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daily  Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Net Attitude on Kindle


Net Attitude

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Kindle is quite an amazing device (see "Kindlized") and I am irrevocably hooked. In addition to buying a growing number of Kindle books, I now have one for sale. Net Attitude continues as a book but I suspect the Kindle version will have the edge going forward. The patrickWeb blog will also soon be available for the Kindle. Amazon is having growing pains as try to ingest a lot more blogs than they expected. The blogs will be updated daily so that Kindle users will always have the latest postings for all the blogs they subscribe to.

Blogging, Favorites, Gadgets, Net Attitude, patrickWeb June 10, 2008 04:40 PM

 

daily  Monday, June 9, 2008

Roku


TelevisionAbout fifteen years ago one of my children worked at Blockbuster. One day I told him that Bockbuster would be history because people would be downloading their movies from the Internet. Yeah, right Dad. Ok, I was a bit ahead of my time. In the intervening years there have been numerous companies started to offer various ways to get movies via the Net but none have gotten much traction. The most successful innovation has been Netflix which offers 100,000 movies and an incredibly efficient distribution system for DVDs. The barriers to a downloading or streaming approach have included technology cost, inadequate bandwidth, complexity, device incompatibilities, and intellectual property concerns.

Then along came the Netflix Roku. The snazzy new device may be like manna from heaven for movie lovers. I have had previous experience with Roku. A few years ago I installed a Roku box for pictures. It enables the display of digital pictures on any TV in the house via the home local area network and can be a nice thing at holiday time. The Roku for Netflix movies is a fraction of the size and allows watching up to 10,000 movies or TV episodes on any TV in the house, if you have a video distribution system, or if you don't then you can use the Roku with the TV of your choice -- home theatre, HD, non-HD, any TV. I took the Roku out of the box, plugged in the power supply, and connected the cables to the video jacks. You then need to connect the Roku to the Internet. You can either plug it into your home LAN or connect via WiFi. The hookup took about three minutes. The TV then displays a code which you enter at netflix.com and you are then activated. A new tab is added to your account at Netflix labeled "Watch Instantly". You make a selection and it shows up on the Roku screen on your TV. You push the play button on the Roku remote and the movie starts streaming. I was watching a movie within five minutes of taking the Roku out of the box.

Streaming is different than downloading. There is no hard drive on the Roku. The movie comes from a server at Netflix directly to the Roku. Some buffering obviously takes place as I detected no jitters or pixelation. I was quite impressed with the quality. Looks like a DVD. Does this mean the end of DVDs? Yes, but it will take quite a while. Music is shifting to digital but there are still a lot of CDs sold. The transition for DVDs will take longer for a number of reasons. Streaming requires a stable and reliable one million bit per second connection. In theory, any DSL or Cable Internet provider should be able to provide that but in practice it is spotty. The trend is certainly in the right direction. HD streaming is not yet available but surely it will soon. That will require more bandwidth. So far only 10% of the Netflix collection is available for streaming. Not sure how fast they will be able to convert the rest.

The pricing is good. If you already subscribe to Netflix under any plan of $9.99 per month or more then you get unlimited streaming at no extra cost. The Roku unit is $99 plus shipping. Movies and TV episodes are selected via the web site just like picking a DVD. All things considered, I think Netflix and Roku hit a home run. Not perfect but you can see the beginning of the end of DVDs.

Gadgets, Home Automation, Media, Personal Computing, WiFi June 9, 2008 06:00 PM

 

daily  Friday, April 4, 2008

Geocaching Update


Hiker As of this week there are 57,370 people who have accounts at geocaching.com. They have placed 550,474 caches around the world for others to enjoy finding. In the last 7 days, there have been 440,577 new log entries written by account holders describing their experiences at finding (or not finding) the caches. For me, there are a lot more to find -- since January 2003 I have found 81 caches (plus 90 benchmarks) in eight states and seven countries. I really enjoy the sport and hope to find quite a few more caches this summer. Geocaching is the tip of the iceberg of "location based" applications.

There are many GPS receivers on the market now with some breaking below the $100 mark. The hot area is GPS for cars. Many new cars offer built-in units as an option but the "after" market is much larger. One of the newest entries is Dash. The new Dash Express claims to be the first two-way, Internet-connected GPS navigation system. The device delivers traffic and destination information in a new way. You can look up somewhere that you want to go using the Internet and then have that "waypoint" delivered via cellular or WiFi signal directly to your Dash. You then select the new waypoint and the GPS will guide you to your destination. The Dash can also show you the location of all other cars nearby that have a Dash. That makes it a good proxy for traffic but what would be much better would be if all the GPS manufacturers got to together and agreed on a standard for information sharing so that each GPS could actually show the "total" traffic in the area, not just traffic of those cars that have a Dash.

