Gadgets, Technology, Diet, Nutrition, Audio Books, and Random Thoughts

Treo Vs. Sidekick: Sightings on Stage and Screen

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , , , — Levi @ 3:08 pm November 4, 2004

Having owned a Sidekick for a while, I’m very familiar with it’s reputation as a celebrity phone. Danger actually does list celebrities as one of it’s target markets! Personally I could care less who uses the phone I do, as long as it works the way I want. In other words, I’m totally not into the whole idea of supposed coolness because you where something or do something similar to a famous person. Many of the celebrities you see with phones visible from any company have actually been given the phone in the hope that they will increase it’s visibility and thus is clout. It’s kind of like a product placement, and while it’s possible that sometimes such deals are formalized in contracts, others I’m sure are just hopeful giveaways. And of course we all know that poor celebrities need all the freebies they can get!

So, with that in mind, I thought I’d try trumping the Sidekick’s cache of associated fame and basically beat it at it’s own game. I’m trying to gather a list of famous people who own and love their Treos. It may not be as flashy as those who own Sidekick’s, but I’m sure it will impress a lot more people to know that Lou Reed uses a Treo 600 than Lindsay Lohan. Maybe not teens or tweens, but guess what, companies, teens aren’t your only market!

So, I found another article about a whole bunch of celebrities who have Treo 600’s, mostly musicians as one would have it. Lou Reed, as I mentioned, as well as Peter Gabriel, Philip Glass, Branford Marsalis, Metallica, Aatronaut Buzz Aldrin and actor Kevin Spacey. Hmmm, no women. Apparently Matthew Broderick carries one as well.

In addition to celebs owning and using Treos in public, there is also Treos placed in TV programs and movies. Actually, seeing a Treo 600 used in a recent episode of The West Wing was what prompted all of this. Josh is seen using the phone in an attempt to reach Leo, the Chief of Staff. None of the Treo’s special abilities are highlighted – it’s just being used as a phone and that’s all. Also, a month or two ago I was flipping channels and saw a Treo on Disney or one of the other kids channels. There was a made-for-tv movie playing about a famous rock star who has dropped his phone with all of its scheduling and address info and this was picked up by a couple of adoring fans who then were trying to find him to return it. While this trumpeted a lot of cool features, they actually overlaid the Treo’s real screen with something that was computer generated to make it look a lot nicer and easier to read.

Well, if you know of other celebs you have the Treo and love it, let us know, even if you are that celebrity. Hey, we could have a celebrity war – Treo celebrities against Sidekick Celebrities. Hmmm, I see a new reality show in the making!

Update: Well, it looks you can add Howard Stern to the list – he talked about it on his radio show recently!

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Election Graphics

Filed under: Journal & Blog — Tags: , , , — Levi @ 12:15 pm

I love maps, and so have been fascinated with all the color coded maps that were used during Tuesday’s election coverage in the media. Boing Boing just posted a map by Jeff Culver that represented the states not as the polarized completely red and completely blue, but instead more of a spectrum between the two, since most of the states do not vote 100% Democrat or Republican. So you definitely get a different picture looking at his map. What I see is that the Eastern half of the country is a fairly similar mix, going from mostly bluish purple in the north to a more reddish purple in the south, with only Indiana and Alabama standing out from their neighbors in red intensity. The western half of the country seems more bit more polarized in terms of states, with the western and southwestern states and Colorado tending towards the blue while the plain states, Montana and Texas tending more red, and finally Wyoming, Idaho Nebraska, and Utah standing out as beacons of highly saturated red.

Of course this graphic, as most, doesn’t tell the whole story. It’s just one way of looking at the demographics. Part of the problem is that we are seeing things on a state-wide level here. What I think might be more useful would be to take the map and section it out by county. Even better would be to do it by precinct, but then if you are looking at a nation as a whole, precincts might be too small to make out on such a graphic. What one really needs is a way to smoothly zoom in and out, with colors changing as smaller areas of detail become discernable. Of course that is a monumental task and ultimately the data simply wouldn’t be there to zoom very far in, since there is to my knowledge no data that goes lower than precinct level. But theoretically you could get to street level or at least a 5-square-blog area. Getting to individual homes would be impossible both for reasons of privacy and because many people live in single households. Then you encounter another variable, which is population density. None of the current graphics represent this important factor, but I suppose you could do this by creating a third dimension and adding elevation to more densely populated areas.

