Wednesday, April 26, 2006

iLoad

Should your computer be nervous?



From the product's website:

"iLoad devices connect directly to the source of your media: CDs, cable TV or satellite box and cell networks and allow you to easily take that content, along with all music, album and video data, directly to the iPod without using a computer or requiring an Internet connection."

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Guilty Pleasure Movies

Dumb and Dumber
Caddyshack
Starship Troopers
Airplane!
The Bad News Bears
Not Another Teen Movie
Wild Things
Armageddon
The Breakfast Club
Conan the Barbarian
Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure
The Wedding Singer
Die Hard
The Brady Bunch Movie
Ferris Bueller's Day Off
Dude, Where's My Car?
There's Something About Mary
American Pie
Joe Versus the Volcano
Last Action Hero

Idea Before Its Time?

Portable DVD Player with a (virtual) viewing area larger than a deck of cards



Connect to your PC, laptop or video game console





Stylish and Sleek?




"able to project an image equivalent to a 52-inch television viewed from 6.5 ft away"


Why didn't these personal video displays catch on when Sony and Olympus tried to market them a few years ago? They weren't cheap, but they weren't outrageous compared to many new gadgets before and since then... reviews from the time weren't stellar, but I've seen worse for far more popular products. With some sort of proven market, there would have been successive generations with improvements addressing key complaints (fair picture quality, short USB cable, "not immersive enough" -- black areas to the sides of the viewable area meant the experience was more like sitting close to a big screen TV than sitting in an IMAX theatre).

Only one manufacturer seems to be making and selling these devices -- the iVisor. Don't know if they are worth the $999 price tag or not...

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Video iPod 2.0

As Apple retools new video iPod, release rolls back





(from ThinkSecret.com)

By Ryan Katz, Senior Editor

April 13, 2006 - The roll-out of Apple's forthcoming video iPod has been delayed substantially after the company encountered problems with the display and touch-screen interface, Think Secret has learned. As late as early February plans were in motion for Apple to deliver the most innovative iPod to date in April, possibly a tie-in with its 30th birthday, sources said. Instead, Apple's birthday came and went without fanfare.

...

The larger, widescreen display will deliver an improved video viewing experience and herald the arrival of feature-length movie sales as the iTunes Music Store. In hindsight, the fact that Apple remained so far from striking a deal with two leading Hollywood movie distributors, as Think Secret reported in March, suggests the company might have been aware of technological problems facing the new iPod at that time and saw no need to aggressively push for an agreement.

Multiple sources have stressed that Apple will not launch the video iPod without a movie agreement in place, and that a movie store will not open without the video iPod. The impasse in negotiations lies in the terms of sale: Apple wants to sell movies affordably a-la-carte as it does with music, but Hollywood wants a subscription deal.





Sounds like the invisible controls on the touchscreen might have been too good to be true after all. Touching the viewing surface seems like it would have to be an invitation to smudges and scratches...

Saturday, April 08, 2006

iTV

Networks Rush to Offer TV Shows Online

Friday April 7, 9:31 pm ET
By Gary Gentile, AP Business Writer
Networks Rush to Offer Individual Programs, Season Subscriptions Online As TV Viewership Drops


LOS ANGELES (AP) -- These days, there's more than one way to get "Lost," visit "The Office" or keep "Law and Order." Six months after ABC struck the first deal to sell commercial-free TV episodes online, networks are rushing to offer everything from individual programs to season subscriptions.

...

Analysts say networks have little choice but to try multiple strategies as viewers watch less TV in primetime and embrace technology that lets them watch shows whenever and wherever they want, including on computers and portable devices, such as an iPod.

Studios also want to offer a legal alternative to the many file-swapping services that offer pirated copies of shows.

"Technology is moving ahead with or without them, and if they don't try to find a new business model, they're going to be stuck with the old business, which is in decline," said Harold Vogel, media analyst and author of the book "Entertainment Industry Economics."

"The problem is nobody really knows what the new business model should be yet," he said.

In its deal with Apple Computer Inc.'s online media store iTunes, The Walt Disney Co. has sold programs from its ABC and ESPN networks and the Disney channel for $1.99 each. Revenue from those sales has been minuscule compared with advertising sales for television.

...

ABC said it has learned important lessons so far about offering online content. Among them is that TV ratings of hit shows haven't been hurt.

"We've only increased overall media consumption for some of our hit shows and some of the shows we're trying to promote," said Albert Cheng, executive vice president of digital media for the Disney-ABC television group.

One analyst said digital delivery can be more valuable for promoting shows than generating revenue.

...

The growing online availability of TV shows and original video produced by Yahoo, MSN and other sites has led some to predict the demise of traditional TV watching.

But some analysts aren't ready to write off network TV.

"Five years from now, we'll have a much better idea of how it will shake out," Vogel said.


Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Lemur

Should your mouse be nervous?



I'd bet that just about anyone who has used audio, video and/or photo editing programs such as ProTools or Photoshop has wished that they could just reach into the screen and tweak the controls directly instead of fiddling with a mouse. The Lemur touchscreen is an interesting device which graphically recreates the controls of digital audio workstation programs in the configuration specified by the user. While this is designed for a fairly specific and narrow use, it does give an interesting view into a possible future direction for the graphical user interface of many types of programs -- if this type of touch-sensitive screen were to be merged into the actual display screen, the need for a mouse should be reduced quite a bit, and the experience should seem more direct and satisfying. Even better would be a virtual 3-d display which could respond to hand movements within the display area.

Or a holodeck.