I have been using GPS devices for quite a few years and have or have had most of the manufacturers. On the trike, I have the TomTom Rider. On other bikes I have Garmins. For the last few years I have been using a Magellan for geocaching. They make a really nice device but I don't like their software. GPS is becoming ubiquitous but the formats for the data storage and data interchange with PCs is a Tower of Babel. Magellan is not alone -- the entire GPS industry thrives on proprietary formats that they think help them maintain market share but actually constrict the market and confuse customers. Thankfully, there is a great piece of software called GSAK (geocaching Swiss Army Knife) that is indispensable for anyone who wants to exchange GPS data with their PC. I highly recommend it. GSAK allows you to download thousands of caches from geocaching.com to an easy to use desktop application. You can then sort them, search them, organize them in various ways, see all the logs of those of have found (or not) the caches, and a Google Map to show exactly where the caches are. Once you are ready to pack up and head for the trails, GSAK allows you to easily transfer the selected cache information to your GPS.

As soon as the backorder gets filled I will be ready to go geocaching with the new Garmin Colorado 400t. Looks like the Colorado will be a rugged and advanced handheld and it will be pre-loaded with detailed topographic maps with a 3-D map view, a high-sensitivity receiver, barometric altimeter, electronic compass, an SD card slot, picture viewer and a bright color display. I will be reporting on whether it is as good as it sounds or not. Meanwhile two of my Magellans went on eBay this week and hopefully they will make a new geocacher somewhere happy.

Related links
bullet Other patrickWeb stories about hiking, geocaching, and benchmarking

Gadgets, Hiking April 4, 2008 11:20 AM

 

daily  Sunday, March 23, 2008

Kindlized


Electronic BookThe "e-book" -- replacing the paper book with something electronic -- is not a new idea. Project Gutenberg started in 1971 and now has a collection of 24,000 books which have been digitized. Digital books can be read on a PC and there are various software offerings that can enable you to read books on your mobile phone or personal digital assistant. Over the years there have been various "e-book readers" introduced. The idea behind the e-book reader is to have a dedicated device that is optimized for reading. I have never met anyone, myself included, that found reading a book on a PC, a handheld device, or an e-book reader to be a good experience. For years I have believed that the day would come but that so far nothing can compare to a real book. That was before I became "Kindlized".

I first saw the Amazon Kindle in early February when Steve Brotman, a fellow director of Knovel Corporation, showed me his at a board meeting. I was not convinced it would be different than the many predecessors I had tried but I was intrigued enough to order one. After waiting a month for the backorder to be filled, I opened the box, turned on the Kindle and within a couple of minutes I was reading Ken Follet's The Pillars of the Earth in a new and comfortable way. I had recently purchased the paperback version of "Pillars" for $14.97 and was about half-way through the gripping 1,000 page novel. With my new acquisition I visited the Kindle bookstore on the device and keyed in "pillars". I selected the Follet novel and in less than a minute the Kindle version was ready to read. The $7.99 charge for the e-book was automatically placed on my credit card. There is no login, user id, password or network connection process. The "Amazon Whispernet" (from Sprint) is totally seamless. In addition to more than 100,000 books, you can also choose from a dozen or so top newspapers and magazines plus a few hundred blogs. If you are an author, there is a streamlined process to Kindlize their books. It took me less than five minutes to add Net Attitude to the Kindle Bookstore. You can also add virtually any document of your own such reports, long emails, user guides, or just about anything.

The most amazing thing about the Kindle is how easy it is to use. Amazon set out three years ago to create an entirely new portable reading device with the ability to wirelessly download books, blogs, magazines, and newspapers. The Kindle uses "electronic paper" that makes the screen as sharp and natural as reading ink on paper without the strain and glare of a computer screen. You have to see it to believe it. The device weighs ten ounces, never becomes hot, and is easy for both "lefties" and "righties" to read comfortably at any angle for long periods of time. I have arthritis in my neck and need to read without bending my head down. I use a reading stand which works very well except with large books like "Pillars", it is hard to keep the book open on the stand. No problem with the Kindle. It just sits there and when it is time to "turn the page" you just tap a button on the Kindle and the next (or previous) page appears. You can select from six font sizes to suit your taste and compensate for lighting conditions. If you encounter a word you are not familiar with, a couple of clicks the built-in New Oxford Dictionary displays the definition. You can add bookmarks, notes, and take "clippings" as you read. It is a joy to use. All things considered, I think Amazon has hit a major home run with the Kindle.

