Thursday, July 16, 2009

Pile of Flash Memory

I guess I'm late on the Spring cleaning, but today I came upon a pile of flash drives in my drawer. Actually, make that a pile of flash memory when you add in the pile of SD cards too. I decided to look into this, rather than keep buying more of these clever devices.

Truth is, none of them were close to capacity. And more than one of them had a folder labeled "Important Documents" that had stuff that the next drive had as well, although none were really complete.

I decided to just delete what I didn't need, and then put the really important stuff on a folder on my desktop. When it was done, not too much was left, which left me fine. In total, I cleaned up around 5 flash drive, and another 5 SD cards. Now that I freed up the memory, I can start the whole process again.

Maybe I should rename the folder "Very Important Stuff?"

Jonas

 

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

NudgeCast 1/27/09

Goodbye to Voom networks, the digital TV transition reloaded, and a new flash drive.

Download the mp3 here.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

NudgeCast 1/13/09

Thoughts on CES, trouble with a flash drive, and spyware software where the cure is worse than the problem.

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Monday, October 22, 2007

Taking TV Back To the Television


On the seemingly never ending quest towards digital convergence, we have one more stop along the way. While it's possible to get recorded television content from the PC to the television, it's a long way from being done easily. Apple has made some efforts with their AppleTV (which I've not been a fan of, see here), or the third party docking devices that interface with the iPod line. Other possibilities include using the Zune's video out, a media bridge device, or hooking up the 'puter to the TV directly, none of which are cut and paste simple.

The media player devices that have focused on this sneakernet shuffling of video content have been hard drive based. Now that flash based memory capacity has reached the size that can hold video, SanDisk is entering the foray with a new player, the new TakeTV Video Player, as well as a new content source they're calling Fanfare.

If we look at it simply, this new TakeTV is really a USB flash drive, initially available in 4 or 8 GB capacities. That's actually a decent capacity as in initial testing the videos are 350 megs per hour of content. The idea is to download the video on the computer, and then insert the flash drive into a dock that hooks up to the TV set. Pretty simple, and easy enough for anyone to do. It even includes a remote in the deal.


The content comes from Fanfare, a new online media service. Initially the content is free, but I'm sure this will change soon so that an hour episode goes for an iPodlike $1.99. It is only in beta so I wouldn't be so hard on that it only has content from a few networks including CBS, TV Guide, Weather Channel and Showtime. After a 7 meg download, and a flash upgrade, I had Fanfare running on the desktop. Unfortunately, a TakeTV player is needed to download and play anything so I can't preview what the service is really like. Reportedly the player TakeTV will also play back DivX files as well.

The units will initially be priced at $99 for a 4 gig model, and $149 for an 8 gig one, with larger capacities to follow. While that price of admission is downright affordable, all of this hinges on them getting the content part of this right. If they can provide more to watch, and can keep it affordable, then TakeTV just might emerge as another "sneak from behind" from the SanDisk folks. I'd also hope that if this takes off that they'd include some of the other SanDisk players to able to view content either on the TV or portably on the screen. The Sansa View could be suited to this purpose.

--Jonas

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Dictionary 2.0 + 1.0 - 0.7

Just the other day, I was thinking about how I really haven't opened a dictionary in quite a few years. As I do most of my writing on a word processor, the veritable Webster's just sits on the shelf as the spell checker catches the typos, (a term that really applied to a typewriter, and probably doesn't even apply here in the strictest sense).


There are times that I need a definition of a word. A few years back, I would turn to the Microsoft Bookshelf CD that came with my first computer, and outlived it by a healthy margin. On it, there were several reference books, and the most utilized one was by far the dictionary. Who needed to page through the heavy tome when the CD worked so much more efficiently? Not me, for sure. This is the Dictionary 2.0 in the article's title.


After a while, loading up the CD even became too much effort. When I need a definition these days, it's even easier to turn to the site Dictionary.com. After all, it's constantly updated, and even a student friendly price of free for the basic edition which is all I've ever used. It also has a thesaurus as well that works quite well. As long as I'm connected to the internet, then Dictionary.com (I wonder how much they paid for that domain, but it was worth it), is clearly the way to go. This is the Dictionary 3.0 in the article's title.

In case you don't like Dictionary.com, there are plenty of other free online dictionaries as well that are within the budget of every starving student. For a fast and streamlined approach, give Ninjawords a try. At the other end of the spectrum, Merriam-Webster has a full featured site that includes a separate medical dictionary, and a Spanish/English one as well.

I recently noted this product over at OhGizmo!:

My first split second impression was, that was an intriguing application for a flash drive. Then, I got completely unenthused to see that this product is going for $43 to $63 dollars (2 or 4 GB version). Why would I pay that kind of money when I can just use Dictionary.com for free? Are there that many times that the user is offline, like on a train, is using their word processor, and has no online access, and needs a dictionary? This would have been a great application about five years ago, but is simply not needed today. This is the kind of product that some unsavvy parent would buy for their child which would promptly get lost in the bottom of their sock drawer never to be actually used.

Seriously, where do they come up with this stuff? This is the Dictionary 2.3 in the article's title. Save your money for something else as this is a step backwards as far as I can tell.

--Jonas

 

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

NudgeCast 8/28/07






For this week, all I'm going to tell you is that these two images that I've included here figure into what I'm talking about.

--Jonas

BTW, we went with blip.tv for the improved audio quality, hassle free uploading, and better exposure.

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