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Archive for December, 2010

Freecom Mobile Drive CLS Review

Posted by Andrew at 5:56 PM on December 5, 2010

Freecom LogoFreecom announced the Mobile Drive CLS concept back in July as a new way of storing and organising the vast amounts of data that all of us now seem to collect through our daily digital lives.  The CLS stands for Collect, Label and Store and fundamentally it’s about using 2.5″ portable drives to store data according to type or use.  One Mobile Drive could have photos, another video.  Or they could be arranged by topic with one Mobile Drive storing all the photos and videos from a trip to Europe and another holding the material from a new house you built last year.  I’m sure you can grasp the possibilities.

It all reminds me a little bit of the SyQuest EZDrive and the Iomega Zip drive, and the drive even comes with a translucent plastic case with a paper insert where you can write the contents of the hard drive for future reference. It’s so old skool….

But enough reminiscing.  If you buy into the concept, what do you actually get?  There’s two parts, the first being the Mobile Drive CLS, a 2.5″ hard drive enclosed in a black soft-touch rubberised case and with a label strip down the side.  The second is the CLS Dock, a docking station that takes three of the Mobile Drives.

Mobile Drive CLS

As the Mobile Drives come with standard mini-SD connectors, you can just use the drives with a cable if you want.  Power is supplied via the USB cable.

Alternatively, the Dock makes using them much more convenient. You simply slot the Drive onto the Dock, which can take up to three of the CLS Mobile Drives.  Cleverly, the mini-SD connector is slightly offset from the centre so it’s obvious which way round the drive has to go.  There’s also an additional standard USB port on the Dock for a memory stick.

The Mobile Drive seemed to fit snugly into the Dock and obviously the review unit was new but I’d be fairly confident you wouldn’t need to worry about wear on the connectors anymore than you’d worry about any external unit.

There’s been a bit of care here too with the USB leads.  The supplied leads are a cut above the average USB cable and there’s a short one supplied in the storage case, keeping drive and lead together.

Performance-wise, the disks were pretty much as you’d expect from an external USB2 drive.  Using hdparm -Tt, I got around 1640 MB/s for cached reads and 30 MB/s for buffered disk reads.

Cost-wise, the Mobile Drives come in four sizes from 250 GB (£60) up to 640 GB (£85).  The CLS Dock costs £16.  Comparing the price for the Mobile Drives against similar units, there’s a price premium of £10 at the smallest capacity which gradually reduces as the capacities increase.

I liked this product as it’s well designed and convenient.  I think this product will appeal to the “laptop generation” – those people who live in lofts and apartments and use technology primarily for their own entertainment. Eventually the laptop hard drive fills up with photos, music or films and this is a clever and attractive way to keep files without cluttering up the internal disk.

It might also appeal to people who just want a convenient way to transfer data between home, work and school.  Use the dock at home and the cable while on the road.  And the label strip on the side of the Mobile Drive can easily take a name and mobile phone number in case of loss.

Frankly, I’m surprised it doesn’t come in white…

Thanks to Freecom for the review unit.

Switching From Windows Mobile To Android

Posted by Alan Buckingham at 2:50 PM on December 5, 2010

I became eligible for a new phone from Verizon on November 10th.  On Black Friday, November 26th, I finally made my decision.  I had been thinking of holding out for Verizon to get a Windows Phone 7 device, but I just couldn’t take my Windows Mobile 6.1 phone any longer.  Plus Dell had a great deal on the Motorola Droid X – $79.99.  It could have been $49.99 if I had the primary line (my wife’s phone has that designation), or even $9.99 if I were moving to Verizon as a new customer.  But, $79 is still one heck of a deal for a Droid X.

The first thing I worried about was that this phone would be just a bit TOO big.  I always carry my phone in my front right pants pocket.  It’s not.  It’s perfectly sized.

