Archive for September, 2007

Photo Booth - A Favorite Office Distraction

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Photo BoothIn the week or so since we have gotten our brand new iMacs, one of our favorite activities has been to step into the Photo Booth with our iSight camera and take crazy pictures of ourselves. Some of the effects (Sepia, Black & White, Glow, Comic Book, Normal, Colored Pencil, Thermal Camera, X-Ray, Pop Art, Bulge, Dent, Twirl, Squeeze, Mirror, Light Tunnel, Fisheye) that you can do in Photo Booth are more or less normal, but those are too boring for us. Bulge, mirror and twirl gives you some some really wild pictures. We like to send these to each other first thing in the morning, in between projects, when we need some silly time — you get the picture. Say cheese! Aren’t these flattering?

Some Shameless Familial Promotion

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Orquest Alto MaizI just received an email from my Dad the other night notifying me that his band, Orquesta de Jazz y Salsa Alto Maiz, just made it onto iTunes. This is fantastic, not only because Alto Maiz is a wonderful, energetic, 11-piece salsa powerhouse, but because it’s something I’ve been pushing towards for over a year now. Regardless, they’re also on CD Baby, but if you just want something to make your toes tap, check out a song on iTunes. It’s only 99 cents.

Productivity Update (Super Mario World)

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Since we have new Macs, we have new iSight cameras and iMovie. So let’s see what kind of video love we can get goin’ on:

First Impressions: A Week With The New iMac (part 1)

Friday, September 21st, 2007

As I previously mentioned a few days ago, we received a few rather large packages. Though I was initially disappointed that the contents weren’t edible I began to drool anyway as the giant, plain brown boxes turned out to each contain a brand new iMac. Not a bad Monday post-lunch-coma surprise. So despite our massive workloads and looming deadlines we grabbed the scissors and got unpackin’! http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1199/1398742766_58a1a07a1a.jpg?v=0

Casey (pictured) and Katy were the quickest to toss everything off their desks an get their new iMacs up and running. Not that unwrapping and plugging in the one power supply cable, keyboard and mouse and hitting the switch takes more than 45 seconds. We all gathered around to watch the way-too-over-the-top Apple welcome video and then remembered that there were five of us (Molly was out of town country) and there were five iMacs. So we all started moving.

What then followed was eerie silence punctuated by occasional mouse clicking and quick, short gasps. Katy was already zooming around, waiting for us on iChat and Casey had the spinning-pinwheel of death while trying to migrate his old Mac’s data (I’m sure there will be another post on this drama later). I plopped the 24″ beast on a spare table in our cave and waited. Patiently. Here’s essentially what I had in front of me (too busy to document things at this point):

awesomeness

Yeah, okay, it looks nice, and it is shiny, bright, smooth, whatever… but the 24″ model is gigantic. I wasn’t even unsatisfied with my previous non-widescreen 15″ glossy monitor, but I realized that I could never go back.

Then Katy video chats me. And I no longer have an excuse to get up and go see anyone in the office. Maybe. But even though this technology has been around for several generations of Macs now, it’s new to us, and we love it.

Of course shortly after startup I’m prompted with about 20 software update requests which I grudgingly proceed with, only to have to reboot, which I learn is fine because it takes all of 30 seconds. Wow.

After that everything is kind of a blur. I do remember occasionally blinking and nearly missing my bus home.

* * *

So skip ahead a few days (to today). I’ve been using the iMac for a full business-week now on projects ranging from interactive Flash construction to logo and web design. And some important Photo Booth sessions (all project related). Let me start with the gripes:

I still can’t get over the size and clarity of the display. After 5 days of use though I did notice a few smudges and fingerprints so I decided to try out the cleaning cloth that came in the box. Or at least I thought it was a cleaning cloth. Had I seen this video first I might have gone about things differently, but I thought “hmm, a nice smooth black cloth, perhaps I can simply wipe down my screen.” I pulled my hand back in terror as half of the fabric seemed to be left on the screen. And yet I wiped again to get rid of it, only to leave more particles on the screen. Not cool. So of course I resort to blowing on every inch of the screen until it is once again spotless. Ugh.

