Technology

Bill Amend's digital conversion

FoxTrot is one of my all time favorite newspaper comics. I've been reading it since it's debut, originally in my hometown paper the Detroit Free Press, then online via Ucomics and now from the FoxTrot homepage. Bill Amend, the creator of the strip has always been among the geekiest of comic creators, his affinity for computers and sci-fi has been among the themes of the strip that have kept me a loyal reader.

Amend added this note to his weekly strip

My first newspaper strip drawn and colored entirely in Photoshop using my Wacom Cintiq. Can't wait until I get better at it!

I have no information on how many other strips are created digitally, I imagine it isn't the first, but to move from pen and paper with traditional coloration to a Wacom and Photoshop is great.

Here is the strip from this week

foxtrot_6-6-2010.gif

Source

Duncan says Listen kids - Android VM

(James) Duncan Davidson has an insightful look at that the Android's VM means in the larger battle with Apple and the iPhone.

I will laugh at anybody who tries to say—with a serious face—that VM performance is what ensures that Android will be a better platform.

Any article that opens a paragraph like this is a winner in my book.

Listen kids, this has all happened before and it will happen again.

Read full source article

WebM

Another divide in the standard for web video appears to be emerging. H.264 seemed to have captured the web up until today when Google unveiled the WebM project at their I|O 2010 conference. WebM is an "open" media format for the web.

According to Google

WebM includes: VP8, a high-quality video codec we are releasing today under a BSD-style, royalty-free license Vorbis, an already open source and broadly implemented audio codec a container format based on a subset of the Matroska media container

This now presents 3 options for presenting media via the web; H.264, Flash and WebM. The list of supporting companies is impressive, Apple seems to have ignored this initiative thus far, while Adobe is on-board.

A developer preview of WebM and VP8, including source code, specs, and encoding tools is available today.

Read More

The real reason Cable TV was started

Interesting bit from BoingBoing regarding the history and origin of Cable TV.

John Walson erected an antenna on a utility pole on a local mountain top that enabled him to demonstrate the televisions with good broadcasts coming from the three Philadelphia stations.

Read more via Boing Boing

MarsEdit 3

Blogging can be simple thanks to all of the great easy to use blog platforms and CMS systems that are now available. It is hard to imagine that the process could be any easier, but it can thanks to the wonderful piece of software I use to post to this site.

Mars Edit is the product of Red Sweater Software, the brainchild of Daniel Jalkut.

This morning Jalkut announced on the Red Sweater Blog that version 3 of Mars Edit has been released.

 

Some of the key feature requests that made it into this version are:

  • “WYSIWYG” rich text editing
  • Support for WordPress Pages and Custom Fields
  • Improved HTML syntax highlighting
  • Integration with iPhoto, Aperture, and Lightroom
  • Scheduled media attachments

 

Oh the new logo/icon is awesome, I've included it here. It looks great in my Dock.

RocketMars.png

This is my first post using version 3 and so far it is beautiful and very useful.

 

Download a copy, and enjoy.

My full review will be coming in about a week.

Thoughts on Flash

Steve Jobs has posted some insights on Apple, mobile devices and Flash.

New open standards created in the mobile era, such as HTML5, will win on mobile devices (and PCs too). Perhaps Adobe should focus more on creating great HTML5 tools for the future, and less on criticizing Apple for leaving the past behind.

Steve Jobs April, 2010

Read the full "Thoughts on Flash"

HP to buy Palm - The End

According to the New York Times, Hewlett-Packard has agreed to acquire Palm for a sum of $1.2 billion.

“We’re thrilled by HP’s vote of confidence in Palm’s technological leadership, which delivered Palm webOS and iconic products such as the Palm Pre,” Jon Rubenstein CEO of Palm

I'm sad to see this happen as I think it spells the death of Palm and their innovation. I had looked at the Pre and Web OS as a real rival and inspiration for Apple and the iPhone. HP has a very poor track record for innovation and building inspiring products.

I bought my first Palm, the Palm III just out of college and I loved it. I had a few Treo's prior to the iPhone as well.

A sad day indeed.

WWDC 2010

wwdc10.png

Apple announced and posted details today for the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference for 2010. It will be held from June 7-11 at the Moscone West in San Francisco.

Apple is using the tagline "5 days. 1,000 Apple engineers. 5,000 of your peers" to describe the event.

There will be over 100 technical sessions largely focused on iPhone and iPad development.

Subject areas are to include: - Application Frameworks - Core OS - Developer Tools - Graphics and Media - Internet & Web

The Apple Design Awards this year are iPhone and iPad only. Mac applications are not applicable this year. While this is controversial and unwelcome news to Mac only developers, I have to conclude that this is due to the next revision of Mac OS X (10.7) not being expected until next year.

Tickets are on sale now for $1,599 through the Developer portal.

Apple is using the tagline "5 days. 1,000 Apple engineers. 5,000 of your peers" to describe the event.

We can assume that there are roughly 5,000 tickets available, and as it sold out quickly last year, if you are interested your time is limited.

This is What a Tweet Looks Like

I never thought that the system was simple, but I've never given it much thought either. RRW has this great explanation of that goes into each tweet.

Think a tweet is just 140 characters of text? Think again. To developers building tools on top of the Twitter platform, they know tweets contain far more information than just whatever brief, passing thought you felt the urge to share your friends via the microblogging network. A tweet is filled with metadata - information about when it was sent, by who, using what Twitter application and so on.

Read More

My Mac Life Part 1

It was 1997 and I was just 15 years old when I had my first encounter with a Macintosh. My regular hang out was Blitz Records, a local Michigan record store. The owner of Blitz Records, Mike Fiscus also produced a music and culture magazine; Anti-Matter. I could be found at Blitz almost daily and built a great relationship with the Mike.

I was there when he entered the store carrying his new baby, a new Mac SE. It was a day that changed many things for me.

I remember being overwhelmed and inspired by the Mac, I would actually say I was afraid of it. Mike took time to explain desktop publishing and even demonstrate the features to me. His intention was to change Anti-Matter, to make it into a really creative endeavor with more control at our hands.

Within a year I was working part-time at the store and was asked to begin writing a few reviews for the magazine. I gained a lot of exposure to the Mac and desktop publishing and thus began my affinity with the Mac platform. Mike was instrumental in all of this, from showing me how layout was processed, letting me enter my own reviews and interviews into the magazine and just being a great mentor. I'll never forget the day he took me and a pile of floppy disks to a professional design studio to finish the layout. They and dozens of Macs, printers and even a scanner. The scanner felt like Star Trek to me, I just couldn't wrap my head around it. It was science fiction come to life.

From there I was set loose, I began renting time on Macs around town to do creative work, mostly designing flyers for my band.

It was a few years before I had daily access and eventually my own Mac, but I've never regretted my crush and eventual love for all things Mac and Apple.

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