July 2, 2009

Today in Tech: E-P1 Point and Shoot Digital SLRish

Amatuer photographers and prosumers unite!  This week on Today in Tech, we have the Olumpus E-P1.  It’s a sharp looking, retro styled “Four Thirds” sensor point and shoot camera.  Those hefty DSLR’s you see people lugging around are so large because they have much larger sensor’s inside that process the images when they’re taken.  The E-P1 basically shoves that DSLR style large sensor into a smaller point and shoot body.  The concept is very smart.  The question is whether the intro DSLR crowd will want to give up some of the advantages for the smaller body and slick looks.

I love the concept of the camera.  The consumer tech industry has been continually making everything smaller and/or thinner for years now but this hadn’t necessary translated into the high end camera industry.  Yes, there were high megapixel point and shoot cameras but they didn’t offer the convenience of having accessory support for SLR type lenses and other accesories.

Advantages:

- Smaller size makes it great for elderly people who can’t carry heavy objects.

-  The look of a less modern style camera may disuade criminals from trying to nab your toy.  Or they’ll find out about this gem and start stealing shitty old cameras thinking that they’re just like this one.

- Retro styling will make sure you keep your street cred when you’re photographing hobo’s in your trendy New York Burrough.  Also will make you look way cool at local indie shows.

- Interchangable lenses and a large sensor to fit your equally large ability to take amazing photographs for your facebook/twitpic/flickr/myspace/linkedin account.

- Shooting 720p video of how awesome you and your friends are at your local hang out. (also good for the amatuer smut videoteer)

- Allows you to make up words like Videoteer

Disadvantages:

- shutter lag! A common problem for non SLR digital cameras. This is what makes those “cool” unexpected effects on your concert photos which can also be called those “really shitty” photo effects.

-That gaping 900 dollar hole in your pocket for the body with 2 lens set.

-Doesn’t have a setting specifically for shooting low budget pornography… yet.

Check out the full specs below:

  • 12.3 Megapixel Live MOS Sensor
  • Two new kit lenses (14-42mm M.Zuiko and 17mm F2.8 Pancake)
  • TruePic V image processor
  • 3.0” LCD screen (fixed, 230k dot resolution)
  • HD movies (720p) with stereo sound
  • Linear PCM sound recording
  • 3.0 fps sequential shooting
  • Built-in IS with max. 4 EV steps efficiency
  • Optional Adapters for all ZUIKO DIGITAL & OM lenses
  • Newly developed GUI for easier operation via Live Control
  • Automatic recognition of common scenes possible with i-Auto
  • Hipster Envy
  • Face Detection & Shadow Adjustment
  • Art Filters, multi-aspect ratios, multi exposure
  • In-camera raw conversion (including application of Art Filters)
  • Small & stylish design

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
June 22, 2009

Why I Love the Internet #2

Love them or hate them, it’s impossible to deny the popularity and pervasiveness of LOLcats over the last 2 years. While felines with poor grammar might not be everyone’s bag, icanhascheezburger.com was a great start for themed-humorous-image-aggregators. Their subsequent other sites, such as FailBlog and EngrishFunny have moved beyond the “Here is some funny text on a mundane picture” to collecting humorous tidbits from the vast internet.

A recent site I found called Item Not As Described takes great postings from craigslist. I can’t tell if this one is part of the ICHC family of sites or not, but it is very similar in structure.

This genius posting below is from the site:

And that, my friends, is why I love the internet.

by mashthekeys

Comments (View)
June 19, 2009

Palm Pre! The 2-Week Review

Ed Note: This was originally supposed to be a 1 week review, but I got farther in over my head with this than expected. I hope to add some future updates as the Pre progresses. —MtK

The waiting

For those of us who follow us on Twitter, you probably know that RP and myself “camped out” for the Palm Pre on June 6. Well, I was getting a Palm Pre, and RP was there for the experience (or, as he told others, to get his hands on a KRZR). My contract was up, and I was very eager to get my hands on this phone…I’d been following it for about six months or so, and convinced myself it was the “next big thing.”
Free image hosting at imagecave.com
HoboRonin awaits his KRZR
Not surprisingly, we weren’t the first ones there. We’d first tried BestBuy, but knowing that our local store was getting only one unit, we knew we were doomed should there be an individual sadder than I there. This was the case, so it was off to the Sprint store with us.