The Chinese invention of paper in 105 A.D. changed the way the world communicates. The invention of "e-ink" may change it again. The electronic-paper display provides a sharp, high-resolution screen that looks and reads like real paper. The screen displays the ink particles electronically. It reflects light like ordinary paper and uses no backlighting. There is no glare and you can read as easily in bright sunlight as in your living room. With the addition of a $10 memory card, the Kindle can store more than 1,000 books. All you put in your briefcase is the paperback sized Kindle. The battery life is good and full recharge takes just 2 hours. Don't forget to pack the charger when you go out of town. I am away for a few days and forgot mine. I finished "Pillars" but now I have to wait until Tuesday to start another book.

Related links
bullet Other patrickWeb gadget stories

Gadgets March 23, 2008 05:25 PM

 

daily  Saturday, January 26, 2008

Music Sales


PatentsTwo years ago I was confident that it would happen -- more than $1 Billion in sales of digital music for 2005. This was triple the year before. For 2007, the number rose to $3B and represented 15% of total music sales up from less than 1% in 2003. People are willing to pay for music if it is offered to them in a contemporary way -- i.e. digital. Single track downloads, the most popular digital music format, grew by 53% to 1.7 billion. iTunes is the giant but there are more than 500 legitimate digital music services around the world offering more than 6 million selections. It goes without saying that sales of music CD's continues to fall sharply.

In spite of the rapid growth, digital music still represents just 15% of the total music business (compared to 7% for newspapers, 3% for films, and 2% for books). The shift to a predominantly digital music industry is inevitable but there are some impediments. There is a non-trivial amount of piracy through various peer-to-peer services. It will take time to change the habits and attitudes of those who do not respect the legitimate need of musicians to make a living and be compensated for their creations and performances.

The other issue is lack of interoperability between services and devices. Apple and Sony and others offer proprietary and incompatible formats. There are dozens of formats to compress music and make it more efficient to store and distribute over the Internet. MP3 is not the best but it has won the war. VHS wasn't the best format for movies on tape but it dominated. Once a certain critical mass is reached it is hard to reverse. Apple is an exception, so far, and has shown that it can impose a proprietary format and by implementing it in an elegant fashion (iTunes) with devices that are equally elegant (iPods) that it can capture dominant market share. Over time people will demand more compatibility. If we purchase music it is reasonable to assume that we should be able to play that music on any device in our house, in the car, or on a trike.

The industry group that reports the data on music sales and monitors (fights) piracy calls itself the "International Federation of the Phonographic Industry". Does that give us a clue that they are not keeping up with the times?

Related links
bullet Other patrickweb stories about music

Gadgets, Media, Motorcycles, Music January 26, 2008 05:45 PM

 

daily  Monday, January 21, 2008

iPhone - Update No. 10


Mobile phone According to some people, the most important question about the iPhone is "does it blend?". Although quite amusing, the more important question to me is whether Apple is listening to the feedback of customers. In prior stories I have expressed confidence that there would be continuous improvement in the functionality of the iPhone. For the first six months I would give them a B+. The two big issues remain to be the applications and the network.

On the network side, I am still not very happy with AT&T primarily because of poor local coverage. However, I have learned about a new tower about two miles from my house that is scheduled to be turned on in late February. That could potentially make a dramatic difference for many people in my neck of the woods. In a few weeks I'll be in South Africa and will get a chance to see how the International aspects of the AT&T service work. Stay tuned on that.

The bigger question for most people is about applications. The "standalone" applications such as the calculator, calendar, photo gallery, clock, and offline email have not changed. There is still no "notes" application that syncs with anything and allows cut/copy/paste. The "networked" applications, such as stocks, weather, over the air email, and YouTube have not changed. iTunes has been improved and "maps" has had a huge improvement with the addition of a location function that uses radio signals to estimate your current location. Not as accurate as GPS but pretty good. I used it at the Albany airport this past weekend and it provided very good directions to where I was headed. The "Web 2.0" applications, through the Safari browser, are still a disappointment but I am sure there will be many useful webapps soon.

Webapps are most useful when they are connected to the network, preferably a fast one. The presumption with webapps is that the data -- travel itineraries, frequent flier numbers, healthcare information, personal financial information, etc. -- is on the server. That model only works if you can get to the server. With 16 GB likely on the way for new iPhones, there will be plenty of room for pictures and music and have space for local data. Local data will allow a lot of useful applications even when there is no available network connection.

The other limitation of webapps is the interface. In theory you can do anything in a web browser but the human interface is not always ideal. That is why millions of people use Quicken instead of quicken.com. This will change over time as web standards evolve but in the short term I believe there is a rational need for local applications. There are many applications that could be local applications with local storage on the iPhone. Both the app and data could be synchronized (backed up) through iTunes. What we are all anxiously waiting for are "third party local applications" on the iPhone as a supplement to Apple's apps and webapps. Apple announced that that they will have a development kit available in the first quarter and many are waiting to see what the SDK will allow and what "approvals" will be necessary and whether AT&T will have any say in "certifying" applications. The clock is ticking and I can hardly wait. Following the political scene is exciting but third party apps for the iPhone will be more exciting.

