Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Want to play with Google Wave?

I haven't done much with it yet.  If you have some ideas you'd like to try out, and for some reason don't have a Wave account yet, feel free to sign up below!



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Saturday, November 14, 2009

Long Term Notes: Nokia 6650 Fold

After having used my free phone for a few more months, I thought I'd jot down a few more details on its state of being and what has and hasn't worked out.

The best thing about the newer smart phones is that once the manufacturer gets the hardware and software stable, a lot of the best things about your phone come from new and exciting ways to utilize its features through new software.  This has largely been the case with my 6650 Fold, so the majority of my discussion will be about the trials of various software solutions to my problems, some of which I never knew I had.

The only real complaints I've had about this phone have been about the button layout, which I discussed in my ealier post, and apparently haven't bothered doing anything more about since then.  I did purchase a USB cable, but haven't yet felt the need to actually attempt to make the changes so that I'm not always tapping the key to open the AT&T Navigator.  Maybe later...

One thing that has changed since I first wrote about my 6650 Fold, was the addition of an internet data plan.  This has allowed me to augment many of my favorite text-only services with new features.

The biggest shortcoming I've found with this phone is that it lacks a comfortable amount of RAM. There is a great web browser for S60 and WM phones called Skyfire, which I could only run after rebooting the phone or it would protest that there was not enough memory available.  SInce installing another helper application, I can't even run it after a reboot, but it was fun to use while I could.  If you have a data plan, and an S60 or Windows Mobile device, compare Skyfire to your packaged browser.  I'm willing to bet Skyfire will take you places you never thought possible from your phone.

Similar to Skyfire's problems with running short of memory, the same can be done with my built-in browser from time to time, so my browser of choice for this phone is Opera Mini. I use the full screen interface, almost exclusively, and it hardly ever malfunctions.  The Opera Link feature allows me to manage bookmarks and notes from my desktop, then synchronize with the browser on the phone later.  I only wish I could use it as my default browser.  Unfortunately, I have not found any way to do this yet.

Google has a full suite of applications for S60.  The ones I use are Search (accessible by pressing the C key from the idle screen, and now featuring voice recognition), Maps with Lattitude, Sync (SyncML or Exchange ActiveSync), and YouTube.  From Opera, I use Google Voice, Calendar, Reader, and iGoogle.

sync.gifI would like to make special note of the Google Sync features for a couple of reasons.  The first is that being able to access your contacts and calendar features from your phone AND anywhere you can access the internet, is very, very handy.  The second? Something strange was happening when I was synchronizing both contact and calendar information that was causing the birthdays of my contacts to drift, making them all a few days younger!  Disabling the calendar sync has not helped, so I'm going back to the SyncML method.  Google? FIX IT!

The music application works well, and can be accessed with the phone either opened or closed, and there are many playback options to configure to your taste.  There isn't any 3.5mm headphone jack, so you're options are limited to using the somewhat proprietary 2.5mm headset jack or Bluetooth.  I'm using bluetooth, and it works great.  This phone does not appear to have any limitation as to what sort of audio is being listened to in order to pump audio through the bluetooth connection. One of my previous phones required a headset that supported A2DP in order to play back .wav or .mp3 files, or it would play throught the phone's speaker.  Nokia does not have that limitation.

locationtagger.PNGOne of the features not included with this phone is picture GeoTagging, but it can be added by installing Nokia's Location Tagger software.  This is built into many of their phones, but is not included with the 6650 fold, probably due to RAM constraints again. It loads up when you start the phone, grabs your location with the GPS, goes to sleep, then wakes up the GPS when you launch the camera application.  Any pictures taken after the GPS has reaquired your location are geotagged.

In closing, I have to say again that while there are a lot of limitations to what this phone comes with, there is plenty it can do if you know where to look, and while there are many signs saying Symbian might not have much longer to live in this world, the fact is that it allows for plenty of added functionality for a very cheap (and fairly durable) flip-phone. Thank you, Nokia 6650 Fold, for being a great temporary measure.
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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Evolving dyamics of entertainment and power usage...

