Technology oriented blog sprinkled with bits, bytes, pixels, wings and pistons...

May 2005 Archives

[ via Gizmodo ]

Just when exactly will the rest of the world actually do something original and stop copying Apple? This is a friggin disgrace. Geee, does it resemble any other device we have all seen from a certain fruit company?

'Intel mini' Prototype Picture: Code-Named 'Pandora' or 'Paradox':

intel_pandora.jpg

No sooner do we mention the 'Intel Mini' do pictures show up online of the prototype from AOpen, code-named 'Pandora' or 'Paradox' (there seems to be conflicting information).

Intel Mini Picture [SilentPCReview]

[ CreativeGuy ] has a great tip for Photoshop. Does anyone know for sure if using this tip can replace using Genuine Fractals or pxl Smart Scale?

PS: Increasing resolution in Photoshop:

91 Ps Resolution Scaling

There's an old rule that states you should NEVER increase the resolution of your Photoshop file simply by upping the dpi in the Image Setup dialog. That old rule is dying away fast.

Incase you haven't noticed, Photoshop CS offers Bicubic Smoother as one of its interpolation algorithms. Bicubic Smoother is virtually always the best way to increase the size/resolution of your image - including the old wives tale of increasing the size a very slight percentage over and over.

Of course, if you are downsizing your image, choose Bicubic Sharper.

Once you're done sizing the image, run the Unsharp Mask filter to clean up the edges - play with the settings to suit your needs. And remember, the quality of the enlargments still depends GREATLY on the quality of the original image, as well as the output device.

I think you'll find that Photoshop's Bicubic Smoother is, in most cases, better than the 3rd party image resizing plug-ins such as Extensis pxl SmartScale or Genuine Fractals Print Pro.

Future IT worker Shortage

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The Herald Sun has an interesting article on the future shortage of IT workers due to the decline in Comp. Sci. majors in universities.

"With a critical shortage of Information Technology workers projected in the coming years, it's crucial that university computer science departments do all they can to attract top students to the field, a local IBM official said Tuesday."

These people just don't get it. They wonder why nobody wants to dump tens of thousands of dollars into a so called "education", only to have their jobs outsourced before they can pay off their student loans. This is just typical university and corporate CRAP. What they really want is an over-abundance of IT workers in the field so that they can drive salaries DOWN and retain control.

As an IT professional, I can't imagine why anyone in this country would want a degree in this field. If anything, IT workers should have a degree in a DIFFERENT field so that when their IT jobs get shipped overseas, they have something to fall back on. When the university system and corporate america figure this out, then they will have the answers they are looking for. Changing the curriculum is not going to solve a damn thing. Keeping jobs in AMERICA and taking care of your most valuable assets (your Employees for you morons that can't figure that out) happy, THAT is what is going to attract more workers into the field.

Makes you wonder who the morons running the schools and corporate america are...and more interestingly, how they got there.

This kicks ass....thanks Engadget!

HOW-TO: Make a customized RSS screensaver in Tiger:

vince1

Allright, we all know a bunch of you OS X users got Tiger and went Yipee! over the RSS screensavers. Well they are pretty cool, but Apple news gets boring…so why not make your own for your obviously favorite website? With Tiger's Quartz Composer, you can make both standalone RSS applications and Screensavers which ends up being really useful or at least handy if you're an RSS junkie. Let's get going already. All you need are 2 things: A mac running Tiger (decently fast of course) and Xcode developer tools installed.

We'll go through the process of making a screensaver first. Go into your Developer folder and open Quartz Composer. Yes, it's very pretty. That's what it's good for, making pretty things. Choose "New Project" from the menu and choose Mac OS X RSS screensaver (see below)

vince2

What this serves as is the starting point for our RSS screen saver. It does the dirty math work for us basically. And when you click it and choose a name to save it as, you'll see a pretty scrolling Apple RSS screen saver. You will also see the underlying heart of Quartz. It looks like a bunch of squares and cubes hooked together with yellowish hoses. Apple has made it very easy for things to interconnect. You can just drag a hose to an appropriate spot to connect it (it will even light up).

