could be absorbed through the skin, doing some damage… somehow. So the activists legitimately had a point to make, these pants might be bad for you. Better yet, these nano-enhanced-pants are part of a trend to embrace possibly dangerous technologies before adequate testing has been done to show that there are few if any draw backs. Nanotechnology could be a really good thing, if developed and used responsibly, but the naked people are claiming that Eddie Bauer, or really Nano-Tex, hasn’t been very responsible.

Nano-Tex says otherwise. The Wired.com article states that Nano-Tex “asserts that Nano-Tex’s products are independently tested for safety and meet all environmental, health and safety standards mandated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Consumer Product Safety Commission.” The EPA shut down the Ghost Busters in their darkest hour, can they really be trusted? Also, organizations like those mentioned above can be influenced by corporate interests. I also have to question how knowledgeable such organizations are about technology as new as stuff that falls under the category of nanotechnology. So again, score one for the graffitied nudists.

On the other hand, they got naked in an Eddie Bauer store front window. Is that really the best way to spark intelligent debate? Picture this, you’re at a cocktail party when you over hear some people talking about nanotechnology. “It could revolutionize manufacturing,” you hear one person say.

“The medical applications are mind blowing,” another responds.

“Some naked people at Eddie Bauer said it was bad,” you chime in.

“Holy sh*t, I never thought of it like that,” everyone within earshot exclaims.

You have to give the nudists credit, they did get national press and that could bring much needed attention to their cause. Or it could completely undermine their efforts by showing that their cause is championed by a bunch of exhibitionists with vague phrases written all over their bodies.

I don’t have a strong opinion one way or the other towards nanotechnology. But there are a few causes I do feel strongly about. If you know me then you already know which ones those are. I like activism, when it’s constructive. The kind of activism practiced by the Eddie Bauer exotic dancers draws more attention to the activists themselves than it does to their cause. I really think that what we need is less activists drawing attention to themselves and more people building a coherent argument as to why we should be weary of things like nanotechnology. The case can be made, and more people will listen if it’s presented in a more conventional manner.

Morons or geniuses? Somewhere in the middle, a little more towards morons in my opinion.

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