I can see this being quite an interesting area as we add more entertainment functions to devices, which in turn need more power to run, even if they replace 5 boxes that would need even more energy to run.

in reference to: FAQ: Can flat-screen TVs make the efficiency grade? | Green Tech - CNET News (view on Google Sidewiki)

Saturday, August 15, 2009

So I guess I've been busy

What have I been doing, that would keep me from my most favoritest of blogs?  A few things.

Allison and I started dieting the South Beach way, and have each been losing weight in a steady fashion.  Along those lines, I've been using my new phone to keep track of the miles I have been walking or riding on my bike.  Nokia Sports Tracker is my weapon of choice.  I can use downloaded maps from Ovi Maps, or grab them from an active internet connection and see where I've been.  After the workout, I can check my stats and compare them to other workouts on the phone, or upload them to the website and do the same thing.  You have a number of privacy options for the workouts you upload, so you can share with your friends, or everybody, or nobody.  The other nice thing it does after uploading your trip is it offers to scan your phone for any pictures or video you may have taken during that time.  It then places those pictures on the map of your route, similar to geo-tagging.  I love this phone.

We sold my car, Ellie, which had served us for many years.  While it made me sad to see her go, the money we are saving on insurance has gone to adding Internet service to our phones, which is kinda nice.  Since we already have unlimited family messaging, and neither one of us has a "smart phone" it only costs us an extra $10 per phone, per month.  I've been taking advantage of the weather and biking to and from the vanpool most days.  Good times!

We took a trip to Ohio to see Allison's friends and family for the part of July.  We had LOTS of fun, and of course it was with faces full of tears that we left to come back home.  We flew out of Portland, so we spent a little bit of time with my family before and after the trip.  We did lots of hiking and exploring and generally had a great time.

I have graduated to keeping the books for the Vanpool.  I actually have a legitimate use for Remember The Milk besides just for my own personal purposes.  I set up monthly reminders for processing the vanpool log, collecting fees from the riders, and sending the reports to Intercity Transit.  I can access the reminders and check them off from anywhere.

I think you are up to date for now.  I'll be writing more about my experience with my phone later.
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Monday, June 08, 2009

A new toy in my pocket

I got a new phone. Not one of the ones I've been aspiring to reacquire from Sony Ericsson, but an upgrade nonetheless. I was going to hold out and just purchase an SE model this summer, but was tired of being frustrated by the Samsung Blackjack I had been using. The Blackjack has lots of features, but is overall very unsatisfying.

My new phone is a Nokia 6650 Fold (not anywhere close to the original 6650), from AT&T Wireless, which is different yet than the regular 6650 Fold you might find from other networks or independent dealers. AT&T wanted to make it a little different, to show off their navigation software and PTT features on this phone, so it has a few more buttons to mess with.

Part of my agenda with this phone is to undo some of the crap AT&T has done to make it "theirs," and make it a little more my own. Symbian is a new beast to me, so I'll be learning for a long time to come, but I am already enjoying some of the benefits of this phone.

Bluetooth: I can conclusively say that bluetooth reception and transmission on the Blackjack sucks. I went back to trying out my Sony Ericsson over-the-ear headset for this phone, because it is the best sounding, least intrusive, and most comfortable headset I have. This headset had a problem with the microphone not always working with the Blackjack, and I still need to test this out. The other problem I saw with this headset was in being able to keep it connected to the phone. This is no longer a problem with the 6650 (hooray!!). The NEW feature with the Nokia is that it pings the headset when a message is received, so I can set the phone to complete silence and tell from the headset when something has happened.

Flexibility: The phone's menu system can be presented in a number of ways, and I still haven't decided what I like more. The addition of touch sensitive buttons for the external display allows for some nice features. I can scan text messages without opening it up, and have access to the calendar, stopwatch, timer, camera, and music player!

The funny thing I see with this phone is that it is running what is normally recognized as a smart phone operating system, but because it isn't from Microsoft or Apple, and only has a numeric keypad, it has been given access to the cheaper data plan from AT&T. I love that.