We were number 2 in line at the store, arriving at about 5:45. The gentleman in front of us arrived at 4:00am, and the guy behind us arrived immedately after us. RP, despite quietly mocking those of us geeking out about the device, made several jokes which got him accepted by the crowd. “What time is it? Oh, about eight oh PRE!”
Free image hosting at imagecave.com
Our small but content line at 6am, courtesy of Roams11 at PreCentral.net.

The remainder of the wait wasn’t bad, the other folks who showed up were pretty awesome—with the exception of one guy…I don’t know how to describe him any better than, like—somewhere there are (maybe) some children particularly embarassed of their father. When 10 of us were let in to purchase our Pres (he was number 11), he had his face pressed up against the glass, doing somewhat of a dance that someone does when they need to relieve themselves. The Sprint rep was very helpful, and even though I was #2,because I was the first person in who was already a Sprint customer, I was the first one out. The other geeks accumulated outside (the ones eager enough to be there early, but not quite early/eager enough to get one!).


The Device

For me, the form factor of this device was a huge selling point, for a number of reasons. While I enjoyed the overall form and function of the iPhone, I am someone who would require a physical keyboard. I do a lot of typing on my phone (between texts, emails, web surfing, etc), so having this keyboard was important. What’s nice about the Pre is that it has a keyboard, but it tucks away nicely. When the Pre is closed, the feeling is very comfortable and organic. It just fits and feels right in the hand. there had been initial reports of sharp edges when the phone was open, and while I’ll admit that while they stand out a bit, it is no where near the “razor sharp death trap” that the Gizmodo review made it out to be (Ed note—I love Gizmodo, but I think they really embarassed themselves with this part of this review…especially making a video of them slicing some sort of soft cheese with their review unit).

The front of the unit is simple, almost a featureless gloss black when the device is closed, save for the earpiece and the center button. The glossiness of the device is fingerprint prone, but I haven’t found it to be problematic. On the left side is the volume rocker, and on the right side is the micro USB door. On the top is a (yes!) standard headphone jack and a physical ringer off switch—something I truly appreciate. On the back you’ll find the Palm logo, the 3.2 megapixel camera, the LED flash and the speaker for the speakerphone. All said and done, the design of the unit is relatively clean and organic.

When you slide open the device—my unit slides easily yet solidly—the full QWERTY keyboard is revealed. The keys are slightly “gummy” like those on the Palm Centro, but give enough feedback to let you know that you’re typing. The keyboard is not as good as the keyboard on my my BlackBerry Curve 8330, but I think the comparisson isn’t necessarily fair, given both the reputation and design of the two devices. My only real complaint about the keyboard is the tight spacing between the keys down the center of the keyboard (T & Y, G & H and V & B). Otherwise, I find it easy to type with.

The screen is a gorgeous 320x480, 3.1” display; the same resolution as the iPhone, but packed into a smaller area. It is very crisp and bright. The screen is capacative multi-touch, and works very similar to that of the iPhone, allowing gestures (more on this later). The touch screen is very accurate, and I’ve had few mis-touches. One thing that’s neat about the touch screen, but takes getting used to, is that the touch area extends beyond the actual viewable screen. This leaves the area below the screen as the “gesture area,” a place where you can make gestures, such as to go back or forward, outside the viewable area of the screen. A few LEDs embedded in the front of the unit mimic the gestures you make, providing some input feedback.
Free image hosting at imagecave.com