In any case, even before I saw this I was envisioning a graphic that would represent the entire country or at least one state in a more “granulated” but softer way. So Jeff Culver’s map motivated me to take an image of Virginia that I got from CNN’s election site with a breakdown of counties. CNN uses lightness to show how close a vote is, so a completely white county means the vote was almost exactly 50/50. The darker or more saturated the color (whether red or blue), the more lop-sided the vote was to one candidate or the other. I just plopped this into Photoshop, got the harsh county delineations out, and filtered it a bit to make it more blurry. A collegue also informed me that the colors on the graphic aren’t exactly red and blue, but more orange and purple. Being color blind this wasn’t obvious to me, but I didn’t make any specific changes to the color from the original except to make it slightly more saturated…

I even considered doing this for every state, but sitting here doing this for 12 hours didn’t seem worth it. Maybe I can find a similar graphic of the entire country and just do the same thing for that one…

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Elections and site problems

Filed under: Journal & Blog — Tags: , , — Levi @ 3:41 pm November 2, 2004

I apologize to readers out there who’ve been tryin to get to the site over the last couple of days. Apparently my blog host, Blog City, has been dealing with Denial of Service (DOS) attacks because of the elections. They indicated that the sites that were being attacked specifically were pro-Bush, so I guess that means Kerry/Edwards has the hacker vote! Which could come in handy if those voting machines are as hackable as some suspect! But really, such attacks are completely idiotic if they are indeed substantiated. Blog City is based in Scotland, hardly a bastion of conservatism, and hosts blogs of all political leanings. Cutting them down is hearting everyone and goes against the whole idea of the internet – everyone should get their say, no matter how much you disagree with them.

Update: Well, it does seem that Blog City isn’t the only site having problems right now. I’ve had issues getting to Boing Boing for some time now. Boing Boing, although not completely political in its subject matter, does lean to the left when it does express political viewpoints. So I wonder if there is just some general traffic issues with the net on a day like today or if there is indeed a movement by partisan hackers to take down sites they don’t agree with. Blah!

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Still no sync for Sidekick – on Macs

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , — Levi @ 3:30 pm

While this story broke last week, there’s been no more news since and I’ve been wanting to throw in my two cents.

T-Mobile still refuses to allow third-party developers to offer people the tools they need. It’s as if Dell were to lock down their PC’s and only allow people to install hardware or accessories that they decided (based on who knows what) they wanted to offer.

Mark/Space is the company that developed the sync product, and they actually did it many months ago. When Danger offered their latest Sidekick II through T-Mobile in September, sync was offered as an add-on for a nominal fee through Intellisync, but it was a sync solution only for PC users. Intellisync, as far as I can tell, does not make software for Macs. So there was great hope recently that with the offereing of PC sync for the Sidekick II, T-Mobile would finally approve the release of the Mark/Space sync for Macs. But apparently this is not the case, as MobileWhack quotes a message from the missing-sync-hiptop-talk mailing list at Mark/Space:

“Unfortunately we have not been able to reach an agreement with Danger, and at this point are not expecting to.”

Here we go again!

I owned a Sidekick for a year and a half until I finally made the move over to a Treo 650 last June mainly because I was fed up with T-Mobile’s refusing to release a sync solution for Sidekick users, even though one had been developed and was actually being offered by other providers who offered the Sidekick. Equally important, in my view, was the fact that the Treo employs the Palm operating system and one can download any and all Palm programs, which number in the thousands. Users don’t give up their support if they load these programs, and no one needs approval to develop or offer such to the users. This type of environment has proven to be instrumental in how popular Palm devices have remained, but also in how Linux grew in popularity. Heck even on the mainstream PC and Mac platforms, there’s no approval process. This seems to be one of the few environments where a company has decided to lock things down so tightly that it makes all the decisions and apparently it only wants to offer a small subset of what developers are creating.

What I don’t understand is why. Why does T-Mobile want to stifle development? Why do they want to hold this phone hostage? It seems to go against all marketing logic and the trends in operating systems and software. I can only believe T-Mobile has some clueless marketing people that want to cripple the phone because they want to control not only who it’s marketed to, but who it’s sold to. Perhaps Intellisync is working on a Mac version (although I doubt it since they don’t appear to have any other Mac products) and T-Mobile is keeping the competition down based on some earlier agreement? Who knows. At this point it seems pointless to guess anymore. T-Mobile is either clueless or completely mean-spirited, or both. They deserve to be abandoned not only for this, but for refusing to get it even after everyone in media and their user community has told them how idiotic they are being.

Luckily I don’t have to deal with this issue anymore, but my wife has a Sidekick II, and although we don’t use Macs, it still means that she has to deal with a phone that could be so much more than it is, but never will be because of this corporation’s utter stupidity.

