Thursday, June 27, 2013

History of Aspect Ratio

If you want to waste 15 minutes to learn and enjoy a great history lesson on Cinema and Aspect Ratio, this is worth the time to watch:
Direct Link: http://vimeo.com/68830569

You'll learn how we got 4:3 and 16:9 aspect ratios.

[フレーム]
The Changing Shape of Cinema: The History of Aspect Ratio from FilmmakerIQ.com on Vimeo.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Workspaces, Office, man cave ideas





I haven't been able to post any new gadget blog type posts in a while. I'm finishing up closing a deal on a new house so my attention has been elsewhere. This leads me to this new post.

With a new house, this geek will probably have to shop for new furniture for his workspace(s).

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Intel shows off first Thunderbolt 128GB stick

According to PCWorld, Intel is toying with the idea of a "Thunderbolt Stick."

Here is the world's fastest thumb drive (in prototype form). This is pretty much a Sandisk SSD in a thumb drive form factor versus your typical Flash NAND in USB 3.0 sticks. Yeah, it is kind of ugly but we have to remember this is just a prototype.


LINK: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2040903/intel-shows-worlds-fastest-thumb-drive.html





Thursday, June 6, 2013

Upcoming reviews

I am anticipating a few new items coming in this summer.
I'm pretty excited about some of the kickstarter projects I've backed.

First is the MiiPC
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/2102024857/miipc-power-to-the-parents




and Parallela
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/adapteva/parallella-a-supercomputer-for-everyone





I'm pretty certain the MiiPC and Parallela ARM based super computer will be coming this summer as promised. MiiPC has already sent out request for shipping. Furthermore, sites like engadgets have already done some hands-on look.

Kickstarter can be interesting and it can be suspense-fully risky. I am still waiting for feedback from ZionEyez. People are pretty much writing it off as a scam. Forbes even wrote a piece on them.

I'll report back if I actually get anything.


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Magic Mouse Carbon fiber bling

Who here likes carbon fiber?

Stickerboy has a nice collection of skins for the Apple Magic Mouse. I happen to pick up a carbon fiber skin set.

I need to work out the minor bubbles but it looks pretty good if you are into carbon fiber.










Wednesday, May 29, 2013

First Look: Korean export 9 inch PoPad HDMI MHL portable display


Have you ever wanted to use your 10" tablet as a portable monitor? I have and always wondered why companies haven't implemented HDMI inputs in their devices. Well, today I have what could be the next best thing. It is a Korean export 1280x800 portable HDMI/MHL monitor in a 9/10" tablet form factor. This is a rare bird you won't see often in the US - the iTechKorea Popad 9" portable HDMI/MHL monitor. Below, you can see it charging and providing external display for my Galaxy Nexus from a single USB MHL cable.



It also supports HDMI which means it can be used as a portable extended display for your laptop or computer.


Like the GeChic 2501m I reviewed months ago, this has similar I/O. It has micro HDMI, MHL, and USB. The MHL port also charges your phone while the micro USB port is used to charge the actual device.



The device is 240mm wide, 160 mm high, 12 mm thick. In comparison, the iPad 3/4 is 241.2 mm wide, 185.7mm high ands 9.4mm thick. The device is slightly narrower in height and girthier than the iPad. Here is a picture of it stacked on top of my iPad 3.




For now, this is a short first look. I will write a follow-up review when I have more time to play with it.


Friday, May 24, 2013

How to make yourself look busy at work with some terminal CLI apps

When I first started my career, my mentor showed me a pretty cool trick at the time. He pulled up his desktop screen (which at the time was the first fancy Silicon Graphics 20" LCD) and filled it up with four terminal windows and he simply ran "top" in each window. As a young guy in the business, I didn't know any better and asked, "whatcha doing?" He replied, "making myself look busy."

Supervisors, managers, and bosses may be clueless to the UNIX/Linux world. To them, screens with a lot of cryptic windows makes you look busy. It has worked for many people I know over the years and today, I'll show you some CLI (Command Line Interface) terminal apps to "make you look busy." I won't go into the obvious like vim, emacs, and real productivity console apps.

Since today is the slow Friday before a long three day weekend, this post is appropriate for those slackers. Look below.



Here I have the following running on my Thinkpad : mc, alsamixer, clmatrix, htop, w3m or lynx.


Going from top left:

mc
mc commander is a file manager. It makes you look like you are copying files. Sure, you may be really copying files but I just leave one window open with it. The blue background makes a good contrast and distracts from other windows.

alsamixer
If you are running Linux, you probably already have alsamixer installed. It looks like the metering tool for some energy nuclear turbine levels. Not really, it is simply the command line utility to control your sound card.

clmatrix (cmatrix under OSX mac ports)
This isn't really an app but it looks cool. It is an animated Matrix screensaver that runs in the terminal.

htop

htop is an improvement over the default top. It shows you CPU load and memory usage like your typical system/activity monitor. Believe me, anything with progress bars and scales looks important to the untrained eyes. Bosses think you are monitoring disk space or checking some load balancing. Maybe you are monitoring web traffic. Either way, look for any apps with meters and progress bars.

w3m or lynx

Those other apps are pretty much diversions for the real app you will be using.
Lastly, this is the most important thing to have. a text only web browser. There is the trusty old lynx but I use w3m which acts and behaves more like a desktop graphical browser and even supports mouse clicks.

You can also go to sites like craigslists, which over the past 15 years, has been very text-only friendly. It is great for searching for your new jobs.

If you are paranoid, run a tab and run one of the previous apps mentioned above. You can always toggle when the bosses come by.

Now go google those apps and figure out how to install them. If you are running debian, you can always do apt-get install 'program_name' like 'sudo apt-get install clmatrix'. And if you are running Mac OSX, you can probably get most of these apps via macports.



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