Wordle your day away!

Wednesday 2nd July 2008 - 9:59:32 AM

Wordle.net is a little online toy that takes a chunk of text, finds the most common words and makes a “word cloud” out of it, with the most commonly repeated words being bigger and so on. Very fun and nerdy waste of time. I popped over to Project Guttenberg and grabbed a poem there just for fun:


 

Endeavor home!

Wednesday 26th March 2008 - 8:06:50 PM

From launch to landing, I witnessed it all! Went over to the coast to see the launch 15 days ago, saw the International Space Station and Endeavor go over last night (Endeavor had already undocked and trailed behind by about 10°) and I just heard the double sonic boom as the shuttle passed south of here minutes ago!

Here’s the video I shot of the launch:

Launch of Space Shuttle Endeavor from def on Vimeo.

“BEST NAME” for President 2008!

Sunday 10th February 2008 - 8:08:27 AM

Here’s my list of some genuine 2008 candidates with the best names. This was inspired by a post in another forum from a guy who was having issues with Barack “Hussein” Obama because of his name, despite overall liking the guy because he was cool and liked to play basketball with the troops. I guess he could have worse reasons, but (especially after the last two “Who would you rather have a beer with?” elections) it’s hard to argue that this whole thing isn’t just a High School popularity contest in the end.

Here’s the Best Names list:

Blake Ashby
Claire Cruise
David Masters
Charles T. Maxham
Kat Swift

Here are some candidates that have NO chance:

Quay Fortuna
Michael “Jingo” Jingozian
Steve Kissing
David Koch

(Those last two should run together “Kissing/Koch 2008″)

Jeff “Petro” Petkevicius

(He apparently isn’t cool enough to have seen “Napoleon Dynamite” - no obvious “Vote for Petro” t-shirts on his site yet.)

“Average Joe” Schriner

(”Joe” also plays ball with urban youth, so he’s got that going for him.)

Da Vid

Happy Chinese New Year 2008

Thursday 7th February 2008 - 4:39:31 PM

OK, sorry, my one super power is the ability to close my eye when the shutter of the camera clicks. I have a different picture with my eyes open, but Gigi the Cat is not in it and she’s cuter than me anyhow.

Chinese New Year 2008

I painted the banners this afternoon, just for fun. They say “Peace in all seasons” and “Peace in all places.” The character on the door is an upside-down luck. Painted with tempera paints on red wrapping paper. Very authentic! Happy New Year!

Blu-ray Loses Format War!

Tuesday 8th January 2008 - 3:40:57 PM

“Blu-ray’s emergence as the format of choice is now inevitable,” Steve Beeks, president of Lionsgate films, pronounced on Monday at CES 2008. I disagree. As I’ve provocatively maintained for years now, both Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats are locked in a death spiral that will ultimately lead to the failure of both - at least in terms of HD movie distribution. Which leaves one question: If not Blu-ray or HD-DVD, then what?

Of course, I really don’t know how this “Format War” will turn out anymore than anyone else does, but it sure seems like both of these clearly superior format will fail just as spectacularly as Beta or Laser Discs did. One or both of these formats may be the next-gen in optical data storage, but that’s a whole other question.

DVD-Video
DVD-Video disc technology remains the fastest technology ever to be adopted in the United States. It took about five years for half of US households to get a DVD player and, today, market penetration is essentially saturated. I believe DVD-Video will be the last physical format we ever see for distribution of movies, however.

HDTV penetration, by contrast, is still below 36% according to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA - an industry trade group). Nielsen estimates that the number of people actually watching HD content on their HDTVs is only 14%, meaning that roughly 50% of those that own HD-capable sets are still watching plain old SD cable and DVD-Video discs. So the question is: What fraction of 14% of US households watching HD content are using the winning “format of choice” Blu-ray players? It’s hard to say, but HD - Blu-ray and HD-DVD combined - accounted for 1% of all home market movie sales in 2007.

Broadband HD
Most homes already have HD displays in the form of a computer monitor. And, when combined with the one of the fastest consumer technology ever to penetrate 50% of US homes - namely, Broadband Internet - we have the answer to our initial question: “If not Blu-ray or HD-DVD, then what?”

adoption-of-technology.jpg

The popularity of YouTube and other video services teaches us something else: people really don’t care about HD. Grainy, postage-stamp sized video of cats doing, well, crazy cat things seem to be endlessly entertaining to the unwashed masses, to the chagrin of high-priced ad agencies everywhere. And higher quality - but still SD-resolution - television and movies are also going mainstream, as sites like Hulu.com, Netflix.com Watch Instantly and networks like NBC and CBS come online in a big way, either for free or for a fee. Broadband HD can’t be far behind. It might be tempting to predict that 2008 will be the Year Broadband HD makes its debut - but anyone who’d make such a bold prediction would be a fool.

Vimeo, et al
Because it’s already here: Check out vimeo.com. If it makes you sick to watch your gorgeous HD video ruined by YouTube’s 320×240 blocky compression and monophonic audio, then this is where you should be uploading your video. Vimeo let’s you upload stereo HD video at 1280×720, of any duration, with the only limit being that you can only upload 500MB a week. At a reasonable data rate of 4,000Kbps using a high-quality H.264 codec for HD, that’s about 15 minutes or so.

Of course, YouTube HD and other HD Internet distribution services can’t be far behind. It’s almost impossible to imagine what we’ll be talking about in the realm of Broadband HD a year from now.