So we don't want this screen saver right? We want to customize it. Make it our very own creation that you can brag about. There's 4 main parts when it comes to changing this:

vince3

#1 is our starting point. This is the RSS feed location. You'll want to click on the dot next to URL and a text box should pop up with Apple's RSS location in there. Let's enter something like http://www.engadget.com/rss.xml shall we? Good. You're done step one. Wait a few seconds and sure enough, Engadget's RSS feeds start popping up instead of Apple's!

Technically, if you're really keen on the glowing background and everything, you could just save it and be done with it right now. But that's no fun. Let's keep customizing.

#2 is the background. Double click the box and you'll go further into the composition and you'll see an all new set of boxes and hoses. If you want to make the background a static color combo, you can remove the hoses from the pink box that says Gradient. Choose your colors with the color wheel and it will remain the same. But what if you want to make the colors/direction/blending change? Easy. Look at that list to the right of all the functions/objects/interpreters etc. Find the one that says LFO. This is going to spit out a ton of random numbers for us thus giving us a dynamic variable (read: always-changing) background. Clicking "Type" allows you to mess around with what kind of mathematics it will use, but what you want to do is click on the dot next to Result. Drag your hose over to a variable on the Gradient. Say, Direction. Voila. Direction now will be a constantly changing thing. Or why not do a color? You can randomly bust out the hot colors like it's nobody's business. When done, look at the hierarchy tree above and go back to the root. You'll be back at our numbered chart section again.

#3 is the article title. The one we see in the middle. Double click the box and you'll be inside the guts of that. In the words of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,"Whoa dudes!" theres a lot inside here! Don't worry. Interpolation is the same as LFO, it busts out a slew of mathematical functions which means randomization. Grab another LFO from the side menu and throw it somewhere. Double click on where it says Repeat Mode and choose "Mirrored Loop". This will make a nice back and forth transition with whatever we're doing instead of it going all nuts like a normal loop would. It's kind of like a seesaw. With this you can really have some fun. Drag the hose over to either of the Billboard boxes and hook it up to Rotation. Ooh! Look! It's moving back and forth and floating! Mess around with all kinda of variables and what not. Just remember, if you hook it up to something like X-Position, know the following:

What you're looking at is an X/Y graph. Thus, X-Position that's negative goes to the left, positive to the right. With Y-Position, negative is down, positive goes up. Remember math class from middle school? Good. You're putting it to good use now. Quartz is really scaled so use decimals, not whole numbers. Ex: 0.8339 or -0.52252 instead of 4.5 or 8.5.

#4 applies just the same to #3 except it deals with the floating article content in the background. You can just delete the box entirely if you don't like it, or you can mess around with it, make it fade in and out and what not. You should have the hang of it by now.

When you're done your creation, it's time to save. Save it and quit, open your screen saver preferences and choose the one you just made in Quartz. Tada! Go you.

Now if you wanted to take it a step further (read: people/developers familiar with Xcode, Cocoa, and Interface Builder), you can start a new Cocoa Application in Xcode, edit MainMenu.nib, import the Quartz Preference Pane into IB, load your composition in, add a button or two, edit the menus, save it, and build it, you'd have a standalone RSS application that's pretty! Also useful if you spend a lot of time waiting for RSS to update! Now get out there and start messing around with Quartz! There's much more to be created...iTunes plug-ins anyone?

Now THIS poses some serious questions. XBOX and PS3 emulation on a Mac? That would ROCK. Anyone also notice that BOTH platforms decided to create form factors that work both vertical AND horizontal? Whas up with that? Gonna be interesting to see the thread on this one...

[via TUAW]

Mac Gaming: Xbox 360 and PS3 Emulators?:

xbox 360This is total conjecture; however, has any one else out there noticed that both the XBox 360 and the PS3 are running on G5 / PowerPC chips? There is also already speculation about Xbox 360 compatibility with the iPod and I think I read similar reports about the PS3, although I cannot now find the link.