thinThis next one is more of a love/hate sensation: the keyboard. I was more than a little exciteed to use this modern marvel only to become more than a little disappointed in the on-keyboard USB hubs. That initial “nifty” feature is now the one major annoyance of my new iMac life. The picture here is deceiving as it appears the USB jack is flush up against the side of the keyboard, but in fact it is set in about half an inch or so. This might look prettier, but it 1) is a pain to quickly plug something in without fumbling around (which I might hopefully improve at with time) and 2) flash/jump drives with even a little bulk either have to bend in order to fit or simply don’t fit at all. Not cool.

The remote. I’ve never used front row, and after trying it (and accidentally connecting with my Boss’s MacBook Pro in addition to the new iMac) I’m not impressed. There seems to be a bit of a lag time on the button press to screen response, and even after I synched-up the remote up with my machine I can’t really get into it. Maybe it’ll come in handy during all of those Keynote presentations I’ll be creating.

The last gripe is a small one, but again, is has to do with input jacks. I’m all for the sleek, unblemished design but does not seem practical to have all inputs on the back of the machine. This has always been a mac problem, but for someone like me who is dependent on the firewire and audio-in plugs it is another thing to fumble around with. But it gets weirder. Because the screen is SO big, I like to put more room between my eyes and the display. I’ve pulled my keyboard/mouse back as far as I can on the pull-out drawer, and it still feels close. This then requires some serious stretching of all cables to the back across my already limited space. Clearly, not a bad complaint to have, so this more of an annoyance than anything else.

Now on to the praise (that’s it, really, only a few minor complaints, most of which are related to my own obsessive compulsive tendencies rather than anything else):

I’ve never seen such great image quality on a Mac. Never. This has redefined my way of looking at a computer all day and even allowed for another level of detail in my design. Though we made the mistake of downloading and sitting through the HD trailer for Beowulf on my machine, it was a beautiful waste of time.

This puppy is fast. Maybe it’s all that Intel stuff that I’m won’t pretend to understand, but it seems quick. The quicksilver G4 that I had been using was pretty tricked out, and now I can hardly imagine going back to it. Going home to use my 12″ powerbook is almost laughable now (w00t 12 minutes of fully-charged battery action!). Everything just feels faster, and so of course I feel more productive. But those minutes in Photo Booth have been adding up fast!

The Mighty-Mouse! I had been using a previous generation that was slightly heavier and less sensitive. The new pure-white mouse is still something I can’t imagine other people living without. Though I’ve accidentally activated Exposé on a number of occasions, sideways scrolling and custom button programming rules. ‘Nuff said.

* * *

I’m sure both of these lists will grow as time goes on, but if anything, they will mostly be relative to my own preferences and quirks. Check back for part 2 which will likely cover some more completely subjective opinions!

Thank you.

Welcoming the NY Times Back to the Interweb

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

It’s been two long years since the New York Times walled off large parts of their website to the outside world. Their “Times Select” service aimed to charge a monthly fee to read opinion pieces by the likes of Maureen Dowd, Thomas Friedman, and so forth. The Times figured that their writers were so good, so much better than all the other bloggers out there, that people would gladly pay a premium fee for those opinions.

Of course, it turned out that people can get just as well-written pieces of opinion journalism elsewhere on the Internet, for free. The Times’ op-ed writers were effectively removed from the annals of online discourse, with only 250,000 subscribers to keep them company.

That all changed today! The New York Times, seeing that they could actually make more money from advertising by putting their content out there for free, opened up their opinion sections and even large portions of their archives. It turns out that Google and Yahoo-driven search traffic actually brings more people to their site than visitors to their direct pages, which tells you something about the future of content delivery.

So to celebrate the big day, here’s a link to an old NY Times story from 1995 when a little company called Netscape wanted to start charging 40 bucks for its browser (in retrospect not the best idea).

Welcome back to the Internet, Times.