The most subtle change in the latest iPhone update last week was the ability to move the home screen icons around, and to create up to nine pages on which you can place icons or web address links. The iPhone comes with just seventeen icons. The home row plus nine screens of sixteen each will allow 148 applications. One that I am hoping for is Opera Mini.

Related links
bullet Other patrickWeb stories about the iPhone

Gadgets, Mobile, Personal Computing, iPhone January 21, 2008 02:54 PM

 

daily  Sunday, January 6, 2008

Innovations That Will Change Our Lives


InnovationsThe annual "IBM Next Five in Five" is a list of predicted innovations that have the potential to change the way people work, live and play over the next five years. The list is based on market and societal trends expected to transform our lives, as well as emerging technologies from IBM’s Labs around the world that could make these innovations possible. Following is a sampling of the five areas.

The press is covered with stories about all things "green". IBM believes the technology is actually going to make it easy to be green and save money in the process. A range of "smart energy" technologies will enable us to manage our personal "carbon footprint". As data begins to run through our home electrical system, appliances, air conditioners, lights, and computers, we will become connected to a "smart" electrical grid, making it possible to turn our appliances on and off using a web browser from a PC or cell phone. In addition to alerting you about leaving appliances on when they could be off, we will be able to establish rules to be followed to automatically conserve energy. Reports will show us electrical usage just like we track our cell phone minutes. Intelligent energy grids will also enable utilities to provide you with the option to use only green energy sources such as solar and wind.

The way we drive will be changing dramatically. In the next five years, IBM says our cars will connected to the roads we drive on and thereby we will be safer and remain out of traffic jams. The technology will keep traffic flowing smoothly, cut pollution, curb accidents, and make it easier and less stressful for us to get where we are going. Intelligent traffic systems will make real-time adjustments to traffic lights and divert traffic to alternate routes while our cars will communicate with each other and with sensors along the road -- allowing them to behave as if they have 'reflexes' so they can take preventive actions under dangerous conditions. When traffic is jammed up alternative routes will be activated.

Since we are what we eat, we should know what we eat. With foods being sourced across international borders, the need to know exactly what we eat has never been more important. According to IBM, in the next five years, new advancements in software and wireless radio sensor technologies will enable us to know the exact source and make-up of the food we buy -- the climate and soil the food was grown in, the pesticides and pollution it was exposed to, the energy consumed to create the product, and the temperature and air quality of the shipping containers it traveled in on the way to our dinner table.

In the next five years, IBM says our cell phones will become our wallets, ticket brokers, concierge, bank, shopping buddy, and tour guide. New technology will allow us to snap a picture of someone wearing an outfit we want and will automatically search the web to find the designer and the nearest shop that has the outfit in stock. We will then see what that outfit would look like on our personal avatar – a 3-D representation of our self on our phone, and ask our friends to check it out online and give their opinion. When we turn on our phone in a city we are visiting, it will automatically provide us with local entertainment options, activities, and dining options that match our preferences -- and then make reservations and purchase tickets for us.

Perhaps the most important area where IBM sees major advances is healthcare. Doctors will get enhanced “super-senses” to better diagnose and treat us. In the next five years, our doctor will be able to see, hear and understand our medical records in entirely new ways. In effect, doctor’s will gain superpowers – technologies will allow them to gain x-ray like vision to view medical images and super sensitive hearing to find the tiniest audio clue in our heart beat. Our avatar will allow doctors to click on a part of our body and then visualize the relevant information for that part of us. The hospital system will then be able to compare those visual and audio clues to thousands of other anonymous patient records and be able to be much more precise in diagnosing us and providing us with a personalized treatment plan.

Some of the innovations IBM is predicting may seem like a stretch but the basics of all of them are already in place. If we were to step back five years it is likely most of us would not have foreseen how we would be doing on the Internet today.

Related links
bullet Other IBM annoncements made in December

Gadgets, Healthcare, Home Automation, IBM, Internet Technology, Mobile January 6, 2008 12:04 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Christmas 2007


Christmas TreeThere is much that could be said about the hundreds of miles of driving to see family and then a houseful of family and good times before during and after Christmas. I won't bore readers of the blog about that but there is one thing I would like to share about one special gift I received. It is called Open It!

Some will immediately be thinking of Open IT as in "Open Information Technology". For example, Open IT Works is based on a simple concept borrowed from Open Source, and is about sharing of IT solutions, best practices, projects, and product and vendor reviews. The Open It I received for Christmas has nothing to do with any of that. My Open It is to open things that come packaged in blisters, clamshells, boxes DVD cases, and numerous other things unopenables that are packaged with the vendor in mind -- and with no thought about how the consumer might open the package without injuring oneself. The Open It is made from hardened and plated precision alloy steel, has has honed, angled, and offset jaws, and an ergo-comfortable handle. It has a built in retractable utility knife and an interchangeable Phillips & slotted screwdriver. (You can click here to get a complete product data sheet). If you have ever suffered "wrap rage", suffer no more. It really works. The only catch is that the Open It comes in one of those packages that you need an Open It to open it! Hopefully, I will not become the technical support department for this product like I did for the PepperBall.

