Author Archive for Sean

Twitter Updates for 2008-06-03

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Social Networking Overload

So I’m trying out a bunch of different social networking sites. Twitter is interesting. FriendFeed is more interesting because it exposes you to friends-of-friends more “efficiently”. (for lack of a better term) I just got my invite for Skydeck, and I’m not so sure about this one. You download a browser extension. You give it your phone number and your login info for your cell carrier’s billing site. It logs in and scrapes your call log. This seems kind of ghetto to me. If people are signing up in droves for Mint and happily providing them with access to their banks, why not just hang onto the info? I guess if they don’t have the security infrastructure, but only being able to update your info from a specific browser isn’t going to cut it. To be fair, I don’t necessarily believe that Skydeck has much of choice though.

The other problem I see is the whole “social network” part of it. There needs to be a huge amount of critical mass for that part to take off, and it’s not quite as compelling as other sites. Until that happens though, Skydeck will just be a pretty neat call log analysis tool.

VBros: Shadowman 9: In the Cradle of Destiny

Oh yeah. If the first episode is any indicator, Season 3 of the Venture Brothers is going to be AWESOME. Much is learned of the Monarch’s and Dr. Girlfriend’s pasts, and Team Venture is conspicuously absent! And who knew of Bjork’s special place in the Monarch’s heart, and her lawyers’ thirst for royalties? If you’ve never seen the Venture Brothers, you’re missing out, You can catch up on Adult Swim’s website.

Movies!

David’s Grandma is in town visiting for a few weeks, so we were afforded a rare opportunity to see some movies in the theater. We went to see Iron Man and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. I can’t really think of a bad thing to say about Iron Man. Robert Downey Jr. *is* Tony Stark, full stop. Effects, excellent. Acting, pretty good. Story, reasonably good. Teaser after the credits? Moderately goofy. As for Indy IV, expectation management ruled the day. Cate Blanchett was pretty awesome. Everyone else ranged from good to boring. I got the distinct feeling that Lucas and Spielberg felt they had to top Raiders’ climax and I wasn’t that impressed, really. In the end, it felt forced. We came to the conclusion that someone had written a first draft, and someone said, “Ok, shoot it!”

Roaring Camp

Grandpa Joe came to visit for David’s birthday and we went to visit Roaring Camp up in the Santa Cruz mountains. They have a really cool fully working steam locomotive, and the ride is really fun. Of course, I tried to take a bunch of pictures, but a good portion of them didn’t come out.

Venting of the boiler towards the end of the ride up and down the mountain.
An extremely yellow caboose. I think it's used for an administrative office.

I think I started something..

I’ve been following Lunch 2.0 for awhile now, but I had gotten the idea that it was for people who worked at “Web 2.0″ companies to talk about “Web 2.0″ type stuff. So I never actually signed up, and just followed along vicariously. However, recently (after hibernating, apparently) they started things up again and the first lunch is at LinkedIn, a social networking site I’ve been playing with in the past few months. In talking to my co-workers, they mentioned how they felt a lot of pressure to accept invitations from co-workers, even ones they didn’t really care for. I can understand that, especially if they’re current co-workers. That having been said, I’m trying to only accept invites from people that I interact(ed) with reasonably often.

So without really thinking about it, I posted to the Lunch 2.0 blog saying I’d be there. After I did it though, I (erroneously) posted again, saying I probably wouldn’t because of my impression of the “rules”. But Terry quickly set me straight about how things worked. Hopefully this will encourage more lurkers to show up at these events.

The iPhone is crap.

I wanted to believe it was cool. I really did. Nope, sorry. The iPhone is a bunch of hooey. Why? The phone is only available with a 2 year contract from Cingular. $600 for the 8GB version, $500 for the 4GB version. So yeah, weak storage capacity. 8GB max? GIVE ME A BREAK. And the worst? No way to install software onto it. What’s the point in making a huge deal out of it running Mac OS X if you can’t even install anything on it? I am so disappointed.

Ideally, what I want is an iPod with the same screen and interface, and a 60 or 80GB drive in it. I don’t care about the phone, I don’t care about the camera. Wifi and browsing would be cool, but not required. I really think Apple shot themselves in the foot with this one.

Playing with Office 2007.

So I started playing with office 2007 today. Outlook is pretty interesting. Now I’m playing with Word, which has blog editing support, and groks Wordpress. I’m scared. We’ll see how well this works.

Robogeo 5.0 supports GPS-CS1

Just noticed this. Work has been really busy lately.

Sony GPS-CS1 Review: They did it right!

When I heard that Sony had announced a standalone GPS logger, the GPS-CS1, I was hopeful and fearful at the same time, especially once I saw it would be bundled with software that was only “guaranteed to work with Sony Cameras”. Well, I picked one up today, and I can safely say that Sony did it right. When you plug it into your computer, it shows up as a USB flash disk, with a GPS subdirectory. Inside that directory are a series of text files that are NMEA GPS logs. Everything is logged in GMT, including the timestamps on the files. (which makes sense when you think about it).

I downloaded a demo of RoboGEO, a commercial win32 geotagging program, as it was the first program I found. After deleting the first line of the test log file I made (sony puts in a line to identify the log file came from its device) RoboGEO was able to import the resulting NMEA file with no problems and tag the quick shots I made in the parking lot. According to the manual, it will record a location every 15 seconds, and battery life is approximately 360 hours on a single AA battery. From that you should get about 86,400 time/location records.

The device itself looks pretty nice too, with a carabiner included so you can hang it off your backpack or camera bag. That having been said, it’s not anything-proof. Not waterproof, water-resistant, dustproof, hot car for extended periods of time proof, magneticproof, dog slobber proof, you name it, Sony says to keep this thing away from it. So, the bottom line is if you’re looking for a (albeit expensive at $150) simple standalone GPS logger that will work (with minor tweaking) with pretty much any geotagging software out there, I don’t think you can beat this thing.

Update: The GPS Image Tracker software that comes with it will work with any JPEG pictures. However, it doesn’t properly account for DST, but you can adjust the timezone for any gps log that’s been imported.