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Entries this day: Uni_to_work Work state_of_computers Uni to work 8:38am CST Thursday 27 December 2001 Just rode my unicycle to work! I fell 3 times, which did not include the big 8 inch drop between two parking lots. First time was at the gate leading out of my apartments (fortunately I fell not too close to the gate, where I might have grated myself on it), second time was going off the first curb before crossing the first street (I would have had to dismount because of traffic anyway), third time was after crossing the second street (without dismounting) and faltering going up the bumpy driveway thing. Other than that, smooth sailing, including under the freeway. I had to use the right had traffic lane because the walkway is blocked with a ROAD CLOSED sign. Whew! I was hot when I got inside after all that unicycling! Yay unicycle! Work 2:10pm CST Thursday 27 December 2001 Work has been pretty good today. I've been working through a SAS example program that they give on their website. I found a few bugs in the code and emailed to their tech support. They thanked me and offered a few other fixes which I have incorporated, but it's still not working yet. I have faith that it will be resolved shortly; they have been quite responsive with my queries. Going to lunch with Kristen now. state of computers December 27, 2001 STATE OF THE ART Year of Living Geekily: Even the Dogs Evolved By DAVID POGUE OR observers of human nature, the end of the year presents a golden opportunity for spotting geeks in their native habitats. Normal people pull tags off gifts; geeks put batteries into them. Normal people spend the week watching movies and reading newly unwrapped books; geeks hook things up to the television. Normal people make up New Year's resolutions like "Clean the garage," "Learn French" or "Get more exercise." Geeks pledge to "Clean up the Web site," "Learn JavaScript" and "Get more RAM." While waiting for the computer to reboot, we geeks may also pause to reflect on the industry itself. For stockholders, this was the year that the high-tech bubble burst with a definitive pop. And it will be some time before venture capitalists back any 20-year- old with a clever PowerPoint pitch. Even so, some fundamental truths still apply. Prices continue to fall, as this season's owners of $100 DVD players are happy to point out. Computer power continues to climb (2-gigahertz processors), even if many consumers already have more megahertz than they know what to do with. And manufacturers continue to revise and improve their products with disconcerting speed. As evidence that the innovation engine is still chugging along, you have but to consider this column's topics over the last 12 months. Here is a look at what has become of some of the year's most notable products, updates that you can clip and paste into your carefully archived originals. NET APPLIANCES Almost all the Internet appliances I reviewed a year ago have gone to that great Circuit City in the sky. You didn't need a Ouija board to foretell the death of 3Com's Audrey ($500). Its tiny screen could show only part of a Web page; its punctuation keys were mere slivers; and it offered only a single e-mail account for each machine. As for its rival, the Gateway Connected Touch Pad ($600), you could have measured its Web-page download speed in ice ages. Only Compaq's IA-1 seemed to be poised for success: it was relatively fast, inexpensive and well designed. (A few IA-1's are still available at Walmart.com for $200.) But just $600 could buy a full PC, with a CD-ROM drive, a bigger monitor and so on. The limited, awkward Internet appliances simply couldn't compete. Only one device survives: Honeywell's WebPad (now $1,970). It's a flat-panel touch screen that maintains a fast, cordless link to your cable or D.S.L. modem as you walk around the house or office. Both the price and the requirement for a high-speed connection should tip you off that this machine isn't aimed at non-techies. Funny, isn't it? The big companies had it wrong. It wasn't the everyday consumers who wanted Internet appliances. It was the geeks. DIGITAL PETS Aibo the robot dog by Sony (news/quote) was, and is, a remarkable machine. Useless, but remarkable. It can walk on its own — seeing with cameras, hearing with microphones, thinking with software. It can even learn new tricks. But not everyone considered Aibo a steal at $1,500. Within nanoseconds, toy companies leaped into the fray with their own models: copycat