What I'll be doing next is adding some applications to use the GPS built into it. The phone comes with the AT&T Navigator software built in, but that costs money for the service and data (separately). There is navigation software available that can be used with map data stored on the memory card, which is preferable right now, as I only want to be able to see how far I'm walking at lunch, or whenever else. I would also like to see if it has any geotagging options.
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Friday, June 05, 2009

This is a test of the emergency FlockCast system

If this were a real emergency, you would not have had a chance to read this bulletin, because at least one of us would have been busy running for our lives.

In case you were wondering was FlockCast does, it allows you to send a link to Facebook for just about anything you are posting somewhere else with Flock.

Sometimes this is extremely handy, but might have a tendency to get very annoying as time goes on.  Please use at your own discretion. 
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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

A Blatant and Probably Useless Plug

My topic for the day is a subject that may sound a little sticky.  It is called Glue, and it has a plugin for Firefox based browsers (my favorite is Flock) that can connect you to other web surfers in new ways.

At its core, Glue invades your privacy by monitoring your activity on certain websites and allowing you to show your enthusiasm for different noun-based objects (people, places, or things).  That alone is not all that great, and has been most of my experience so far.

What makes it better is the networking capability it has.  You can instantly add other glue users to follow from your Facebook friends and those you follow on Twitter, in addition to following other Glue users that show up in the Glue Bar when you visit a site monitored by Glue.  Once you happen across more people, you can comment on the comments they have left, see what they like or where they have been.

I consider myself lucky to know a few BIG movie buffs, and would love for them to start using Glue to show me which ones they like or dislike by slapping a link to their review of said movie into the "2 cents" Glue comment section.  That might also promote more reading of their reviews. Ha!

I have only done a little bit of this so far, and most of it has been on Yelp, recommending local restaurants.  I look forward to doing more, and seeing what my friends can do to tell me about what they like, whether it is books, movies, movie stars, music, recording artists, gadgets, restaurants, stocks, TV shows, or wine.

Now if only I could motivate them a bit more...
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Wednesday, April 01, 2009

New Blog Features for kEnny!

Part of what keeps me active on this blog, is a desire to understand how to appply new and nifty applications and gadgets.  Whenever I hear of new features or hacks being made available for my favorite sites and tools, I'm all over it.  Almost every gadget in this blog's sidebar is a result of that pursuit.  To that end, I'm officially introducing two new features to my blog today.

The first can be seen at the top of the main column, where you should see "Click here to leave your answers!"  This is a Wall gadget from Google Friend Connect.  This is not my first time using gadgets from Friend Connect, but it is the first time I have put something interactive like this on my own blog.  It is there for whatever you would like to use it for.  If you would like to tell me how super green my blog is, or how i could do something to make it easier to read, or if you want to ask a question for me to answer in a new blog post, go right ahead!

The other new gadget is my label cloud in the sidebar.  I've been looking for something that makes better use of the humongous amount of space taken up by Blogger's default label list.  You can find tag clouds all over the web, but it is near to impossible to find one that works with Blogger's Labels.  I found one, and it is fairly easy to implement.  Let me know if you want the details.
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Saturday, March 14, 2009

New Fun!!

Hi again! I've got my new laptop from work, and it has been a lot of fun getting it set up just the way I like it. This thing is a monster, and definitely falls into the Workstation class of laptops. The hardest thing to come to grips with so far has been the screen. While not outrageously huge, it can be an eyeball burner because of the number of pixels it packs in. I've had to do some major tweaking to make things large enough to comfortably read.

This is coming from someone who is still living life without assisted vision. I consider myself pretty darn lucky to have been able to last as long as I have without needing corrective lenses. I can see the writing on the blurry wall when I look at things FAR off in the distance, but I have been able to keep things from getting too bad through a regular ocular exercise regimen.

Back to the Beast. This might be the fastest single processor system I've had the pleasure of using. I've got as many eye-candy inducers as I can get to run without causing trouble for each other as I can on it, running Windows XP, and it doesn't ever miss a step. I'm also very impressed that the Bluetooth software is suitably capable, and can handle just about every type of function there is.

The keyboard is very comfortable, mostly because HP didn't have to squeeze any keys to fit inside the "constraints" of the chassis. I'm very happy to use it, and am still amazed to have been able to get it, considering how much my employer is trying to squeeze all they can out of every last cent. Thanks, Intel
!!