WebOS

The Palm Pre’s hardware is good, but it’s still first generation hardware and certainly could improve. The operating system, however, is where the Pre REALLY shines. Like the iPhone OS, WebOS is very graphical and gesture oriented. The key feature of WebOS is how applications appear as “cards,” and it is easy for you to switch back and forth between applications, and have multiple things running at once. Where the iPhone runs applications “in-place,” so to speak, the Pre runs them simultaneously. You can be writing an email on one screen, flip over to your browser to look something up, change tracks on Pandora (without even leaving the current application), run the GPS and make a call, for example.
Free image hosting at imagecave.com Free image hosting at imagecave.com Free image hosting at imagecave.com
Left to right: Phone Dialer in “card” view, multiple cards open (app store, Tweed and phone), some eye candy pulling up the launcher within an app

The OS is Linux-based, and has already proven to be quite hackable, something that Palm has even seemed to support to a degree. Many of us are still waiting on the Mojo SDK to be released so we can get started creating applications.

The gestures on the device are excellent. Some of the scrolling and back/forth gestures from the iPhone are present, but Palm kicks it up a notch, using gestures to switch between applications, and even closing them by “throwing” them off the screen. Emails, too, can be deleted by swiping them off. The Pre, like the iPhone, has an accelerometer that will switch the phone into landscape when it is rotated. Fortunately, I have not found ANYTHING about the phone that requires shaking it. Thank god.

Currently the app catalog is somewhat lacking, but some of the Pre “hackers” have incidentally shown that the Pre should be relatively easy to develop for. I expect a lot of existing Linux applications could be ported to the Pre. Many WebApps (pages with extra functions, formatted for this type of device) that were created for the iPhone function great on the Pre, as they both have WebKit derived browsers. The apps that are available function great, and really work with the robustness of the device.


Wrapup

All said and done, the Pre is a pretty awesome and impressive device, but it still needs some time to grow. The OS is gorgeous and functional, and the device itself is well thought out. 2+ years of iPhones have left many users (myself included) with many expectations about what a phone like this should be and have. Admittedly, the App Store doesn’t have many applications yet—but it will take time. One needs to remember that the iPhone didn’t have these things from the get-go either. Even copy/paste is a “new” feature. I say in 6 months the Pre will have left its infancy and become a robust and interesting platform.

by mashthekeys

Comments (View)
June 4, 2009

Media Worth Mentioning IX: E3 EDITION

Every week, the incredibly busy staff here at Fajitamonday will bring you the important [read: important to us] releases in movies, dvds, music, and video games as we see fit. This is where the complete bias of our writers shines through. Please note that all the distributors lost our address and we have no advance copies of anything. We are also poor.

Video Games

We have a special edition Media Worth Mentioning this week, partially because the E3 video game conference was this week and also because we haven’t done a MWM in around a month! GO PRODUCTIVITY! The event is huge so we won’t be covering ALL of E3 like your standard journalists would, instead we are just going to cover some highlights from the show.

RP: The X-Box appears to have brought a lot of guns (literally) to E3 this year. Bringing our previews and announcements for a whole load of first and third person action and shooter games. The games that seemed to be getting the biggest fanfare included Assassin’s Creed II (think Metal Gear Solid: Italian Renaissance), Modern Warfare II (think CoD: Modern Warfare… sequel), and Rock Band: Beatles (think awful awful game). I know I will receive shit for this from MtK but I may honestly be the most excited for Fifa 10. They’re making some great ball control tweaks so that you can actually spring with the ball in any direction instead of the weird 8 way directional run they have in the current version. This is all along with the standard updated rosters, graphical enhancements, etc. I’m a sucker for a soccer game what can I say?