Holiday time also allowed me to finish a couple of books. Indian Summer was an excellent history of India, Pakistan, Kashmir, and Bangladesh. The Iranian Time Bomb
is a wake up call to what has been going on for thirty years. Good investigative reporting went into this. It was a special pleasure to finish Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Prepare yourself for 944 pages. I learned many things I did not know about the civil war and about Abraham Lincoln. He was quite the political strategist and a superb manager. A very long read but worth it. Several new books in the read queue for January. The quarterly update on favorites is here.

Favorites, Gadgets, People, Travels December 26, 2007 01:12 PM

 

daily  Thursday, January 12, 2006

Internet Phones


TelephoneToday's Wall Street Journal story, "Web Phones Go Unplugged", summed it up pretty well. There is a convergence taking place between cell phones and Internet phones. Utopia has not quite arrived but at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this month there was a slew of new announcements surrounding Vonage, Skype, and various new handsets. The "ideal" phone is very close.

Imagine that your "cell phone" is on your belt or in your pocket. You are at home. When you make a call, the connection goes through your DSL or Cable Modem over the Internet and through one of the VoIP providers such as Vonage. When the phone "rings", you will hear a voice saying who is calling and if you look at the phone you will see a picture of the person and the person will have a unique "ring" associated with them so you can tell just from the ring. When you get in the car with your Bluetooth headset on, you will be using the same phone that you were using in the house except that phone calls will use the cellular network. When you arrive at the airport, the phone will pick up the free WiFi service being offered and you will once again be able to use Vonage or Skype for unlimited long distance calling.

Some would argue that the environment I have described is already here. There are in fact quite a few products and services available. However, there are a few wrinkles. A seamless 911 system is not quite there. There are still some places you might be that have no reliable signal of any kind. A power failure at home can cut you off from communications if you don't have a good cellular signal or if your phone is dependent on a base station. Some telecommunications providers and airport operators are attempting to block free WiFi services. Finally, some of the devices have so many features that they are hard to adapt to for many people. In spite of the wrinkles, we are getting very close to the point where the Internet is pervasive in our lives for all forms of communications and interactions. I am sure we will see and hear much more about all this at the upcoming DEMO conference.

Related links
bullet Other patrickWeb stories about Long Distance

Conferences, Gadgets, Home Automation, Internet Technology, Mobile January 12, 2006 08:29 AM

 

daily  Tuesday, November 15, 2005

The Fly


FlyThe fly is quite an amazing creature with wings that can flap 200 times per second, and aerodynamic capabilities at 6 miles per hour that include flying straight up, straight down, or backwards and somersault to an upside down landing on a ceiling. What appear to be two eyes are actually two compound eyes each of which contains 6,000 miniature hexagonal eyes called ommatidia. The fly can outmaneuver any man-made machine at low speeds and do so with very little power. While the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter has three shoe-box sized PowerPC-based computers aboard, the fly uses just a few hundred of the neurons in it's brain.

Rafal Zbikowski in the United Kingdom has been studying the fly for a long time with the hope of building a Flapping Wing Micro Air Vehicle (MAV). The insect-like MAV would be a small hand-held flying vehicle that could be used for the purpose of reconnoitering in confined spaces, for example, inside buildings, tunnels and shafts that might be very dangerous places for humans to visit. For example, looking in a dangerous coal mine for survivors of a flood or explosion and other hazardous situations. The military potential is even more dramatic. Imagine a fly-like device intruding a terrorist hideout and hovering while gathering information that could result in saving the lives of innocent people.

The engineering challenges are formidable but there is much focus on emulating the insect-like flapping and actually building an artificial replica of the amazing fly. A workshop on "Reverse Engineering of Insect Flight Control" was conducted to bring the key players together. They are really serious about this and have great respect for the fly.

The rest of us may marvel at the fly at times but their annoying presence also explains the invention of the fly swatter.

Gadgets November 15, 2005 01:37 PM

 

daily  Tuesday, July 26, 2005

The PepperBall Log


PepperBallAfter so many emails about the PepperBall (see below), I decided to establish The Pepper Ball Log to share some of the inquiries. There is also a new link to enable readers to be able to buy a PepperBall. Chef'n is a leading innovator in the kitchen housewares industry and it seems to be a company moving in fast forward with a passion for innovation. An inventive young man, David Holcomb, had an idea in the early 1980's to replace plastic container from which you would shake dry flakes of garlic with the Garlic Machine. It also used to be that the only cracked pepper you saw was if someone dropped the shaker on the floor -- until Mr. Holcomb invented the PepperBall.

