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User: chappel

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  1. Re:Twin Cities on Ask Slashdot: Undervalued, Livable American Tech Towns? · · Score: 1

    Complain about MN winters all you want, but the onset of global warming is making it nicer every year.

  2. Re:Wow! on NY Times Passes 1M Digital Subscribers · · Score: 1

    I really wish there were a Spotify or Pandora etc for News - where I could pay ONE (low) monthly fee and get access to a TON of news to be able to get some proximity of a balanced view of the world (and be able to discover NEW voices), with an appropriate fraction of my payment going to support the articles I read. I realize they need to make money somehow, but there's no way I can justify the full price of even ONE online journalism outlet, let alone the several I'd like to access and support. So in the mean time I don't support anybody.

  3. Re:Why not just skip Apple TV on Plex Is Coming To Apple TV · · Score: 1

    I ran an older (core2-duo) mac Mini connected to my livingroom TV via DVI/HDMI for years, just playing videos in VLC set to full screen, and using a bluetooth trackpad as a remote, using the Finder as an interface. It got the job done, but was a bit clunky and twiddly. For whatever reason, I couldn't ever get Plex to run as both server and client without horrible performance issues (the earlier Minis were well known for wimpy video power). With some recent home wiring improvements I swapped the mini for an Apple TV and moved the Plex server component to a different, more current Mini in a different room and implemented the DNS hack to re-route the AppleTV 'Trailers' to be plex, and it's been running great for several months now. The apple TV with plex has a much friendlier, more usable interface, uses less power, has been more stable, requires much less tech-stuff in my living room - I've really been happy with it. The only drawback is there is no usable volume control for speakers connected directly to the Apple TV, so I can't change the volume on my powered speakers fed directly off it - only on the crappy built-in TV speakers. I'm curious to see if that changes at all with the new Apple TV, and excited to see a native Plex app for it, so I think I'll eventually get one anyway, even if I need to get some additional components to get better volume control. My original plan was to rip my DVDs and import them into iTunes, then use it to stream to the Apple TV, which worked, but was REALLY painful to get everything in place, and still clunky to use. It was very clear Apple intended uses to re-purchase any content they planned to watch. Plex isn't perfect, but I've been really happy with it compared to everything else I've tried.

  4. Re:Beijing is not China on Breathing Beijing's Air Is the Equivalent of Smoking Almost 40 Cigarettes a Day · · Score: 1

    Imagine if European journalists assumed New York City was all there was to know about the entire USA.

    Then they would be just like American journalists?

  5. Spotify or Pandora for news? on Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industry? · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't even mind PAYING for access to newspapers and commentaries, but I don't live in a major metro area, and it just isn't worth it to me to pay the entire going rate for access to just ONE paper (as I recall, the NY Times is like $250/yr), the vast majority of which doesn't relate to me - but I'd jump at the chance to pay $10/mo for access to articles that interest me that I could pick and choose from 100s - 1000s of papers all over - just like the way no one wants to pay for an entire album just to hear one good song, or buy a subscription to just one record label.

  6. Musicians should get paid on Apple To Pay Musicians For Free Streams, After All · · Score: 1

    I'm all for seeing musicians getting paid for music being streamed, or even Apple getting a cut for supplying the back-end infrastructure - I just REALLY wished there was a good way to get the money DIRECTLY from my account to the musician without subsidizing the entire sleaze ball scum bag music 'industry' in between.

  7. Re:next step for photography on What Happened To the Photography Industry In 2014? · · Score: 1

    I know Pentax has had the 645 'cropped sensor' 4x5 out for quite a while - I watched an interesting youtube video comparing it with the d800e when I was trying to decide if I should buy the Nikon; I guess I discounted it because I haven't heard very many good things about it. I was really hoping for something that produced an image that was worth all the additional effort (weight, expense) to capture it. As for the lenses, my understanding is that much of the older 4x5 glass from decades of film cameras will still work (at least in full manual) - maybe to augment just one new crazy-expensive leaf-shutter lens.