But who reads this to hear about what I love? Here’s what I didn’t love: Both Sony and Microsoft are trying to jump on the motion capture train with wii-mote or handsfree verisions to try and take a bite of Nintendo’s market. I think they should stick with what people bought the system for. The X-Box and possibly even more so the PS3 are hardcore gamer machines and most hardcore gamers want to use a controller. I recently made the switch from a Wii to an X-Box because the types of games on the Wii weren’t the types of games I wanted to play most of the time. I like longer games with generally more mature content and a fuck ton of blood. I think more than anything, I’m just scared that these companies are trying to take gaming away from those of us who have been playing them since we were kids. That probably makes me some what of an elitest, and I’m ok with that.

MtK: While I know Ronin has very strong feelings about the direction Nintendo has been going, I found myself EXTREMELY excited about the trailers for New Super Mario Brothers Wii (that’s a mouthful) which brings the updated version of the classic platformer, and adds some multiplayer, both competitive and co-op. Nice graphics, but simple, original game play. Looks like a blast. Additionally, Nintendo previewed Super Mario Galaxy 2. I. am. pumped. I think that this was a defining title on the Wii. It was one of the most intuitive and fun members of the Mario family. I likened it a lot to Super Mario 64, which was by far my favorite (Super Mario Sunshine should’ve been named Super Mario Suckshine). SMG2 looks like a good, solid update with a new vibe that builds well off the first one without being just a boring extension. Return of Yoshi? Hells yes. Also, the new Metroid looks good.

I don’t really follow the other platforms so much, but I found myself disappointed with the decision to include NASCAR with GT5. I know Ronin and I disagree on this, and while he makes a valid point that it might allow them to extend the reach of the Gran Turismo series, I feel that it cheapens the brand.

Movies

Land of the Lost

RP:This movie looks downright dreadful. I haven’t read any reviews of it but judging from the preview (which made be the least funny preview since…night and the museum 2: the hunt for more bad history jokes) It’s going to be a terrible terrible ride. What happened to funny Will Ferrell?
MtK: Wow. Just wow. I’m surprised how much we disagree here. I saw the trailer and said “Hey, a Will Ferrell movie that might actually be slightly funny and not formulaic.” I’d be interested in seeing it, but I do have serious concerns that all of the funny moments could be in the trailer.

The Hangover

RP: I have such mixed emotions about this movie. They talked about it on Jordan Jesse Go! (my favorite podcast) last night and said that it could have an Old School style following. The humor in it does seem to be of that vain. It’s a mixture of slightly offensive and very over the top. I like Zach Galifianakis and I love Ed Helms. I have no idea who Bradley Cooper is. at all. AT ALL (that was my Patton Oswalt impression)
MtK: I think this one will be good…I’ll definitely catch it. Like any funny movie these days, I worry that all the funny/good parts could have been in the trailer, but I’m holding out hope. Also, I think that I can’t see Ed Helms as anyone BUT Andy from the Office. I’m sure I’ll watch the whole movie wondering “why would Andy do that? Where’s Oscar?”

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
June 3, 2009

Daily Sizzle: Cell Phone Elbow is the new Cell Phone Brain Cancer

The Daily Sizzle is where us here at FM, rant, rave, hate, and date pretty much anything we want.

If you talk on a cell phone, you’re probably going to die.

” If your pinkie and ring fingers tingle or feel numb, you might not want to pick up that cell phone to call the doctor.”

CNN’s crack investigation squad is reporting that our elbows are not made to be bent at a 168 degree angle to hold a cell phone to our ears for 6 hours while talking to that dude from yahoo chat (26/m/hotsville).  In fact, they are going so far to say that in doing so we may be hurting our bodies!  Apparently, when your fingers start going numb, its a BAD thing. I always thought it meant 5 minutes to a stranger.  To really understand WHY this is bad for us, CNN brings in a big doctor type who explains something about choking blood and straining nerves.  I prefer to explain it using a history lesson: (if religious, see modified history lesson)

History Lesson: The first humans did not have cell phones.

(G)odified History Lesson: Cell Phones are the devil’s work and they make our fingers tingle because that’s Satin slowly pulling you into hell.