Most people that visit patrickWeb are looking for stories about WiFi, blogging, or Internet technology, motorcycles or music, but the subject that results in the most emails is the PepperBall. I hope you enjoy the log that follows. Fortunately, I have been able to help all those who have written. (read more).

Gadgets July 26, 2005 04:00 PM

 

daily  Thursday, February 17, 2005

Demo@15


ToolboxOf all the many conferences I attend each year, my favorite is Demo. Many conferences offer insight in various ways. All conferences offer a chance to network with friends and colleagues from the industry. Only Demo offers the chance to meet with the top couple of people from dozens of technology companies, see their product in action, and discuss their plans and strategies with them. The conference is attended by analysts, consultants, editors, venture capitalists, and entrepreneurs. This year was special because it was the fifteenth year of Demo. There were several people there who had attended fourteen of the fifteen (I have been to thirteen of them). There were 73 companies showing off their new offerings.

Various stories have appeared in the media about Demo this week and news about the conference will reach 250 million people around the world via print and online media. Chris Shipley is the Executive Producer for DEMO Conferences and she always opens the conference with her vision of where things are headed and what technologies will have the biggest impact. Half or so of the companies get six minutes to tell their story and do their demo on stage -- others get one minute. During half of the morning and half of the afternoon, the 750 attendees get to mingle at the company booths. Needless to say, a lot of networking occurs and much of it leads to new relationships and in some cases financing.

Chris says that she gets to be like a kid in a candy store - she looks at more than a thousand companies in order to select the ones that present at Demo. At breaks, colleagues always ask each other "see anything you like?". I always do. It is hard to summarize the excitement I felt for what I saw. I'll highlight a few things I saw but you can see a one page summary and link for each company on the list of demonstrators. (read more)

Conferences, Gadgets, Internet Technology, Personal Computing February 17, 2005 05:43 PM

 

daily  Monday, January 10, 2005

Heathkits: A Walk Down Memory Lane


Heathkit - Apache TransceiverI got a note from Harry Schultz in Tennessee about the Heathkit story from this past May. For Harry (and me) the story brought back many good memories. Harry grew up in St. Joseph, Michigan and, like me, enjoyed putting together many Heathkits while a teenager. After graduation from the University of Michigan, Harry actually worked at Heath Co and became a charter member of the initial computer group that brought out the H-8. The Heathkit H-8 was an early entry into the personal computer market. Harry says that is was more like the Altair and Imsai systems of the day than the more complete Apple, Commodore and Radio Shack entries. The H-8 consisted of a "power supply and a number of slots into which processor, RAM and IO cards were plugged". The user interface was the front panel which consisted of a small LED display and a 16 key keypad for data entry. Harry wrote some of the original software for the H-8. For both Harry and I, a brief reflection on Heathkits was a walk down memory lane.

Related links
bullet Original Heathkit story

bullet Other patrickWeb gadget stories

Gadgets January 10, 2005 10:57 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, December 15, 2004

iTrike Riding


TrikeIt was not exactly a sunny and warm day but, as long as the roads are dry, I like to go out for a motorcycle ride on Sunday afternoons. Winter riding is actually very nice and refreshing -- as long as you have the electric vest and gloves plugged in. They really did the job today when the wind chill was in was single digit territory. Today's ride was on the trike through lower Westchester County, New York and was especially enjoyable because I listened to some great music from the Harley-Davidson MP3 player. The music came from iTunes, hence the term "iTrike Riding". First I will review the motorcycling and digital technology involved and then discuss some of the issues and implications. (read more)

Gadgets, Mobile, Motorcycles, Music, Personal Computing December 15, 2004 10:06 AM

 

daily  Tuesday, January 6, 2004

Personal Medical Technology


The Body Fat Scale has prompted as much feedback as the future of the Internet! This will be the last story about it though. Perhaps it is holiday gadget gift giving that is behind the interest or perhaps it is a desire that many people have to focus on their physical condition at the beginning of a new year. One reader reports that he has had a body fat scale for some time and found it to be "reasonably accurate, consistent, and reliable". He pointed out that the key with body fat measurements is the trend line, not the absolute number. More importantly, the reader related the measurement of body fat to the much larger issue of measuring other things about our bodies using personal medical technology. Being a member of the technology committee of a hospital board, I immediately related to his comments.  (read more)

Gadgets, Healthcare January 6, 2004 09:27 PM

 

daily  Monday, December 29, 2003

Body Fat Scale - Reader Feedback


Feedback about the Body Fat Scale has ranged from "why bother" to "wow, didn't know about that". There was also constructive feedback from Tony, who endorsed the need to monitor both weight and body-fat. "I'm 46, with a family history of heart disease. I have mild hypertension, Type II diabetes and I'm slightly overweight and over-fat", he said. Tony cautioned that one thing to be aware of is the reliability of body fat impedance measurements. (read more)