    I've read that it's possible to get good results in medium format by purchasing 30 yo film gear, processing the film then scanning it, for $500-$1000(?) - but that sounds like a LOT more effort than I'd see myself undertaking often enough to be 'in the right place at the right time' to really get outstanding shots on a regular basis, and over my pain threshold for a novelty.

  8. Re:Those are substantial annual fees on MPAA Considers Major Changes After Sony Hack · · Score: 1

    If you buy into the bogus reality that pirated materials are worth mega-brazillians of bux per download, then it's easy to justify crazy money for the service to reduce that 'loss'.

  9. next step for photography on What Happened To the Photography Industry In 2014? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally I think the next big thing in photography will be digital 4x5 medium-format cameras for the 'serious amateurs'. It's already taking hold with the high-end pros, but current tech for a digital MF system is $50,000+ (Phase One / Mamiya, Hasselblad - especially the 'full' 4x5 sensors) - well beyond what any sane 99%er would pay for a 'hobby'. It looks like some low-end digital backs have already dropped to the $15k range (Pentax, low-end Hasselblad?, older, refurbed Phase One gear) - within a few years (I'm hoping anyway) they'll be into the $6k-$8k range to match higher end current DSLR cameras, but with even better low-light sensitivity, dynamic range and color gamut. Until then it'll take a LOT to get me to spend real money to upgrade my Nikon D800e - I'm just not a good enough photographer to need a better camera (yet).

    Until they figure out how to make the entire screen on an iPhone Plus act as an image sensor I don't see cell phones competing in that market.

  10. Re:The content of this article was lost in the noi on What Happened To the Photography Industry In 2014? · · Score: 1

    My understanding is that the DSLR auto-focus technology is VERY mature and works astoundingly well by redirecting ALL the light from the lens up into an entirely separate focusing system right up until the time when the shutter is tripped and the image is captured - mirrorless cameras have to figure out how to focus based on what's analyzed through the live view sensor, and they just haven't been able to get it to work as well... yet. That, and I suspect the mirrorless cameras eat batteries faster while running their electronics constantly (electronic view finder or 'live view' screen) while a DSLR is just idling, letting a mirror do all the work. Otherwise they seem like a great idea.

  11. Exact same thing happened in Monticello MN in 2009 on Big Telecoms Strangling Municipal Broadband, FCC Intervention May Provide Relief · · Score: 1

    The same thing happened in Monticello MN in 2009 with TDS, the local ISP. The community requested that TDS upgrade their services to make it more attractive for telecommuters working remotely from Twin Cities business; TDS said that 'wasn't on their road map', so the community went ahead to install their own fiber network. TDS found out, sued the town to halt their install while at the same time rolling out their OWN fiber network, and doubled all their subscribers speeds at no additional cost, then claimed that the original municipal plan was 'flawed' because there was now a 'cheap alternative'.

    I'm not fond of government, and doubt a municipal fiber system would be perfect, but it sure couldn't be worse than what we have now.

    http://arstechnica.com/tech-po...

  12. Windows should have similar feature on Mac OS X Lion Has a Browser-Only Mode · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've thought for years that windows should have a 'boot to Outlook' feature for executives; allow the entire available space of the drive to be used for indexed email storage to avoid having to decide which emails to delete, and load office programs by clicking on attachments, but don't confuse them with any other interface than just Outlook.

    And optionally support rebooting by holding it upside down and shaking.

    ch

  13. come visit my home office on CmdrTaco Visits Pixar · · Score: 1

    Nothing particularly interesting here - mostly old tech crap - but there isn't any heat, and in the midst of a minnesota winter 'cool' is an understatement.

    Can I upgrade my tee-shirt to a /. parka?

  14. Re:Great but on iMac Gets Thunderbolt I/O, Quad-core · · Score: 1

    My yearning for a 'mini-Pro' is the current inability to install two drives internally on native SATA ports. Three times now I've had drive issues that I could fix using tools that worked fine on the drive on a native internal SATA port, but the utilities wouldn't see the drive (or at least couldn't fix the issues) through an external USB or FW converter / enclosure. Once I was able to borrow a Pro, the second time I tore apart an older iMac and ran the utility (paaaainfully slowly) off a bootable DVD.

    I'd love to get a full-blown Mac Pro, but can't afford to blow $3k. I'm tempted to save a bit and build a hackentosh, but I'm afraid just when I need it for something it'll blow up and require days of intricate patching to restore, all without any 'official' support (for whatever that's worth). I'd settle for even an eSATA port, or the ability to add a card that has one. I'm definitely not buying a Pro until it supports SATA3.

    I'm sure the Thunder-whatever port will be cool; I'm looking forward to the prices dropping - but I have my doubts it will work any better for drive tech work.

    ch

  15. Re:Two words: sniffer dogs. on Auditors Question TSA's Tech Spending, Security Solutions · · Score: 1

    they don't have to grope you.

    It isn't a _grope_ as such, but being racked in the nuts by a dogs nose certainly isn't _pleasant_ - although somehow I'd consider it less offensive than when it's done by some TSA dude.

  16. Re:see what happens when point out holes in the TS on Auditors Question TSA's Tech Spending, Security Solutions · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've got an IFR pilot rating and an RV-8 - which gets about 170 knots and a decent range, although it's pretty cramped (better than coach, though), and lacks de-icing capabilities, I regularly fly it around the central US, and for most flights it's faster than commercial (counting drive-to-airport, checking in, waiting, flying, retrieving baggage and leaving airport), and no 'freedom fondle' or worrying about breakage, theft or the TSA rule-of-the-week. As an example, from my home in west-central MN to a client site in Dallas is about a 20 hour drive (direct), about a 6 hour flight in my plane (with one pit stop), or about 7 hours commercially (3.5 hours to 'real' airport, 1 hour AT airport, about 3 hours in air). Fuel is a bit more than a typical coach fare, but less than two tickets if I bring a passenger (it's a 2-seater). I occasionally have to wait or divert for weather, but I get to do it on MY schedule, not the airlines. It isn't for everybody, but it's not as far fetched as many think. I've had the plane about 6 years and I've been (for business or recreation) all over - Fargo, Minneapolis, Chicago, Indianapolis, Cleveland, DC, Orlando, Key West, Dallas, Phoenix, St Louis, Atlanta, and hundreds of smaller towns around the country.

    On top of that, the plane is fully aerobatic and fun as hell.

  17. appliance support? on Military Pressuring Vendors On IPv6 · · Score: 1

    I'm a networking guy excited to play with some new tech, but I've been putting off converting my 'basement' network to IPv6 because sure, all the PCs (mac and linux) and routers (cisco and openWRT) will be easy, but what about all my legacy appliances? I check HPs website every 6 months or so to see if they've released a firmware update for my multi-function printer/scanner, but nothing. So far Polycom hasn't mentioned any support for their SIP phones, and Asterisk is still just dabbling with it - so far only SNOM and Yealink (and yealink only as of November) support IPv6 SIP phones (that I've been able to find), and SIP is supposed to be one of the IPv6 'killer apps', since all the hassle of transitioning NAT goes away. I won't even go into my mvix media player, chumby alarm clock, or nabastag wifi talking rabbit. Is it safe to assume the Wii doesn't do IPv6, either? I have yet to find an ISP that is even considering IPv6. I was impressed apparently the iPhone supports IPv6 since iOS v4, and that my folks Brother LaserJet (wifi/ethernet) supports IPv6, but I don't want to upgrade my printer just to not have to mess with dual stacks - I guess we'll get there eventually.

    I'll start playing with dual stacks one of these days, but at the moment it doesn't appear to get me anything beyond novelty and geek cred.

  18. color e-ink killer app: digital picture frames on E Ink Unveils Color E-Reader Display · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been waiting for years for color e-ink to mature enough to make a good digital picture frame. Something cheap, lightweight, with great viewing angles, daylight readable, non-reflective, awesome resolution, takes no power in between refreshes - heck, you could set it to only switch 1x day and run it for a year on a small battery.

    Sounds like they are getting closer - keep at it, guys!

  19. Re:Maybe a solution? on TSA To Make Pat-Downs More Embarrassing To Encourage Scanner Use · · Score: 1

    I'm a private pilot, with my own plane, and have also been through lots of airports - mostly tiny ones, but I've been to some larger ones, including Dulles, Indianapolis, and Orlando. I must have been to at least 150 different ones within the US. The most security I've seen consists of the cute girl behind the service desk needing to push a release button for you to walk out the doors to the plane, the next most security has been several airports with a white stripe painted across the parking area delineating the 'private' from the 'carrier' areas, which you aren't supposed to walk across on penalty of a stern warning - although all the larger ones have a considerable distance between the ramps for private planes and the commercial ones. So far the only effective security I've seen is at the little strip where I learned to fly, where the owner lives along side the runway, and keeps an eye on things.

    I always fly with a pocket knife, and have flown with a handgun in a waist holster. I don't ever recall seeing a security agent; there are no checkpoints. If your plane doesn't crash, explode or get a 'ramp check' from the FAA (which I've heard about but never witnessed), no one would ever know what you had on board.

  20. Re:How long until Sony starts subtracting features on Sony HDTVs To Come With Google TV Interface · · Score: 1

    Wow, guess I struck a nerve with the Sony Fanboys. Sure, I could research and find out if a particular Sony product does something underhanded and unexpected, and should have researched the walkman, but I had been really happy with my previous sony products, and had no reason to suspect that if the box SAID it was an MP3 player that they'd be lying. After the ensuing years of proprietary hardware, root-kits, and support for the RIAA, I don't care if they DO happen to puke out a decent product, I know part of the proceeds from it go to screwing people, and that just doesn't sit right with me, and I encourage others to spend their dollars more wisely whenever I get the chance.

  21. Re:How long until Sony starts subtracting features on Sony HDTVs To Come With Google TV Interface · · Score: 1

    The PS3? The last straw for me was in 2000 (2001?) when I bought a wildly overpriced network walkman NW-MS9 "MP3" player that wouldn't play MP3s - http://reviews.cnet.com/mp3-players/sony-nw-ms9-network/1707-6490_7-6148779.html

    Awesome hardware completely crippled for the sake of ensuring no possible way to share a song with it.

    Sony: just say no.

    ch

  22. So how long on Texting On the Rise In the US · · Score: 1

    until all those teens realize the cellular carriers are royally screwing them on texting plans, and rise up to do something about it?

  23. still no USB3/SATA6gb :-( on Apple Launches New Magical Trackpad, 12 Core Macs · · Score: 1

    I really don't need even four cores, but I'd sure love to have the option to move lots of data much faster. I can't remember the last time I waited more than a second or two for something to process (ok, I guess converting RAW to jpg would go faster) but it seems several times a week I'm moving mass quantities of data - photos, movies, backup images - and waiting for 30-60 or more minutes for USB or FW800, and lusting after BANDWIDTH. I was hoping Apple would cook in some rockin' fast bit shuffling, rather than spending $3000 on a machine, then more to band-aid on a faster interface card.

    I'd be all over a 'mini Pro' - let me keep my monitor between upgrades, and add a card or two to customize it to what I need, and update with the times without a forklift.

  24. Re:game changing, if true on Long In Development, Toshiba 'SCiB' Battery Debuts · · Score: 1

    I'm curious - can't you use plain gasoline through a fuel cell to get electricity? Wouldn't it make sense to make an electric motor driven car - and get all the efficiencies of an all-electric drive train, and get the electricity via a modular fuel cell run off a standard gas tank, that has all the current benefits of our awesome fuel distribution system, which could then be augmented by or eventually swapped for a battery/capacitor/ Mr Fusion module once they become practical realities?

  25. Re:Only 1% on Europe To Import Sahara Solar Power Within 5 Years · · Score: 1

    "you gain essentially an entire country."

    Atlantis?