The article continues on to say when you start feeling numbness to simply switch hands.  This could be the end of the article, but no, this is CNN.  Madison Park continues;

“People who have this condition, called cubital tunnel syndrome, can feel weakness in their hands and have difficulty opening jars or playing musical instruments.”

Ok, so if you talk long enough on a cell phone you end up with Michael J Fox Syndrome. I get it. I have learned my lesson, I will never talk on my cell phone with the same hand for more than 35 seconds and will always use some sort of supportive elbow brace.

The story continues to tell the sob story of a woman who thought she was getting old but was actually talking on her cell phone too much.  But luckily, product placement came a long and a bluetooth headset simoultaneously fixed all hand pains and made her look like a jackass.

Enter Doctor #2 to help us understand this deeply complicated medical mystery;

“It’s like anything else, any sporting activity,” Benson said. “You can hit balls at the driving range — just don’t hit 300 of them, because you’ll be sore. So common sense would dictate not to talk on the phone for hours if your small and ring fingers go numb.”

I’m glad we got a real doctor to come explain this to us. I know now that when I get sore from playing sports I should stop.  Before I just kept going until I passed out.  But stopping when I get sore or tired is ingenious! Stayed tuned next week when CNN explains that it’s much more comfortable to put the left shoe on your left foot and the right shoe on your right foot.

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
June 2, 2009

Why I Love the Internet #1

MtK here. I’m introducing a new feature at FM where we quickly summarize one thing that, thanks to the internet, makes our life awesome. Or more enjoyable. Or something

WILTI #1 - 6/2/09:

Ronin and I were discussing award shows, and him and I both have an equal hatred for most things, especially those aired by MTV.

Back in the day it used to happen that if something happened that was remotely funny the night before on TV, you missed out. Maybe you caught the clips as part of some sort of “Best of” show or something later. But by that point you didn’t care.

Then, streaming came along, and maybe you could see the whole thing—but who cared?

Now, you can watch the individual clips and watch the funny stuff and ignore the rest of the crap. Case in point, this year’s VMAs. The VMAs can suck it, but Andy Samberg’s opening, Bruno’s “prank” on Eminem, and a medley featuring many Lonely Island tunes (with Forrest Whittaker singing “Dick in a Box”).

Thanks to the internet, I’ve enjoyed only the best parts of the program, commercial free, without sitting through hours of crap, and this is Why I Love The Internet.

by mashthekeys

Comments (View)
May 26, 2009

Daily Sizzle: When Skateboarding isan’t Skateboarding at all

The Daily Sizzle is where us here at FM, rant, rave, hate, and date pretty much anything we want.

http://www.engadget.com/2009/05/26/tony-hawks-ride-120-at-gamestop-october-13th/

Remember a simpler time?  When young children would wake up one morning and think; “I want to destroy my body on some sort of four wheeled death trap while trying to jump mere inches off the ground for hours and hours.”  Remember when counter-culture wasn’t just an industry word for sold at participating Hot Topic and PAC SUN stores?

I remember watching the X Games in my formative years.  When Tony Hawk was a man on a mission but everyone really just wanted to be Bucky Lasek or Bob Burnquist.  When the X Games were just shown on ESPN 2 because it was too edgy for real ESPN.  The X Games that made that one rasta haired dude’s career.  At some point, the mass appeal of “extreme sports” pushed it across the threshold into mainstream culture.  Skate shoes started being worn by people who would never touch a board.  Baggy Volcom tee’s were neoning up the young whippersnappers at their rock and roll disco concerts.  I contribute this trend to two things.  The creation of viable stars in the extreme sports world (Shaun White, Tony Hawk, Travis Postrana) and Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater.

THPS made everyone think they could do 720 nosebone to 540 modanna’s in their backyard with enough practice. I remember the first time I did a 900 to darkslide to front-side heelslide to heelslide to ollie to ollie to ollie to heelslide to 180.  It was a beautiful day in June.  After the original, the games became more complex and the scale grew dramatically. The dozen or so iterations of the Tony Hawk series have seen it grow from gaming phenomenon to a lukewarm but consistent sports gaming franchise.