Gadgets December 29, 2003 10:22 PM

 

daily  Sunday, December 28, 2003

Tanita Body Fat Monitor/Scale


Tanita fat monitor/scaleI can't say that I am in the best possible physical condition, but I do work hard at staying fit. When I received a Tanita Body Fat Monitor/Scale as a gift this week, I hope it was more about my love of gadgets than a different implication. The theory behind having a way to measure how much body fat you have is that it is an important element of your fitness. Weight alone is not a clear indicator of good health because it does not distinguish between pounds that come from body fat and those that come from lean body mass or muscle. Too much fat is often called obesity, and most health experts would agree that obesity puts a person at risk for many serious medical conditions. (read more)

Gadgets December 28, 2003 01:17 PM

 

daily  Thursday, November 27, 2003

The PepperBall Log


PepperBallAfter so many emails about the PepperBall (see below), I decided to establish The Pepper Ball Log share some of the inquiries. There is also a new link to enable readers to be able to buy a PepperBall. Chef'n is a leading innovator in the kitchen housewares industry and it seems to be a company moving in fast forward with a passion for innovation. An inventive young man, David Holcomb, had an idea in the early 1980's to replace plastic container from which you would shake dry flakes of garlic with the Garlic Machine. It also used to be that the only cracked pepper you saw was if someone dropped the shaker on the floor -- until Mr. Holcomb invented the PepperBall.

Most people that visit patrickWeb are looking for stories about WiFi, blogging, or Internet technology, but the subject that results in the most emails is the PepperBall. I hope you enjoy the log that follows. Fortunately, I have been able to help all those who have written. (read more).

Gadgets November 27, 2003 11:46 AM

 

daily  Sunday, October 12, 2003

WD-40 Origin


WD-40Thanks to Chris Forbes at Knovel Corporation for explaining what the 40 in WD-40 means. He says, "It took them 40 attempts to get the water displacing formula worked out". Chris also says that the name came from "Water Displacement perfected on the 40th try". They obviously did a really good job because the original secret formula for WD-40 is still in use after fifty years. I always have a few cans around the shop.

Gadgets October 12, 2003 11:11 AM

 

daily  Saturday, August 2, 2003

Anyone Remember Heathkits?


Heathkit - Apache TransceiverIn the late 1950's and early 1960's, when I was a teenager, building electronic kits from Heathkit was my favorite hobby. During the Heathkit era which lasted from the late 1940's through the mid 1980's, it was possible to build a wide range of things from hi-fi/stereo and ham radio to computers, radio control, and home electronics. Heathkits were first marketed by mail-order, with advertisements appearing in electronics and amateur radio publications such as Popular Electronics, Radio Electronics, CQ and QST. I eagerly awaited the next issue of these magazines to see if Heath had introduced any new kits. Even more exciting was the arrival of a new Heathkit catalog. The largest kit I ever built was the TX-1 "Apache" Ham Transmitter. (read more)

Gadgets August 2, 2003 12:37 PM

 

daily  Friday, August 1, 2003

USB - What Next?


USB FanThere is no end to the creativity of the technology industry. The USB (universal serial bus) had the primary goal of creating a more compact, instant, hassle-free way to connect a keyboard, mouse, printer, digital joystick, scanner, set of digital speakers, digital camera, or PC telephone to a PC. Prior to the sleek and simple USB cables we had big and bulky serial and parallel cables. If you had more than one serial device, then you needed a special box with multiple cable connections and you ended up with a mess of cables. Adding a non-USB peripheral device to a PC can be a non-trivial task that requires a lot of technical savvy and a certain amount of luck. First you have to figure out which port to use and then, in most cases, you have to pry open your PC to install an add-in card, set special switches, and figure out various "settings". USB makes adding peripheral devices really easy. First, USB replaces all the different kinds of serial and parallel port connectors with one standardized plug and port combination. With USB-compliant PCs and peripherals, you just plug them in and turn them on. What's next? (read more)

Gadgets, Personal Computing August 1, 2003 09:53 AM

 

daily  Saturday, May 24, 2003

How To Fill A Pepper Ball


Of the many subjects I have written about on patrickWeb, the one thing that continues to elicit the most feedback is The Pepper Ball. I first wrote about it in 1996 in the gadgets section of patrickWeb. For some unknown reason, it seems I have become the technical support department to the world's pepper ball users! I have gotten emails asking where to buy a Pepper Ball,  how to repair one with broken handles, but mostly asking if I could explain how to refill the pepper supply. Yesterday I got an email from a frustrated man in Virginia Beach, Virginia who wrote, "How do you (or can you) refill the damned thing?"