The most fun I've been having of late is working on the development of a new team blog for a fictitious person originally established on a Facebook fan page
. The idea came about shortly after Facebook's "Like" feature popped up. Allison mentioned that she wished she could "Dislike" things, and that started the ball rolling toward the birth of H.A.Ters. It has been a rather therapeutic platform for venting about stupid things you see, and finding a few other like-minded folks. We only have 14 fans at the moment, but we are determined to grow. :^)

Once the idea to branch out from the Facebook page was broached (again by Allie), I set up a twitter
account and twittermail address so that H.A.Ters' ghostwriters, of which there are currently six, could all tweet directly to their (currrently singular) followers. This was followed by a Google Group for the ghostwriters to discuss the blog setup, and hold the information concerning the ins and outs of the H.A.Ters universe. I started another Google Group to allow more of us to monitor H.A.Ters' email inbox, which is still a little problematic. We have pretty much launched the new blog now, and it features a few imported rants from our previous adventures in blogging, to fill the toddler-blog out in its infancy. The nice part about making this a team blog is that we can each contribute what little we can to make for a more frequently updated blog.

With H.A.Ters' blog
and twitter account running, I was able to add RSS feeds from both back onto the Facebook fan page, and added the new blog to Facebooks Networked Blogs app. From Networked Blogs I was able to take a blog following gadget and add it to the blog to go along with all the Google Friend Connect gadgets on the blog, so it is really "socialed out." You can sign up to follow the blog through Blogger or Facebook, and you can leave comments and videos on the page as well as leaving comments on the blog posts. It has been a lot of fun, even if we are the only ones to get much out of the exercise.


Google Voice
My last bit of news has me VERY excited. I just read that Google is finally unveiling a closely guarded secret for the last year. What was once known as GrandCentral, a company Google bought not much before GrandCentral stopped showing any outward publicity, has now become Google Voice. This is going to be an interesting ride. Google Voice will take all of the features from GrandCentral, and integrate the phone book with that from your Gmail account's contacts, and makes your Google Voice phone number available for SMS and email. They have added message transcription, which is an amazing feature all by itself, and usually can't be found for free. We will most likely be dropping our Vonage line very soon. Vonage, I love ya, but you can't keep charging me the small pittance you expect if you can't keep up with this.

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Monday, February 23, 2009

My latest adventures!

To start with, our new GPS has arrived and now that it has seen a bit of use around town, I can say that it does a fine job.  While our Sony NV-U44 is certainly not the navigation and multimedia powerhouse that some units are, the frugal side of me says "Hey, you got a LOT of features for your $70!!"

And I think it's true. It features Text-to-Speech, lane guidance (as seen in the picture on the left), fast satellite acquisition, and gesture recognition, which allows you to wipe your finger across the screen to activate some features instead of needing to divert your eyes from the road.  There are many features missing from the unit, my favorite of which is traffic updates and internet connected features, but we don't live in an area where we are all that likely to benefit from them either.  Despite being made fun of by my wife, I'm going to continue to use it as we drive around town, just to familiarize myself with it more. 



The second event of note is a continuation from my last post, about the resurrected Acer 2010 laptop.  The one remaining weakness the system had was a broken right-side lid hinge, which would pop out of the plastic cover when someone would try to adjust the screen angle.  I was trying to adjust it back to a usable angle and squeezed the screen a bit too hard.  The glass cracked, rendering about 80% of the screen unreadable, but still very colorful.  I set about disassembling the lid, which came apart without too much drama.  The Sony Vaio laptop, whose screen I was hoping to steal, was not giving in so easily.  I was afraid that if I pried too hard I might end up doing similar damage to the one remaining usable part from the Sony. 

After sharing my work laptop with my sister for a week and a half, Allison said she wanted to give it a try last night, and while she did crack the bezel around the screen a little bit, it really wasn't anything to worry about.  I was very happy that the two laptops we had gotten for her were so similar that they could share so many parts.  The new screen went in, and I got it all put back together without the misbehaving hinge.  Now it works the same, but we can close the lid again (woohoo!!!), and it has a glossier and brighter screen. 