Which brings us to the latest and lamest: Tony Hawk’s Ride.  Ride follows the same premise of the Wii or Guitar Hero franchise.  Everyone WANTS to do X but they don’t want to LEARN how to do X.  (X being playing instruments or in this case, riding a skateboard)  Details on the game are very scant to this point but it’s clear that Activision thinks the board peripheral is the future.  (fun fact: Activision also makes Guitar Hero)  I think they just need to slow down and think to themselves; “Do people actually want this?”  Honestly, which person seems like more of a loser;

A) The guy doing a 1080 using a controller

B) The guy doing a 1080 but flicking the front a fake skateboard up in the air with his can of SURGE in one hand and a fitted Nixon cap (backwards) keeping his long bangs out from covering his eyes.

If you answered A then you will probably own and enjoy this game while your parents consider where they went wrong.  Granted, I may have handicapped the “Ride-r” by giving him a can of Surge but honestly I cant think of any normal person playing this. The game carries a 120 dollar price task, I will not list what else you can get for 120 dollars;

A) A REAL SKATEBOARD

B) A REAL SKATEBOARD

C) MOST OF THESE

D) A REAL SKATEBOARD

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
May 24, 2009

Two Takes, One Film: Star Trek

RP: I have never been a big fan of Star Trek.  My general assumption was that all their movies were about whales.  My father was a big fan of the series when I was growing up which automatically made it lame and uncool for me to have any interest in it.  I’ve looked at it as a series consistently characterized by in-jokes and a deep sci-fi cannon.  I think this is what makes a Star Trek movie so difficult to do.  You have to balance making something that the average person would want to sit down and watch for two hours while also showing appreciation to the hardcore fans.  The whole concept of Star Treak seemed to be the opposite of anything JJ Abrams would do.

MtK: First of all, let me commend my pal RP on the title of this post. I guess my very first reaction to the movie, once it was over, was “Wow, J.J. Abrams didn’t ruin that.” I suppose I expected it to be like Cloverfield: In Space!. The movie was good, and for being what I’d consider to be a re-adaptation, it wasn’t bad. The special effects were good, but not to the point where it ruined any past Star Trek lines for me. Interestingly, I found myself more bothered by small things than anything, such as product placement (Budweiser, Nokia, etc). I felt that those didn’t particularly have a place in this segment of Sci-Fi—much like you’ve never seen it in Trek or Star Wars. Some films, like Demolition Man (1993) did have over-abundant product placement, but, it felt out of context in Star Trek.

Lastly, the only other thing that bothered me was how some of the scenes and imagery actually seemed to borrow from the original Star Wars trilogy; by far the easiest comparisons were made with some of the shots of Kirk on the ice planet and Luke’s time alone on Hoth.

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
May 20, 2009

Daily Sizzle: Spend 30 dollars or try… PARENTING

The Daily Sizzle is where us here at FM, rant, rave, hate, and date pretty much anything we want.

http://gizmodo.com/5261192/the-gamedr-doesnt-have-a-phd-but-will-drive-your-kids-nuts

50 years ago, people didn’t have any trouble controlling their kids, they just beat them.  I saw the Jackson 5 made for tv movie.  I know the facts.  Today, everyone is concerned with being the perfect parent because, lets face it, in the the 21st century, if you don’t do it perfect the first time, you’re going to cheat and end up in prison.  I’m glad you brought up prison, because thats where the makers of the Game Dr. should go for creating yet another loophole out of parenting.  It’s ironic.  Remember when video games were considered a way to get out of real parenting?  Back when I got my Super Nintendo, I could just sit in front of the tv for hours and hours playing Star Fox FX to my hearts content and you know what?  I did, and I didn’t do cocaine or have sex afterwards. Then somewhere a long the line, everyone decided that video games were no longer a parental savior but had become this evil demon box that created serial killers, rapists, and Insane Clown Posse fans.  Here’s what actually happened and I defy ANYONE to disprove my theory:

In the 90’s and (20)00’s, video game popularity skyrocketed due to great advances in visual technology and a vastly expanding technological landscape (like that one? I know, its a keeper), Kids were spending more time in front of their computers and televisions and parents were probably pretty damn happy about it.  They could go about their gardening and running and drinking without being bothered by their kids when they didn’t want to be.  But then they’re kids got fat and the parents needed someone to blame.  So they went to their kids pediatrician;  “Is it the meals we’ve been cooking!?” they’d exclaim!

“No, I don’t see any problem in 1998 with High Fructose Corn Syrup being in everything that you feed to your child… its not like they’re drinking purple stuff… are you letting your kids drink purple stuff?”

“NEVER! I’ve seen the commercials, kids hate purple stuff. Well then what could it be!?”

“Well, as far as I can tell, you’ve been a perfect parent, its clearly that nin…nin…that demon box they sit in front of for hours upon hours a day.”  So then this whole crusade started; Parents vs Consoles.  It basically played out like Terminator.  There was a parent who traveled back in time to save the kid who would later become the parent who would destroy the consoles in the final battle for parenting supremecy.

THAT brings us to 2009, where apparently, having a box built over a power cable will prevent teennagers from buying another power cable and enjoying their video games anyway.  If this had come out 10 years ago, it could have been a force to be reckoned with. Children would have just sat next to the box with a rock hammer that they had traded 4 packs of ciggerettes for and slowly tried to destroy the box over 20 years. Without the internet, it was pretty much impossible to find anything.  Do you remember buying anything before the internet was around?  I didn’t think so.

by roninpowride

Comments (View)
May 6, 2009

Today in Tech: Amazon Kindle DX

Ever since “going green” met the recession the idea of early adoption has kind of been thrown on its head.  Everyone has this urgency to clean up their emissions but they want don’t want to pay the price for emerging technology.  With much more frivoulous technological advances like Blu-ray or LCD TV’s, it was never really an issue.  There wasn’t a national call to upgrade to skinnier televisions. I have always enjoyed reading about emerging tech.  I think its really interesting to see where the technology world is possibly heading.  The idea of E-Books has always appealed to me.  The convenience of having access to hundreds of thousands of publications and books on a medium that reads very similiar to paper is clearly the first step in lowering our dependence on [tree made] paper.

Amazon today showed off its newest E-Book reader aimed at the education and subscription digital newspaper market.  The DX (not to be confused with the DSi) comes in with a 9.7 inch E-Ink screen.  Coming on the heels of the Kindle II, this version touts a long awaited PDF reader.  My first reaction is that this is a genius move.  Textbook pricing has long been one of the most ludicrious costs of going to college.  The books are heavy, expensive, and have a very short shelf life.  I have seen some response saying that the price point of the DX comes in at the price of a low end laptop ($489).  While this is true, I think that the Kindle still has a number of things working in its favor.

1) The vast majority of consumers hate reading off computer screens.  I still get eye strain from sitting infront of my work computer screen after an eight hour day. The E-Ink really does seem to make a difference in readability of a screen over long periods of time.

2) Battery life.   Those low end notebooks are going to have a 4 to 5 hour battery life at max before they have to be plugged in.  The Kindle can run for days without ever having to be plugged in.  You could go to all your classes with your digital textbooks and never have to worry about having a place to plug in.

3) Size Matters.  The Kindle is just over 1/3 of an inch thick making it highly portable.  No more lugging books around campus or running back to your room to switch books inbetween.  Everything is in the device.

The upfront cost, as with any emerging tech, is going to be pricey.  Years later, early adaptors generally are seen as crazy for paying the kind of money they did to get technology that still needs work.  Though there is something to say for making head turns when you pull out a 9.5” E book reader in a coffee shop.

by roninpowride

Comments (View)