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Listen Before You Vote

Filed under: Journal & Blog,Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , , — Levi @ 6:59 pm November 1, 2004

Sorry for getting this out a bit late, but all you undecided voters still have a day to figure it out. To help you do this, you can sign up with Audible.com who has recently put together a new site called Listen Before You Vote (this site is no longer available) that’s devoted solely for highlighting their politically oriented Audio Book files. Audible.com has been offering a service for downloading or streaming audio books, radio shows, and newspaper and magazine transcripts through your computer or downloaded onto your iPod or other portable player for at least 5 years now. They’ve amassed quite a collection of titles, including lots of political stuff. While it’s unlikely that you’ll be able to listen to more than one or two full books before you have to vote tomorrow, there are a number of items that Audible has been offering for free which will consume a lot less of your time, including The Economist’s Swing State Report, various speeches (from the Democratic and Republican conventions), debates, public hearings and congressional reports (like the 9-11 Commission’s), etc. This is a nice way to preview the service and see how the audio sounds on your device. For politicos I’m sure that the reports and hearings will be fascinating, but personally I find it a bit hard concentrating on such stuff. Give one of their politically oriented audio BOOKS with a good narratore, though, and I’ll be captivated, or appalled, or incredibly amused, as the case may be.

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Hackers Vs. Big Media (with Technology Companies In The Crossfire)

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , , — Levi @ 11:02 am

It occurred to me recently how we have this silly game between technology companies on the one hand and hackers on the other. The technology companies produce a gadget or software that is really useful, like the Treo, or the iPod, or TiVo, etc.

These companies often have to play a careful game with content giants because that’s what a lot of them are about – the iPod is about music, TiVo about TV and movies, etc. They want to provide something that consumers will find useful and that they will be able to use in as many ways as they can but the content companies are afraid that this will translate into mass copying of all their copyrighted materials causing people to stop buying these at the prices that keep these industries saturated with money. It is that money that offers both a stick and carrot to the technology companies. They see the stick of litigation and regulation, and the carrot of simply vast quantities of money that could potentially help with their bottom line in some way.

Then there are the hackers (and when I say “hackers” I mean anyone who is actively trying to disassemble technology in ways that they feel will benefit them and others, no matter the intended use of the technology or laws prohibiting what they want to use it for) who think it is everyone’s right to be able to use the technology in a completely free way. There should be no copy protection or other hindrances to viewing content that they feel should be free or almost free in the first place.

The battle, then is not really between hackers and technology companies. Tech companies are simply caught in the crossfire because it is in their products where the battle takes place.

I understand both points of view, but the extremism on either end can get a bit ridiculous. The movie, music, and publishing industries have consistently been against technologies that would give almost any power to consumers in deciding what they want to watch or listen to, how, and when. They tried killing the VCR, which ended up providing movie companies with untold billions. They tried killing MP3 player technology and file sharing, but Apple’s iTunes has shown that giving users the ability to buy and download individual songs for a low price is something that can generate revenue as well. In general, these industries have been fighting a very defensive battle against technology and even their own consumer in the ultimately doomed goal of maintaining all control over their content. Technology has also provided a cheap means for producing high quality audio and video recordings, and so there’s been an unleashing of independent product that sells for much less than the traditional stuff from bloated industries which need to support legions of lawyers (litigating for their copyright infringements), huge marketing campaigns (becoming less necessary as the Internet provides huge word-of-mouth networks, and the ability to reach vast numbers of people with little or no cost), and huge executive salaries (not to mention ridiculously large salaries for actors and other performers). Much of the independently produced content can also arguably be considered a lot better than the mass-market stuff because it is not tightly controlled by marketing departments employing focus groups. It more truly reflects the true vision and creativity of those who made it.