Now Allie can get back to her Ubuntu lessons.  Maybe she'll want to work on importing some of her old blog posts to our new blog, as well.



The next bit came as a bit of a surprise to me last week, as I received an email at work indicating that I am scheduled to get my laptop replaced at the end of THIS WEEK!!!!  I'm pretty stoked, as it will be my first laptop that wasn't WAY outdated by the time it got to me.  The one I'm using now, is the third shell replacement and second hard drive image of the IBM T42 I received new a few years ago. While it is a well-built machine, and not too heavy to carry around, I have longed for a wider screen for some time (especially now that I use Flock).

My new system will be an HP Compaq 8510p, which has a high resolution screen, updated processor and chipset (Centrino Pro, even), and a SATA hard drive!  I'm looking forward to burying Windows on another machine. 
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Sunday, February 01, 2009

After talking The Talk, I finally walked The Walk.

I'm writing this blog entry from a newly resurrected "laptop" computer, which has just recently been imbued with the powers of Ubuntu (Intrepid Ibex, if you are curious). This was the first system bought for Allison to use as her own, and served us well for a while, but then bad things started happening to it. The right side screen hinge anchor broke, the keyboard lost some functionality, and it got replaced with a slightly updated Sony Vaio. It was also having intermittent hard drive issues, which were ended when I used it to experiment with digital video capture from the DVR, and forgot to limit the file size. The hard drive was not usable after that.

When Allie's Vaio up and died before we had fully scoped out her replacement laptop, we had nothing better to do, but to see if we could get ANYTHING up and running for her. This effort serves multiple purposes: It gives us our first stab at using Linux (our router doesn't really count) for determining if we can use it on the next laptop, it "bridges the gap" until we purchase the next laptop, and can perform as a computer for the kids later on. What it needs (and is on the way now) is a new keyboard. I'm using the wireless "lapboard" stolen from the XBOX, which had originally been used for playing Half-Life 2 on the TV with the old HTPC, sitting atop the laptop's built in keyboard. When the replacement keyboard arrives, it may grace somebody's lap once again. It has a few upgrades inherited from the Viao: like a faster processor, and twice as much RAM.

Ubuntu has been a joy to use for the most part. There have been a few hickups, but I haven't had to undo anything. The biggest pain in the butt has been figuring out how to correctly administer permissions. For those of you who might be unfamiliar, the common model of usage with Linux is that you don't USE anything with root (overlord master of all) permissions, and those permissions are only invoked when specifically needed. I can understand that just fine, but have had a hard time finding the CORRECT instructions for my particular needs. The hardest thing for me to do has been to get Flash working on Flock. It is a simple process, but was hard for me to find the right set of instructions, so there were a lot of wrong instructions for me to try out first.

Of course I now have Flock set up with all my favorite Firefox Add-ons, and have installed WINE to enable some of our favorite Windows games from Silvercreek Entertainment (Solitaire, Hearts, Spades, etc.), so in the software sense we are good to go. Ubuntu has set up ALL of the hardware available to the laptop with a minimum of effort, including our networked all-in-one printer. All I had to do was tell it to look for a printer, and it was immediately found ALL BY ITSELF!!! I don't know if Windows Vista can do that, but I know Windows XP can't. Similarly, the scanner was already known when I opened up the scanning application. I can't shout enough praises for these last two, as we have had a good amount of trouble from the HP software for Windows. This rocks!! The only other little nibble was that the volume control keys were not mapped to the correct device. This problem was fixed rather quickly though, as it was simple to find the correct control to change.

So for anyone wondering if they can make the leap, and isn't attached to proprietary devices and files they are worried about losing (Hi, iPod. I'm looking at you), try out the latest release of your friendly neighborhood linux distribution. You don't have to commit to it, as you can run many distributions from the CD to try it out.
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Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Internets, Complacency, And Me.

This entry has been baking for a long time, while I have been gathering evidence against myself in observing my lack of new adventures on the world-wide-web.  While my writing upon the subject may not be all that lengthy, I think it bears some scrutiny even if only for my own self examination.

