Wednesday, August 30, 2006

As Promised

As promised here are couple of pictures of the new house. This is my newly painted bathroom, which was covered in green vines everywhere before. It almost hurt my eyes before, but now its relaxing.
Bath-repaint


And this is a Giant hole which is in my back yard. The previous owners had an above ground pool which they sank into the ground a bit. Still woring on finding an excavator to fill it in.
Giant hole

And this would be a nail in my brand new tire. I'm trying to get someone to patch it, but it looks like I may have to do it myself because all the shops are afraid of lawsuits.
Nail in Tire

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Google Calendar Revisited

Well, I have finally had some time to try out Google Calendar, and I must say that I'm quite impressed. Not only is it easy to use, but it seems to have much less problems than Outlook's Calendar. Putting this on my customized google start page combined with the agenda displayed, it has become quite useful. Not only does it offer 99% of the features I want, but I can access it from practically anywhere. It is also fast as can be, no long loading times. On a similar note, I have noticed that Google Maps seems to be functioning much more smoothly in the past few months.

If you have not had a chance, then I suggest you give it a shot.

On a different tangent, I am finally getting stuff moved in at the house and walls painted. I also got my Camera back from repair finally, and hopefully can post some pictures soon.

HDCP + 32bit Vista = Crap

As an update to my earlier post about HDCP, it looks as if there is more bad news about the future of High Definition video. The following is from a post on slashdot:

"Pity the Vista user with a 32-bit CPU. Senior Program Manager Steve Riley announced today at Tech.Ed Australia that full HD content shall only be played at the full resolution where only signed drivers are used — only in the 64-bit version of Vista. From the article: '"Any next-generation high definition content will not play in x32 at all," said Riley. "This is a decision that the Media Player folks made because there are just too many ways right now for unsigned kernel mode code [to compromise content protection]. The media companies asked us to do this and said they don't want any of their high definition content to play in x32 at all, because of all of the unsigned malware that runs in kernel mode can get around content protection, so we had to do this."

Well... great no HD on Vista on any of my PC's! I really hope they get all these restrictions and problems worked out soon, because it's looking like I won't be wanting any HD media I'm restricted to playing it to it's full ability. It looks like downloading already ripped versions of the HD content will be much easier than worrying about all the hardware and software compatablility, especially when I plan on building a MediaPC soon.

Here is an excerpt from a comment in the post that I find insightful:

"The DRM will always be broken: somewhere inside that cable box or LCD monitor, is an unencrypted digital signal. With the right test equipment, somebody will figure out how to get it back into a computer and record it. From there, they need only to compress it with one of the many HD-capable codecs and video formats available and playable right now (H.264 inside an AVI or Quicktime container), and dump it onto the P2P networks.

This smacks of what we saw happen with MP3 music a few years ago. The music companies feared it, and hoped that they could kill MP3 by using proprietary formats instead (anyone remember ATRAC3?). Instead of buying the legitimate, overpriced garbage that the recording industry tried to foist on them, consumers ignored it and got their MP3s illegally instead. By ignoring demand, the music companies gave up billions of dollars in revenue and created a generation of buyers who got used to getting music for free.

The movie and video companies, together with electronics manufacturers, have an opportunity now to not repeat history. If they give the market what it wants -- HD movies without onerous restrictions, playable on the hardware they already have (which by-and-large is technically capable of the task), sold at a reasonable price -- they could start making money immediately. Instead, I think they'll probably resist the inevitable outcome as long as possible, and waste millions (or billions) of dollars in misplaced technological development and make criminals out of their would-be customers in the mean time."


Saturday, August 05, 2006

Turbo power

HERE is a site that reviews the Art of Turboing. Basically it shows you how to get something done after you get stuck in the 7th ring of tech phone support hell.

Oh, and by the way... 5 days until moving day!