So, the question is: with these similarities in architecture, could we see some nice hacks that squeeze OS X onto these two gaming boxes, or better yet, could we see some PS3 and Xbox 360 emulators for OS X coming out down the road?

Wicked wicked cool...

[ via Engadget ]


Sony HDR-HC1 HDV Handycam: world's smallest and lightest HD consumer cam:

Sony HDR-HC1

Sony’s not content to wow everybody with just the unveiling of the PS3 alone, so they're also putting out what's reputedly the world's smallest and lightest HD consumer cam. Like the QUALIA 002 and the HDR-FX1, the HDR-HC1 supports HDV and records in 1080i. At a mere one and a half pounds, your camera bag would be a smidge less burdensome with this thing in tow. Other features include a 2.7-inch hydrib touchscreen LCD, SteadyShot image stabilization, 90 minutes battery life, 10X optical and 120X digital zoom, PictBridge capability, and the ability to snag 2.8 megapixel stills directly onto Memory Stick Pro Duo cards. They're also saying it's the only HD camcorder that lets you take a 1 megapixel still shot while concurrently filming HD video. It's gonna roll out officially in July, though they omitted one of those finer details we'd rather like to know: the price.

Update:

Japanese reader Toshio says it''ll be out July 7 for about $1700USD. The Year of HD, indeed.

OS X v10.4.1 Goes Live

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Get yer updates folks, get 'em while they're hot. Updates include...

�Ģ file sharing using AFP and SMB/CIFS network file services
�Ģ using DHCP in wireless networks
�Ģ user login when accessing LDAP and Active Directory servers
�Ģ core graphics including updated ATI and NVIDIA graphics drivers
�Ģ synchronization with .Mac
�Ģ Address Book, iCal, Font Book, Mail, and Preview applications
�Ģ Dashboard widgets: Address Book, Flight Tracker, Phone Book, and World Clock
�Ģ creating and burning disk images using Disk Utility and System Image Utility (Remove)
�Ģ compatibility with third party applications and devices

Playstation 3 announced

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Ps3 Screen001
[via Breaking Windows]

Playstation 3 announced:

As expected, Sony has released the expected information on the upcoming Playstation 3, now the official name. Ken Kutaragi, designer of the console, spoke on its multimedia capabilities, including photo viewing and internet access. It will be backwards compatible with both the original and second generation Playstation.

It will run Sony's own Blu-Ray discs, their own Hi-Definition DVD standard. Wireless controllers will be the standard, though USB ports may allow for third-party controllers to connect via a cord. The slot for Memory Stick Duo cards could lead to some form of compatibility with the PSP.

Billingsoverviewmainwindow
Marketcircle today announced the release of Billings 1.0, a new application designed for the professional who tracks and bills detailed time. As a designer, I have been in search of a decent application that integrates everything that Marketcircle's Daylite has with a decent billing solution. By golly, I think they've done it!!! If this works even half as well as I think it will, these guys are going to have the industry on lock-down for the best all-around business management solution EVER (on a mac). Rock on Marketcircle!!!

Poppin' -n- Lockin'

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640
Apple does it again by posting a new ad just 1 week after their most recent Skate video. The new ad is called "Pop-Lock" and grooves to the beat of Daft Punk's Technologic.

iTunes updated to 4.8

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Indextop48Mac050905
Apple quietly announced an upgrade to iTunes today. The latest version is 4.8 and adds a few improvements to the mix. Version 4.8 includes ���new Music Store features and support for transferring contacts and calendars from your computer to your iPod (requires Mac OS X version 10.4 on your computer).��� There are a few other feature related to international ITMS, and video cataloging. Very cool stuff indeed. The question remains...where the hell is the Video iPod??? Could this be the first indication that video is indeed coming to the iPod?

Widget Manager

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Icon
Chalk this one up as a must have utility! Widget Manager is a Preference Pane for OSX 10.4 that allows you to inspect, remove, and disable Dashboard Widgets.