The leading indicator of my home-grown personal epidemic lies in the lack of new bookmarks and websites I actively use to check the pulse of the Internets.  There was a time when I would check in on up to 20 different websites in the course of a single day, and most of those were "news" sites, featuring a short blurb and a link to the actual content on other websites.  Now?  I only have 3 sites I chick with any regularity:
  • CNET's News.com
  • The Inquirer
  • My personal iGoogle page.
Granted, my iGoogle page has multiple tabs, and each tab has lots of gadgets and feeds, but there are only a few links from there that actually get clicked on in any daily fashion.

A lot of the reason for my compressed internet schedule is due to my own changing habits.  I no am no longer worried about how to get the ABSOLUTE MOST game out of my computer.  I'm wowed more by the new tricks on the TiVo and XBOX 360, for which my computer may be considered a conduit, but other than that isn't really used with the same regularity.

Another reason for the lack of adventurous reading comes from many of my former favorites either being bought by other sites (possibly changing the style), disappearing off the map, or maybe I just don't feel I need it any more.  For instance, I used to check PCMag.com (when I wasn't subscribing to their magazine) on a regular basis, but then CNET bought them.  I had already been a regular user of various CNET sites, so with the exception of checking in on John C. Dvorak on occasion I don't have much use for PCMag.com any more.

So tell me, Internets, where my new adventure?  What's the next Holy Grail for me to search for?  I'd like to know. 
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Monday, January 12, 2009

e-Tools Quick Take...

Just a quick update, here:

I found a work-around for Blogger's inability to keep completed tasks from showing up in my "Blogs to Be" sidebar gadget. This was coming from a Remember The Milk task list, and has probably only been read three or four times in the correct manner. I found out how to change the feed from Atom (default) to RSS, and now it works! At least there is a workaround for Blogger's ineptitude.

Since my favorite browser, Flock, has now integrated the photo sharing services of Tinypic into its Media Bar, I have signed up as well. Another member of my household has been a longtime user of this service, for stuffing her blogs full of pictures, so I have some catching up to do.

I've added a Digg feed to the sidebar, but unlike the gadgets referencing the most popular articles on Digg, these are just my own most recent diggs. You're here (all 2.5 of you) to read my spewage, so you deserve to see the "garbage-in" side of me as well. Look for "What the heck is kEnny reading?" on the right.

...

On a somewhat unrelated note, something funny happened between last night and this morning. On a whim I decided to look up the ShamWOW guy, Vince Clortho Offer. I found his Wikipedia page and used twitter to make note of it. This morning I got an email from twitter announcing that _VINCEOFFER_ was following me on twitter! How very interesting!!
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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Now (or at some point, at least) It's Gonna Get Serious

... of course it will be in a fun & geeked out way. We now have two multimedia powerhouses connected to our "Home Theater," in the TiVo HD and XBOX 360, with the capability to add back the HTPC at some point as well. Both devices can stream audio and video from the our network and the internet. I'm determined to find some cool stuff to do with them.

I've been watching NAS (Network Attached Storage) trends for a long time, and there are some very compelling devices out there that are friendly to both the XBOX and TiVo, which can feed them with pictures, audio, and video. We've got lots of pictures and music already, and could conceivably be downloading TV content (instead of paying the cable company so we can record it on the TiVo) from the web.

As home networking options gain new features and speed, we'll be looking for the proper direction to go to replace our router and add a NAS box of some sort. Our current router, as steadfast and trusty as it may be, can be overwhelmed at times by the number of bandwidth hogs currently connected to it. We will need to step up to Gigabit speeds to make it through all the cross-streaming mess, and a finalized high-speed wireless standard would be nice as well. Using a stand-alone NAS should bring power savings over simply running an HTPC all the time, and keep the overall packaging smaller and easier to handle.

After reading an article on CNET about a family who dropped their satellite TV to save money, we're going to be examining some similar options. Most of the TV we watch that isn't broadcast over the airwaves is available for download or streaming. The first trick is determining what we can receive with a terrestrial antenna. If we can kick Comcast cable TV to the curb, we'll be golden!
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Saturday, January 03, 2009

X Barks The Spot!