The next thing was the learning curve from Windows Mobile 6.1 to Android.  And that was surprisingly low.  It took me a little while to figure out certain things, but that should be expected when moving to a new device.  For instance turning on WiFi, deleting programs, and moving icons to the home screen were all not completely obvious.  But they weren’t really hidden either.

The market was front and center on the home screen and made searching for apps simple.  And once you find one it’s one-click to download and install it.  Talk of Android apps is all over the place on on the internet, so there’s no problem hearing about new ones, both good and bad.  I had a list I was interested in long before I even bought the phone.  For instance, Tom wrote a great post on this site a while back about Camera 360, so that was one of the first I added.  The apps you start with will depend on a lot of things.  I have DirecTV, so I added their app for accessing and programing my DVR.  My kids and I have a fantasy football team and Yahoo makes a really slick app for tracking your team.

Beyond those personal apps, everyone should probably look at adding Google Maps, Google Reader, WeatherBug, and Twitter.

Moving to Android has been really painless.  If you have heard talk of Android being somewhat geeky then you have only heard part of the story.  It can be as Geeky as you want, but version 2.2 can also be simple for any user, no matter what their level.

TMS-2010-12-04 #8 PC 1 – Mac 0

Posted by geeknews at 11:44 AM on December 5, 2010

IN this weeks Morning Tech Show, Andy McCaskey and Rob Greenlee join me as we talk tech of the week. Plus we try to figure out why Mac’s have no camera control over brightness and contrast.

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360 Panorama from Occipital Makes Panoramic Photos from Mobile Phone

Posted by Jeffrey Powers at 2:43 PM on December 4, 2010
First Snowfall from Front of House

First Snowfall from Front of House

Yes, I shoveled this morning.

Then I got out my iPhone and took a 360 Panorama view of the neighborhood. I used the new 360 Panorama application by Occipital for the iphone. All I had to do was spin around and capture the image.

The program just came out this week. It’s for iPhone 3GS, 4 and iPod Touch 4g. You call up the application, then start the capture at one point. Once the image is capturing, just spin around in a circle moving the camera up and down. When you have spun a full 360 degrees and the whole wireframe is filled up, choose done and your panorama is ready!

360 Panorama Wireframe

360 Panorama Wireframe

Once the 360 image is complete, I can choose to Twitter it (using YFrog or Twitpic), email or save it to the phone. You don’t even have to do the full 360 view. Let’s say you are taking a picture of a concert stage. Just capture the area and choose done.

The 360 view does have an online viewer to watch your work – Here is the 360 view of my front yard.

The program uses stitching of pictures, so you will see some weird spots in your photo. Just like most 360 programs, it can only do so much to “Stitch” the images together. Lighting and movement in the scene can make it tougher for the image to smoothly stitch together.

A pretty impressive application for only $2.99. I have been playing with different scenes. Remember that light also plays a role in your image, so make sure you have adequate lighting.

Now I have to go shovel again.

GNC-2010-12-03 #631 The Long Haul

Posted by geeknews at 1:19 AM on December 3, 2010

Thank you for all of the words of support and prayers for my cousins children that are still missing. I covered a metric ton of content tonight and introduce you to a new website we launched today for the 2011 CES content. See link below. Cannot believe it is only 30 days away before I head out to Vegas for the annual trip.

Please check out our new Sponsor Luxor, they are our first officially announced sponsor for CES 2011. Really excited to have them on-board and will be sharing a lot about their property over the next couple of weeks.

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Listener Links:
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NASA Alien Discovery.
Way of the IT Ninja.
Stars Stars and More Stars.
The Web Tells All.

