Thoughts

Stop-motion animation with people

This is an interesting video of stop-motion animation with people. Looks like it was done by students, but the low-tech effects are refreshing – although I should mention the illusion of floating through the air was first done (to my knowledge) several months ago by some teenagers on Google Video. I can’t find the link now, but this video will suffice to demonstrate it.

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Reviews

The Navman iCN750 GPS/Digital Camera Tags Pictures w/ Coordinates

Navman is set to introduce a GPS unit that combines standard turn by turn navigation with a built-in digital camera. Pictures snapped by the Navman iCN750 include a Geocode tag embedded in the picture, listing the longitude and latitude. This is meant to help you sort pictures by exact location. The camera (or GPS, depending on what you want to call it) has a 4-inch touch screen, preloaded maps, and the latest SiRF StarIII GPS chipset. The GPS/Digital camera (no word on megapixels) can be powered by either a power adapter or internal battery. The iCN750 should be available this may for around $800. Very cool!

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Thoughts

Possible problems with the MacBook Pro?

Apparently there are problems with the new MacBook Pro, such as overheating, loud cooling fans and whining sounds from the CPU/circuits. It doesn’t happen in all of them, and people are pretty happy with the machines that are working fine. But this is something to watch out for, in particular if you are thinking of plunking down some hard-earned cash for it. To their credit, Apple is doing what they can to fix the defective machines. I suppose glitches are to be expected when one switches to a smaller form factor AND an entirely new CPU. Here is the link.

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Thoughts

Bring your own laptop

Stumbled onto this at Boing Boing and had a look at the original site. The idea is very simple. The employer provides the employee with the money to purchase a reasonable laptop, and lets them take care of the support and other issues. Or lets them use their existing laptop, if they so choose. Here’s the link.

I think it’s great! As a matter of fact, I was thinking of doing this with my next job – if the company’s policies weren’t too stuffy. I know first hand the pain of configuring laptops with group policies meant for desktops. Laptops are very different beasts from desktops. For one thing, they move around so much. For another, users often need to install software when they’re away from IT. Why hamstring their performance with a laptop that’s just been neutered by bad group policies?

At my last job, I wasn’t in charge of the business side of IT – instead, I handled academic IT – and I would cringe every time I saw a laptop that the business IT folks had touched – the users were constantly complaining they couldn’t do this or that, they couldn’t even print, they couldn’t connect to wireless networks, etc. The complaints were without end. Why do this to people? There’s no reason for it, other than the immature need to feel in control at all times… So okay, if you’re working with secret/classified materials, it may be a different story, but that’s a small subset of the work population, not everyone.

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Thoughts

Gallery: 30 Years of Apple Gear

Gallery: 30 Years of Apple Gear: “Over the past three decades, the company has cranked out a boatload of breakthrough products, from the first PDA to the iPod — and lots of computers besides. Get lost in a monster gallery of almost everything Apple’s ever made. PLUS: Wired News’ full coverage of Apple’s 30th anniversary.”

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