Archive for October, 2005

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

I Need More Power Scotty!

My brother called me today, slightly frantic, but calmed. His iMac G4 wouldn’t start up. Normally, I’d recommend zapping the PRAM, resetting the Open Firmware, things like that.

The problem was, he couldn’t do those things. It wouldn’t boot at all. There wasn’t even a chime. The computer was absolutely dead silent.

Little did I realize that the flat panel iMacs also had the PMU (Power Management Unit) like my Powermac and Powerbook had. Apple even has instructions.

The instructions are great and colorful, but they’re slightly lacking in one way. When pressing down the button, it’s a good idea to hold it down for a little bit. Tyson (my bro) pressed it once quickly, but it didn’t restore booting. That scared me. He decided to try it again but hold down longer.

I was greeted soon thereafter by the dulcet tones of a Mac starting up over the phone. Victory.

Video iPod Tomorrow?

Think Secret has retracted its earlier statement that there would be no video iPods tomorrow.

They’re now calling for them. To quote them:

The rumor business is not always kind. Reliable evidence has corroborated reports of the development of a video iPod, but information until now had pointed to a release date later than October. Recent notes suggest otherwise, however, and tomorrow may in fact see the release of a video iPod, while Mac updates may not be delivered until next week.

It’s great to be in a business that is purely speculative so that the story can change a couple times before an event or even change after.

Personally, I still don’t see much utility in a video iPod as there isn’t any legal way to get DVD video into another format (cracking the encryption on the discs is a violation of the DMCA). Surely Apple can claim that the player is purely for music videos and vidcasts, but the move would be suicide if they don’t support a format that users can easily convert DVDs into (H.264, etc.).

That said, Apple was able to capitalize on rampant illegal peer to peer file sharing to fuel iPod sales. They were able to skirt the RIAA’s vengeful fist because CDs can be legally encoded as MP3s. Not so with DVDs. Will the music video excuse be enough to keep the MPAA placated?

And what about recent problems for projects such as MacTheRipper? Without DVD ripping utilities, would a video iPod be successful? That question is likely to be moot as someone will develop a program to fit the need, but it’s still of concern, particularly if someday we hope to keep all our movies in our pocket, like we do with music today.

That also begs the question about what kind of outputs would such a player have. Could this new iPod have the full assortment of AV output connections to hook up to a television? Could the current dock connector act as a conduit and supply the necessary bandwidth for such data?

I have lots of questions and few answers.

Monday, October 10, 2005

The Digg Spammer/Plagiarism Major Throws in the Towel

I finish this project

Thank all visitors for reading my blog all this time. I really enjoyed to post hot “around macintosh” news and rumors, funny pictures. Unfortunately, I decided stop it, and here is a main reason, a part of e-mail was received tomorrow:

“We’ve received a complaint that content in your blogs… infringes upon the copyrights of others…

…with any personally identifying information removed, will be posted online by a service called Chilling Effects…

…asking that you please remove the allegedly infringing content in your blogs…”

I just posted on my blog IT-news I could find in the Internet, hole from open sites.

I didn’t find there any “infringes upon the copyrights of others”. Maybe, I just can’t identify “allegedly infringing content” in this news, which repeated everyday on the thousands internet sites and blogs . Anyway, after this e-mail I make decision delete all data with or without “Vallegedly infringing content”.

I wouldn’t delete “topmac.blogspot.com” from Blogger, because many readers are coming here everyday. I had more then 90.000 visitors for this period, 500-1000 Unique Visitors everiday, and more then 3000 in the my best days.

If anybody would like to continue support this blog, public news, ext. — just e-mail me to mhasman@comcast.com. I’ll be happy to hand blog over somebody for continue TopMac.

Follow I put visitors statistic for last 3 months.

Thanks!

Seriously, with gems like:

I just posted on my blog IT-news I could find in the Internet, hole from open sites.

Maybe copying verbatim was the smarter move.

Friday, October 7, 2005

Netflix Analysis

I came across this article recently, which includes an Excel spreadsheet for analyzing your own Netflix usage.

The problem is that Excel v.X for Mac likes to paste tab delimited data into multiple columns (as it well should). The original sheet was written to parse the data out of a single column based upon character position. That’s clever if you don’t have it separated. It’s a lot more work though.

I made my own clone for Mac users. There are far fewer instructions built into the sheet though because I’m lazy. The first three values in the analysis section can be set as seen fit. To input your data, select the cell just below “Shipped” and paste after copying out of the email you get from Netflix when you request the full history. Make sure that the fourth column is filled in with the formula as far down as your data goes.

Download the sheet and try it out.

Google Reader

Just when I was getting ready to drop Bloglines for NewsGator because it will soon have NetNewsWire syncing, Google released its own RSS reader.

I’m going to check it out soon, but unfortunately, I can’t share anything now because its OPML import facilities aren’t working for me.