dogs that did less but also cost less. Eventually Sony's engineers, no doubt sighing with resignation, set about the task of designing an Aibo knockoff of their own. The result was the new Aibo LM series ($850): cuter, rounder, smaller dogs that still respond to vocal commands and can "learn" new behaviors. The cheaper dogs cannot send audio and video to your PC wirelessly, as the more expensive Aibo can when equipped with a $150 software kit. But for anyone who longs for companionship yet doesn't have the energy to care for an analog dog, the price for the ultimate laptop has dropped considerably. MAC'S NEW CORE With all the hoopla about Windows XP, it is easy to forget that there is another good-looking, super-stable operating system gaining popularity: Apple's Mac OS X. The overhaul of OS X, version 10.1, released in September, was so sweeping that it made the original look like a dress rehearsal. The current version is much faster, includes a long list of useful features, and restores the DVD playback and CD burning that were missing from the original. Even better news is that by now, most big-name programs have been revised to take advantage of Mac OS X's beauty and stability, including Microsoft (news/quote) Office, America Online, FileMaker, Illustrator, Freehand and Final Cut Pro. Mac fans should take note that it's finally safe to make the switch, as long as they're prepared to pay the upgrade fees for the programs they use. THE MASTER'S VOICE For all the attention given to computers that understand human speech in sci-fi movies, it's strange how little fanfare surrounds this category now that it's here. In any case, both leading Windows speech-recognition programs are available in new versions. The chief virtue of I.B.M.'s ViaVoice Release 9, a minor upgrade, is its inclusion (in the deluxe version) of a U.S.B. headset microphone that improves accuracy. Naturally Speaking 6, meanwhile, is an ambitious merger of features from the onetime rival programs L&H VoiceXPress and Dragon Naturally Speaking. The most impressive feature of NatSpeak 6, however, is its very existence: it was born during the public disintegration of its maker, Lernout & Hauspie. Only two weeks ago the company sold its speech software to Scansoft, so that NaturallySpeaking and its descendants may live on. (There is also news for Mac fans: The last few months have seen the release of both ViaVoice for Mac OS X and iListen for Mac OS 9.2.1.) DICK TRACY'S LENS Casio's weird and wonderful Wrist Camera ($230) still shows only shades of gray on the watch face when you take pictures. But the recently upgraded watch (model WQV3-1BNDL) actually stores color photographs (80 at a time), which you can see when you later beam them, via infrared, to your PC. These pictures aren't what you'd call gargantuan — in fact, they're 176 by 144 pixels, just over two inches square. But when you need to be surreptitious or spontaneous, there's no smaller digital camera outside the C.I.A. TUNES TO GO Apple's iPod is a spectacular music player. It holds 130 CD's worth of music in a white-acrylic-and-mirror-finish player not much bigger than a box of Tic Tacs. No MP3 player offers this capacity in anywhere near such a small size, especially not with 12 hours of battery life. But Apple said that the iPod could synchronize its music library only with Macs. Fortunately for PC fans, xPlay, a $40 Windows program being readied for a January release, will let you load your iPod with music and use it as an external hard drive for your PC, just as on a Mac. An early version is available at www.mediafour.com. PIXELS' PROGRESS The PC industry is no longer the youngster it once was, exploding with monthly leaps in sales growth and features. Nowadays, it's the digital camera industry that behaves that way. The cameras I reviewed in 2001 are already smaller, cheaper and better. As noted last week, 2.2-megapixel models now sell for under $300. Four-megapixel cameras cost less than half what they did a year ago. And Sony's CD1000, which burns its images directly onto mini-CD's, ready for archiving or inserting into your computer, no longer requires $1,500 and a wheelbarrow. Today, Sony's CD200 offers about half the bulk and price ($800). The lesson from the camera business is the same one that we've learned over and over again from the PC business, the VCR business and the DVD business: The longer you wait, the better the deal you'll get. Of course, you know what we geeks would say: Where's the fun in that? permalinkprev day next day |