Show Links:
Flash Update for Droid.
Google Chrome Version 8 Beta.
YouTube Ads you can Cancel.
HP Kills Windows Home Server.
Robot Causes Havoc in Denver.
Chevy Volt Gov’t dollars at work.
Xbox 360 case Tossed.
AVG Bricking Windows Machines.
GetGlue review.
Sony Pocket Edition Review.
Stream Any Video on Apple TV.
Fix that Slow Internet.
Congrats Revision3
Glow in the Dark Soap.
Add a Flash to your iPhone.
Tron Motorcycle For Sale.
Woz walks you through Computing history.
BitTorrent based DNS (Radical)
Dumping .com for .me
Hackers moving Servers to China?
The leaking of Black Ops.
Verizon LTE reaching Cap in 32 minutes.
Verizon LTE ridiculous Pricing.
4G Options.
Netflix gonna be next Time Warner?
Shuttle Launch Date Unknown.
NASA Aliens on Earth.
Cassini Wows us.
SOFIA makes first science flight.
Stem Cell Spray to treat Burns.
Loud Commercials coming to end.
Net Neutrality Opinions.
Amazon unplugs Wikileaks.
Native Apps versus Web Apps?
Moscow watching Wikileaks.
Senator Lieberman gets tough on Espionage.
What does Wired and Perez Hilton have in Common?
FBI Story on Nabbing a Spammer King.
Hadron Collider looks into the Big Bang.
Feds Tracking CC use without Judge signed Warrant.

Send in your stories to geeknews@gmail.com and be sure to provide a link to your websites!

Zediva Has A New Way To Stream Movies

Posted by Alan Buckingham at 5:34 PM on December 2, 2010

Stories about Zediva have been kicking around the internet for the past few days.  It’s an interesting story and an even more interesting concept.  The company’s founder explained that concept to Rotten Tomatoes as this:

“We don’t rent digital copies of a movie,” he said. “Our users rent a physical DVD, along with a DVD player, from us for a fixed amount of time. They then control that DVD player remotely over the internet — and stream the movie privately to themselves.  Think of it as a really long cable and a really long remote control.”

That “actual DVD” loophole allows Zediva to bypass the streaming contracts that are the bane of such companies as Netflix.  This means they can show more recent releases than other services.  They also charge less for new releases than their competitors – $1.99 for a 14 day rental as opposed to $3.99 from places like Amazon.  They even offer a deal of 10 movies for $10.

They go so far with the physical DVD model that you may find some movies to be rented out and you’ll have to wait for the next available copy.  With that sort of limitation it may be enough for the model to succeed.  We’ll have to wait and see what the studios and the MPAA have to say.

Bringing the GPU to the Cloud

Posted by Andrew at 5:37 PM on December 1, 2010

PEER 1 and bluegfx have announced a partnership that brings the GPU to the cloud, giving bluegfx’s customers access to high-powered graphics on pay-per-process basis.

Using NVIDIA’s Fermi-based Tesla GPU’s and RealityServer hosted in PEER 1′s global data centres, bluegfx’s customers in the games, design, architectural, film, broadcast and education industries will benefit from high performance 3D web services.  It delivers a 3D rendering and animation package that works remotely over the Internet onto the GPU cloud to demonstrate the concept of remote hybrid computing, with the GPU processing being done off the PC.

Hosting the GPUs and software within the cloud simplifies customer implementation and provides an inexpensive entry point for new users. Businesses only pay for the processing they need and can upgrade or downgrade as required.

Amanda Dunn, Cloud GPU Manager EMEA, PEER 1 Hosting adds: “We have the only hosted NVIDIA GPU service, which brings simple, cost-effective graphical processing power to the media industry on a pay-as-you-use basis. bluegfx has excellent experience in rich media, and working together we can offer high performance computing in a variety of areas such as  rendering, transcoding and modelling.”

The move of the GPU to the cloud seems to be popular – Amazon and NVIDIA announced a similar service earlier in the month.  It certainly sounds like a great idea – if you need to do 3D rendering, don’t buy expensive GPUs but instead use the pay-per-process 3D web services.  Obviously some GPU processing doesn’t need to happen in real-time, e.g rendering a special effects sequence, but would it be possible to use a tablet to present a 3D model in real-time, with all the hard work being done in the data centre?  If it was possible over Wi-fi or 4G data speeds, I can think of some pretty amazing applications, particularly in the medical space.