I am hoping that the following explanation will make a match for people doing web searches looking for the answer. If you look at the Pepper Ball picture carefully, you will see a rectangular shaped area on the left side. It is about 3/4" wide and 1 1/2" long. By pressing on this "door" toward the bottom of the Pepper Ball, it will slide open. I use a small funnel to fill it so I don't have to chase peppercorns around the kitchen floor.

Gadgets May 24, 2003 03:15 PM

 

daily  Saturday, May 10, 2003

Wind Chill



JRP's Dyna Wide GlideIt was supposed to be a warm and sunny day. I had a long ride ahead of me from Pennsylvania through New York to Connecticut on Interstate 84. The temperature barely got above 55, and there was no blue sky or sun to be seen. A slight drizzle was in the air, although fortunately, I did not encounter the scattered showers. Riding a motorcycle in 55 degree weather may not sound unreasonably cold until you consider the wind chill I have always been curious about exactly what wind chill means, so I did a bit of research on it. Basically, it has to do with how cold a person feels due to the effect of wind. Not a big revelation. The calculations are based on a formula, which was arrived at through empirical means. The literature consistently makes the point that the calculation of wind chill is just an approximation but you would not think so based on the formula. (read more)


Gadgets May 10, 2003 02:06 PM

 

daily  Friday, April 18, 2003

Always On -- almost


For a number of years I have been talking about the next generation of the Internet -- Fast, Always on, and Everywhere. (There is a chapter on each of these characteristics in my book, Net Attitude). Although we have a long way to go, I think we have now reached the tipping point. WiFi is a major contributor to that. It doesn't’t seem that long ago that I was at the Holiday Inn in Beijing and felt relieved that I could get connected at 1,200 bits per second and in Prague with a pair if pliers and screwdriver re-wiring a wall jack to get connected. We all have many similar stories from throughout the world – including in America. But, times have changed. (read more)

Gadgets April 18, 2003 04:48 PM

 

daily  Sunday, November 10, 2002

Stupid


We arrived at our destination for the night and unloaded the car. When I removed the key from the ignition switch, the car beeped to warn me that the headlights were still turned on. It was my wife's car and I am not as familiar with things as with my own car and I wondered if the lights would go off automatically after a minute or two like many other cars. I decided to find out so I shut the door and went inside and sat down. Then I decided to turn on my ThinkPad and since WiFi instantly came to life I was soon checking email and soon thereafter had forgotten my experiment. The next morning the car was as dead as a doornail. I felt stupid. Ok, it was a stupid mistake. (Webster: stupid = "acting in an unintelligent or careless manner"). Things went downhill from there. (read more)

Gadgets November 10, 2002 10:25 PM

 

daily  Saturday, November 9, 2002

Speedpass - part 2


Recently my speedpass stopped working as I described in a prior posting.The nice folks at Speedpass sent me a replacement for the broken one and my others too. I was surprised to find that the Speedpass had a battery in it and still wonder why they didn't just tell me to go to Radio Shack and get a replacement battery. I will call them today and give them the serial numbers on the old Speedpasses so they can't be used. The speedpass from one of my motorcycles (picture of card tag on Harley) had the serial number worn off and so I decided to destroy it. I was really curious to see what was inside of it anyway. After a half hour I would have to describe the Speedpass as indestructible! It finally took a pneumatic saw to peel back the electronics inside. Fairly simple -- in addition to the battery, there is an antenna, a small circuit board with one electronic element on it. Built to withstand nuclear attack. Here is a picture of the remains.

Gadgets November 9, 2002 11:49 AM

 

daily  Sunday, July 14, 2002

Some Assembly Required


I have been struggling to rehabilitate my knee for more than a year now. After running for so many years, it is really hard to do without it. Doctors have recommended swimming but I am not a good swimmer and swimming has never appealed to me. I finally took the plunge and bought a Nordic Track Model CXT-910 elliptical cross-trainer from the local Sears store. I asked the sales clerk if it had to be put together. Yes, he said, "some assembly required". You have to "attach the arms to the base". That didn't seem like much -- until I got it home, opened the box, looked at the parts list in the owner's manual and found out that there were 249 parts! (read more)

Gadgets July 14, 2002 02:45 PM

 

daily  Thursday, January 3, 2002

The Pepper Ball


One of the joys of having a personal web site is the feedback received from people all over the world. Through the years -- since 1994 -- this has been a source of much learning for me. Once in a while I receive a flame or barb or criticism or crazy question but for the most part the email has been very sincere and thoughtful. Of the many subjects I have written about on patrickWeb, the one thing that elicited the most feedback is The Pepper Ball. (read more)


Gadgets January 3, 2002 01:25 PM