MSN and Yahoo via iChat

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Msn Messenger Logo 5

Yes, you read correctly. Someone has finally figured out how to use MSN and Yahoo through iChat AV!!! I dunno why the heck I didn't think of this myself since I use Jabber on my Treo 650 to do the same exact thing. Here is the article with all the how-to info. Thanks to allforces.com !!!
Smiley Large

Get yer skate on!

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skate




Apple has posted a new iPod commercial groovin to the tunes of Fell Good Inc. by Gorillaz. Check it out!

[Great Anti-virus piece via mrbarrett.com ...]

Mac Anti-virus: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly:

The state of anti-virus protection on the Mac (as I see it).

THE GOOD
There's a new kid on the block called ClamAV, an open source product that's regularly udpated. While its interface isn't as spiffy as the commercial-ware anti-virus apps, it still does a great job scanning. And it's free! Works with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger.

Sophos continues to be on top of their game and released an update for Tiger compatibility the same day the operating system shipped. Sophos is the best choice for large shops. I continue to be impressed with their product and level of support. Now, if only I could convince my own employer to switch.

THE BAD
Network Associates' Virex used to be a decent product. It was fast and updated regularly. It's eUpdate engine did a great job of keeping the virus def files up-to-date and was easy-to-configure. Unfortunately, much of this is no longer true. Virex is incompatible with components of Final Cut Pro, and so we must disable anti-virus in those rooms to allow the students to get their work done without mysterious crashes. Good AV software shouldn't interupt any application's standard behavior. Network Associates and Symantec have known about this conflict since FCP 4 shipped in the summer of 2003 but still have not updated their products to be compatible. Virex 7.5.1 and even the beta of 7.6 are both incompatible with Tiger, causing major processor hogging. Network Associates has given us no information on when version 7.7 will be released with the promised Tiger compatibility.

THE UGLY
Symantec Norton Anti-Virus continues to wallow in their ineptitude. Their product is designed for the home user (barely) and has little use in the Enterprise or large-scale environment. Its LiveUpdate mechanism is annoying, crash-a-riffic, and sloo...ooo...ooo...www. And since the release of Mac OS 10.3.9 and the latest NAV defs, it's been (I'm convinced) misreporting users swap files (virtual memory space) as being infected with a hacktool.underhand trojan. Users unaccustomed to having to deal with a virus/trojan on their Macs are panicking. Symantec's clueless tech support is having people wipe hard drives to deal with an issue caused by their own software. This thread at Apple's discussion boards is an interesting read. Most are arriving at the conclusion that they would've been better off having not installed NAV to begin with.

Should you have antivirus software installed on your Mac? Probably, but you shouldn't be over-worried about the threat of contamination. If you're lucky enough to work in a large environment, maybe you have Sophos available for you to install. Otherwise, download and install ClamAV. At this time, I'd avoid both Norton Anti-Virus and Virex, which seem to cause more problems than they solve, particularly if you've upgraded to Tiger.

I protect my Macs at home with ClamAV and a dose of common sense. Don't download and open mysterious attachments. And run your websurfing with the excellent PithHelmet, which blocks all kinds of behind-the-scenes activity that could potentially link you to unwantables.

NOTE: I have zero experience with Intego Virus Barrier.

P.S. Stumbled across this apparently new bulletin board set up to discuss issues with Virex.

Rootvalid20050429

So after finally migrating all my mail to the G5 running Tiger, I am finding little things here and there that used to work fine in Panther, and aren't so fine in Tiger. Once such beast is the use of Digitally Signed Certificates. Although I have successfully imported the certificates and verified they are seen by Tiger (looked in the address book and they show up there just fine), I can't seem to digitally sign, or decrypt encrypted messages anymore! What gives? Seems that I am not alone and there is some chatter about this in the Apple firums as well. Anyone had similar experiences? Sound off in the comments section...

Tiger Night Launch Pics!

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Apple The Falls

Sorry I haven't posted these sooner, but it's been a busy weekend. Here are some pics from the OS X "Tiger" Launch at the Falls in Miami....Enjoy!

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This page is an archive of entries from May 2005 listed from newest to oldest.

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