I'll be the first to admit it. In terms of game consoles, our household has been living in the dark ages. We've had the same Nintendo Gamecube since before either of our children were born. We've been mulling over what to do about it for quite some time, but the options had been somewhat daunting for most of that time. Some consoles had cooling or noise problems, some consoles had only "family" games, etc. After lots of deliberation and putting off the purchase, we took my brother-in-law's advice (Thanks, Brandon!) and bought an XBOX 360.

I had been thinking for some time about the optimal way to add the 360 to our home theater, considering the way things had been connected and set up before. I really wanted to use the HDMI output for the video, rather than using the questionable component cable supplied with the 360, but because our TV doesn't pass through the audio data from HDMI we needed to still have a separate audio connection to the reciever. One solution I had come up with previously was to use seperate HDMI switch, but I have only found a few that I was interested in, and those didn't seem to last long. My idea was to have a 4 or 5 port HDMI switch, with SPDIF or TOSLINK connections to handle all the source switching. Our TV has to toggle through the first HDMI input to access the second input when selecting by remote control, so using more than one digital input on the TV can be a bit of a hassle, hence the search for the outboard switch. Unfortunately it seems rather hard to find one that is both well recommended and less than $100.

The simplest idea for now, was to just replace the DVD player with the XBOX. This kept the console in an area of the TV stand that was open from both the front and back (for better cooling), and made for easier game swapping as well. There was one little problem preventing us from using the same HDMI and TOSLINK cables from the DVD player, which would seem to have been done on purpose by the XBOX 360 designers. The A/V connectors on the back of the 360 were too close together, not allowing the simultaneous use of the HDMI port and the multi-purpose A/V pod that came with our unit. The huge plug on the A/V pod was almost completely blocking the HDMI jack. Luckily the internet came to our rescue. Microsoft offers a $50 solution to this problem, in the form of an HDMI cable kit which has an A/V pod of reduced size (offering only audio connections) and the requisite HDMI cable. From the state of current HDMI cable price gouging, this might not be such a bad deal, but as a customer of Monoprice, I'm not about to settle for that kind of robbery. I found a number of "tutorials" for getting around this small problem. Simply removing the plastic casing from the plug of the A/V pod made enough room for both connections, and we were in business.

The next task was to program the universal remote control. Okay, maybe I should stop here. This was actually done before the I figured out how to get the HDMI connection going on the 360, but for the purposes of our story we are going to pretend that this was done afterward, K? Our remote control, while definitely not glamorous, is a very versatile beast once you have found the right software tools for manipulating it. It is a LONG throw from any Logitech Harmony, but it gets the job done very nicely, thanks. While it has no recharging stand, the batteries last for many months on end with no problem. I've programmed upgrades into it for the TV, TiVo, receiver, old DVD player, and now the XBOX 360, so that we have a 3rd way to control the console (remember that we want to watch DVDs on it, too?) for when a game controller doesn't seem quite right. While this remote control is much older than all of these devices, there are many avid fans who have spent hours of hard work on the programming tools for these remotes, so I could spend $35 a few years ago on the remote and programming cable and not need another remote for a LONG time. Just as with a Harmony, our remote is set up for task based usage, giving you access to the controls you need for the particular media you are enjoying. No, it doesn't have a battery-eating LCD screen, but it still works great and keeps things simple.

Another interesting highlight of getting the new "DVD player" has been Allie's inquisitive side turning its attention to the XBOX. After a friend of hers recommended we get an extra cooling unit for it, and us discussing it at length, she took off and found out which exact components our 360 was built with, any known weaknesses associated with it, and what we needed to look out for in general. I would normally get around to these things, but it was nice to be beaten to the punch. She's pretty awesome that way, when it comes to things she has taken an interest in. It turns out ours is not in very great danger of succumbing to overheating issues.

Today marks the first full day the kids will be able to spend with the XBOX, after Allison and I had it to ourselves for almost a week. I'm glad we didn't have them under foot for the first few days, so we could have a chance to get it all figured out for ourselves. I still have some tweaking to do with the remote control, but other than that, it all works great!!!
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