Hackers have arisen partially as a response to the arrogance and greed of the content companies – in addition to their naiveté in regards to technology. But the fact of the matter is that all too often they are simply creating a means for people to copy things illegally. Some times the laws are still in dispute and/or they don’t make sense. However, when you buy a piece of content with clearly defined restrictions against copying, and then make copies for all your friends, the charts only see the profit from one sale, when it was obviously good enough for many more than that. Thus the artist is deemed to be not as worthy as he really is in such a sales-centric industry, and he is less likely to be supported in a similar type of work in the future. Hackers have a kind of skewed “civil disobedience” mentality that argues that if the laws are stupid and can be circumvented easily without what they consider real harm to anyone except for the companies that they deem as evil, than they have every right, perhaps even a duty, to break these laws. In the same way, there has developed this outrage to anything a company does to try to hold on to its customers, really any hindrance that it puts on its customers to leave them. So contracts that hold people to a regular subscription payment (with a large cancellation payment tacked on) are condemned. However, this goes even further with the indignation even over the lack of a way to unsubscribe from a service (whether or not a fee is levied) via an online button. Apparently having to make a phone call which might take 20 minutes is too much of an imposition. When some functionality is removed or not allowed in the first place (while still being possible for people who understand the technology), the hackers are incensed. It’s not enough for them to be able to hack sometimes, but instead they feel it’s necessary for such questionable functionality to be made easily accessible by all.

There is also this kind of weird “don’t ask don’t tell” relationship between technology companies and the hackers. Technology companies are straddling a fence. They want to show publicly (and privately) that they are all for keeping the content companies’ materials free from being illegally distributed, so they simply don’t make this possible for the average user. However, hackers (and really anyone who does a little research by reading online forums or mailing lists) can and do easily find ways to circumvent these controls. Their seems to be a wink and a nod in many cases as the technology companies don’t go the extra step of filling holes in copy-protection security schemes and thus defeating the hacker’s abilities, or at least making them jump through more and more hurdles – at least in most cases. Perhaps they understand that it is ultimately a losing battle and one that does not justify lots of resources. Perhaps it is partly because they themselves are hackers in one way or another and they really don’t want to totally defeat this group even if they could, because they know that consumers crave flexibility and control, and that limiting these things will ultimately kill their products.

iTunes, Audible.com, CDBaby, and CinemaNow, among others, have shown that people are willing to spend money on content if they feel it is a reasonably priced. The technology that has made copying possible has also meant, as I mentioned before, that many more people can create music, video, and of course simple written words, such as you see here, for a mass audience at a very low production and distribution cost. This overabundance of content shows that people want to see a large variety of different types of content, not the very strict areas that media companies think will sell the best, but it also inherently decreases the individual value of a piece of content because there is so much of it to chose from. Because these other choices are growing in number and are available at a much lower price that doesn’t involve voiding one’s warranty or breaking the law, they become more and more attractive. The large media companies need to understand this and they need to do something radical or else they will fade into nothing. This may not happen tomorrow, but it will happen. Of course it will mean that they will have to get a lot leaner. Justifying huge salaries at the expense of incredibly inflated costs is becoming more obvious and less accepted by the average consumer, who would rather support the actual creator of the content and not minions of lawyers and marketers. Neither do many want to keep content creators swimming in money, no matter their adoration. People want to support the artists they admire so that they can continue to churn out the stuff they like, not to support lavish lifestyles or expensive drug habits, the latter of which often sadly seems to come hand in hand with sudden vast wealth, especially at younger ages.

I suppose both sides of the coin have a role to play, and maybe even hackers will become less of an issue if media companies become savvier about consumers. In the end, we are still a capitalist society that bows to market forces. If people get pissed off enough at media companies as more independently produced work is released at a much lower costs with word of mouth on the internet eclipsing the now skipped over commercials (thanks to TiVo) on TV, these large companies will eventually implode. Their desperate attempts to control their content completely do not need to be battled by illegal means, because eventually newer, cheaper, independent content will supersede it in popularity. Certainly, if the knowledge and desire is there to “hack” a technology without using that hack to create illegal copies, but rather simply to allow a purchaser to viewed/listen to/read a piece of content in a way that’s more convenient, I’m all for it. Otherwise, I think some of the less reasonable hackers need to have some self restraint and instead of using illegal means to obtain some content they want but just think should cost less, they should vote with their feet by simply supporting the companies, artists, and industries that they feel are “getting it right” by allowing for greater flexibility and lower prices, and not buy, and not watch, listen to, or read, content that is from companies that are clueless. Otherwise, it is just taking the law into ones own hands. Certainly we can all agree that it’s a positive thing to legally fight against laws we feel are unjust, and Electronic Frontier Foundation and others have done a tremendous job in this regard and have fought to keep many consumers’ rights intact. The same money that has kept these large industries afloat for so long also helps them keep their stranglehold on these laws to some extent, since laws are written and/or made into laws to begin with by politicians and politicians need money to fund their campaigns for reelection. So in some ways that works against the freedom that many of us would like to see, but this just means that individuals should speak out more (as opposed to expressing themselves by ignoring the law altogether), and financially support those entities, like the EFF, that are trying to legally fight these battles for us as consumers.

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