The stop motion animation in the following music video is beautiful on its own, but the fact that the medium is a simple white board truly makes it amazing to me.
Music by Minilogue
Animation by ljudbilden & piloten
The stop motion animation in the following music video is beautiful on its own, but the fact that the medium is a simple white board truly makes it amazing to me.
Music by Minilogue
Animation by ljudbilden & piloten
It’s not exactly the new Volkswagen glass factory, but this has to be one of the coolest Mindstorms-based project I’ve seen. And there are a lot of them out there.
A bit on the slow side, but amazing nonetheless. I can only imagine how much time this must have taken to think through and build.
Apple today officially announced the little box formerly known as the iTV, now dubbed the Apple TV. Nothing new has really been announced, and the honours of the day of course duly went to the quite stunning iPhone. The Apple TV price tag was confirmed, at US $299.
Pretty neat and cheap little device, but one detail to note is that it will not ship with a cable to link it to your TV (see What’s in the box), which will probably fetch another US $20 or more at purchase time.
Also, unless 3rd-party cable providers jump on the bandwagon, and/or that the device itself does not make use of Macrovision-like DRM technologies, the Apple TV will also not be compatible with analog TV sets (See the connection options), unless plugged in an intermediary solution like a cable/satellite set-top box or other. This is of course conveniently in line with the media industry’s quest to plugging the infamous analog hole (booh, there be dragons in there!).
For those just as tempted as I to press the shiny pre-order button, I’d suggest to consider the family=AppleTV in the URL at the online Apple Store. Can you see the bigger-drive-coming-soon flag too?
On another front, Sling Media announced (1, 2) the upcoming release of their very similar offering, the SlingCatcher, at the Consumer Electronics Show.
We will probably have to watch for the same limitations as the former device, but one big point is that this solution is currently said to be media agnostic.
This is an important fact in my context, since I have digital videos that go back to close to 10 years now, and some of them will not play in Quicktime without the addition of extra codecs (such as wmv, xvid, divx, etc). Apple currently only lists the iTunes compatible H.264 and MP4 (without avi encapsulations).
Other codecs enabled via plug-ins do not import into iTunes at this time (2007-01-09), but interestingly will play in Front Row. I say this is interesting because Front Row seems to use iTunes for video playback (iTunes is launched in the background). Apple probably doesn’t want to have to deal with the AVI metadata format.

But there might still be hope, if the Update Software seen in the Settings view is not just an interface to the Mac OS X Software Update utility, and allows for additional plugins to be installed. Or, like in Front Row, if it is possible to stream movies from mounted server, instead of the iTune daap Bonjour/ZeroConf-based streaming protocol (or video-enabled successor?). If I was a 3rd-party QT codec provider, I’d probably be begging them to do so right now, but as much as I enjoy their products, Apple doesn’t have the best record for letting others play with their toys.
The price tag for the SlingCatcher is currently pre-announced at around US $200, or about $100 less than the Apple TV. The better solutions for me could still be a Mac Mini using Front Row, which has its own upsides (full feldged OS, analog adapter, DVD player/burner, external expandability, etc) and problems (US $599 v. > 300, thicker, etc). Or also a PS3 running Linux.
Um, again left with decisions… Bah, I still have a few weeks to decide before my birthday anyway. 😉
Update: 2007-01-10: Apple does not actually manufacture/(re-)brand connection cables at all. The ones listed on their site are actually made by Xtreme Mac. Also, some of the same questions/concerns I had have been addressed by some of the Ars Technica editors.
Major geek humour warning…
Anybody who knows me (and them) knows that I had to do the following. Consider it saving a short snapshot for posterity, since they’re 10 (Surf, dog) and 8 (Bandit, cat).
Or like Linus Torvalds once said:
Only wimps use tape backup: real men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the rest of the world mirror it.
Whoever said cats and dogs hated each other didn’t know these two. Surf’s been taking care of Bandit since the day he was born. And yes, the snoring is coming from Surf. 🙂
In the spirit of my other Linux install screencasts (1, 2), I took a lot of screenshots while installing Ubuntu 6.10 Desktop on my 12″ iBook G3, and made this 2+ minutes video out of them.
It hopes to demonstrate how easy it can really be to install Linux, and to demystify some of the FUD around this great platform. Show it to your family and friends during the Holidays, and we might just end up with a few more Linux users in the new year! 🙂
And to conclude the series, here’s part 4 of 4 of the fan video I filmed at the 2002 Slam City Jam, in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Audio: Straight Up, licensed from ibaudio.com.
Probably not the best one in the series (my faves are #2 and #3), but I had some raw footage left. 🙂
See also:
This short video shows how to build a very basic puzzle, with and for [your] kids, out of any non-toxic scrap wood and just a few simple tools.
It takes less than 15 minutes, not including drawing time, and the kids love it.
My kids and I have made dozens of those in the last few years, some a lot more elaborate than what is sampled in this video, but the basic concept and techniques are the same.
And the first person to laugh at my narrative skills gets hit on the head.
WHAAACK. Dam’it, I laughed at myself… ;P
Here is part 3 of 4 of the fan video I filmed at the 2002 Slam City Jam, in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Audio: No Deal, licensed from ibaudio.com.
See also:
This is part 2 of 4 of the fan video I filmed at the 2002 Slam City Jam, in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Audio: Sour Grape, licensed from ibaudio.com.
See also: