August 18th, 2012
In a follow-up to this recent Chad’s News post, Adobe has pulled its Flash Player from the Android store. Thanks to Steve Jobs, it appears that HTML5 will be the delivery system of choice for multimedia content. Adobe still has plans for Flash, and it’s fully supported on PCs, but this is pretty much the end of it for mobile devices.
Link: http://www.bbc.com/…
(via Kim Komando)
Posted in Internet, Other Software, Phones, Tablet Computers | No Comments »
August 13th, 2012
Aaron Deveau, age 18, has been convicted of vehicular homicide for texting while driving. The distraction led to a crash that killed a man. Deveau will spend a year in jail then five years on probation, and he will lose his driver’s license for 15 years. A harsh punishment indeed.
Link: http://www.cnn.com/…
(via Kim Komando)
Posted in Cars, Phones | No Comments »
August 12th, 2012
The linked article has an infographic listing the pros and cons of Windows 8, from primarily a corporate IT department point of view:
Pros:
- Common user experience across devices
- Windows 8 will run from a USB drive
- Easy to reset devices back to their original configuration
- Better login security: gestures on a picture
- 8-second boot time
- 3G/4G support: automatically detects your SIM card and configures for it
Cons:
- No Start Menu
- Significant retraining required
- The corporate desktop seems to be an afterthought
- PCs will require a hardware upgrade to touch screens in order to use the touch interface
- Mobile devices can’t join a Windows network domain
Link: http://www.techrepublic.com/…
Posted in Microsoft | No Comments »
August 12th, 2012
The radio show, This American Life, did a segment where they interviewed recent immigrants to the United States and asked them what aspects of American life they found to be the most unbelievable. Then someone posted a follow-up question on Quora to see what else there was. The lists include:
- People obeying traffic laws
- Christmas light displays
- Homelessness
- Serving sizes, obesity, and well-stocked supermarkets
- Public displays of affection, such as kissing
- Availability of firearms to any citizen
Link #1 (Flash audio stream. Starts at 35:34 and lasts about 10 minutes. Start the audio then click the right-arrow in the “Act 2” section to jump directly to it.):
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/…
(via Neatorama)
Link #2 (Follow-up): http://www.theatlantic.com/…
Posted in Potpourri | No Comments »
August 11th, 2012
exFAT is a file system, similar to FAT32 or NTFS, developed by Microsoft and released to the mainstream in Windows Vista SP1. It’s primarily intended for Flash drives, as opposed to magnetic hard drives, and has the added advantage that Apple Macintosh computers with OS X 10.6.5 or later support it by default (which is not the case for NTFS). Based on the linked article, you should probably use NTFS for standard hard drives and exFAT for Flash-based devices, and just completely forget about ever using FAT32. exFAT will work with Windows XP if you install update KB955704.
Thanks to Josh for this link.
Link: http://www.tech-recipes.com/…
Posted in Microsoft, Other Software, USB | No Comments »
August 5th, 2012
The linked article explains the two main types of memory cards and their various speed ratings. The author also gives tips on which ones to use for your camera, based on the type of photography you’re doing
Link: http://www.komando.com/…
Posted in Cameras, Other Hardware | No Comments »
August 4th, 2012
The linked article discusses how geothermal energy from Iceland will be sent to mainland Europe. It also covers plans to build solar farms in Africa that will help power southern Europe. Now that’s what I’m talking about! For some time now I’ve been wondering why they don’t carpet the Sahara with huge solar farms—this would be such an economic boon for the African states, and it just makes environmental sense. So it’s good to hear that plans are underway to make that happen. I can see it going even further, where energy from the solar arrays is used to power massive desalinization plants, thus bringing fresh water to the African nations that most need it. I believe Northern Africa could be transformed into a prosperous region, much in the same way that oil has transformed Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia.
Link: http://arstechnica.com/…
Posted in Environment | No Comments »
August 3rd, 2012
When I first heard about Windows RT, I got it confused with the old IBM RT PC, but they are not related. Instead, RT is a version of Windows 8 that will run on mobile devices that have ARM CPUs (instead of the familiar Intel/AMD CPUs that we see on desktops and laptops). One downside is that existing Windows applications, those developed prior to Windows 8, will not run on Windows RT without some conversion work. But Microsoft plans to release an ARM-compatible version of Office to help lead the way. Windows RT is an effort by Microsoft to get Windows into the mobile device market. The benefit to users will be Windows’ huge pool of applications. We’ll see how well it works out.
Link: http://www.techrepublic.com/…
Posted in Microsoft, Tablet Computers | No Comments »
August 2nd, 2012
The linked article gives a summary of what it takes to convert a movie from 2D to 3D. The process is long and involved, and is compared to cutting your lawn with a nail clipper. The article covers the conversion of Titanic, which took more than two years. Many other conversions are done in much less time, and shortcuts are taken that make the 3D experience less enjoyable.
Link: http://www.extremetech.com/…
(via Slashdot)
Posted in 3D Movies | No Comments »
July 31st, 2012
[EDIT: Yes, this is a duplicate article. My bad.]
While it hasn’t actually happened yet, plans are underfoot to capture a near-Earth asteroid and mine it for precious metals. Asteroid mining was a staple of ’50s science fiction, and now we have people putting up money to make it happen. Should it prove feasible, it will also give us more resources and stave off the catastrophes predicted by limited-resource doomsayers.
Link: http://www.reuters.com/…
(via Kim Komando)
Posted in Environment, Space | No Comments »
July 31st, 2012
I’ve been hearing some good things about the Google Nexus 7 tablet computer. At $200 for the 8GB model, its price is comparable to the Amazon Kindle Fire, but the features and specifications are much better. The 16GB model, at $250, is so popular that it quickly sold out, but only for a week or so. Here at the Chad’s News Network Command Center, however, I still prefer my Kindle because of its tight integration with Amazon.
Link #1: http://arstechnica.com/…
Link #2: http://www.komando.com/…
Posted in Google, Tablet Computers | No Comments »
July 30th, 2012
The video in the linked article details how much of the work for Toy Story 2 was almost permanently erased. Someone ran a delete command on the root directory of the computer containing the movie’s CGI work, and the backup was corrupted. The only reason they didn’t lose all their data was because one employee had made a recent copy of the files so she could work from home. Seriously… that’s what happened during the production of a multi-million dollar Pixar movie.
Now on to a technical explanation of how the article and video are wrong. First, the article says it only took three characters, referring to “rm/
“. This is incorrect because there’s a space between the “rm
” and the “/
“, making it four characters instead of three.
And the video is wrong when it says the command used to delete the files was “rm /
. In order to delete directories, subdirectories, and their contents, the rm
command requires you to supply the -r
parameter. And to suppress prompts and warning messages, you would need to speicfy the -f
parameter. Thus, the command that was most likely run was “rm -rf /
“.
Now don’t I feel like a total geek after that rant.
Link: http://www.tor.com/…
Posted in Movies | 1 Comment »