Wednesday, October 31, 2007

New Apple Wireless Keyboard


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Originally uploaded by iMaculate.
Stopped by my local Mac dealer who was finally in stock with the new Apple Wireless Keyboard. Demand for this little accessory must be sky-high. Scoured the whole of Berlin for this new addition to my Apple gadgets.

It is light and has a very small footprint on my desk. I think the controls for Dashboard, iTunes and Exposé are really useful. By far the best computer keyboard I have ever seen (why doesn't Logitech do something like this?). The brushed aluminum syncy nicely with the base of my iMac.

A camera worth waiting for: Ricoh GRD II

Fixed focus cameras have been out of style for quite a while - you are usually spoiled by the zooms the digital SLRs come with. Now Ricoh is coming out with the successor of its much touted Ricoh GRD, the GRD II. The specs of this camera are impressive and I would just like to have a camera now and then that I actually carry with me all the time, without being majoryl burdened.

So the wait has become more worthwhile, looking forward to December. Who knows if I don't do something audacious like selling my Nikon D70 :)

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Leopard is a' coming


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Originally uploaded by iMaculate.
Just got Leopard today, at the Mac-House store here in Berlin. And while unpacking it has become a tradition to have an espresso.

The retail box is about the size of a CD and much smaller than previous ones. The box is the pull-out kind. It contains the DVD, instructions and the obligatory stickers (what on earth should I do with all of them?).

Now it's time to backup my entire hard-drive and do a general clean-up. SInce I have really large video-files on my desktop I'm clearing those off before I do the install.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Coffee, am I addicted?

Panasonic HDC-SD1 Videocam

Oh, the joys of being a gadget-geek1 Yesterday marked the arrival of my new videocam, the Panasonic HDC-SD1. I have been watching and drooling over this camera for quite some while now. I actually heard about it the first time on a some podcast on Twit, Leo Laporte and his crew were praising this camera alot.

One of the special features is that it only uses SD memory-cards to save videos in the new AVCHD format. No DV-tape, no DVD. This means that there are essentially no moving parts. Another adantage is that you don't have to reel the material onto the computer in real-time (i.e. 60 minute tape takes 60 min. to transder). With the SD-card you just transfer the file to the computer which is very swift. Compared to tapes, you can access the video material sequentially without having to rewind or fast forward. And to top it all off it's much lighter than my previous cam (a Canon MV600i).

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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

The Past: Tied up in Video8

If part your past was played out before the proliferation of digital media then collecting those analogue bits and pieces can be a chore. Currently I am in the process of digitizing my old Video8 camcorder cassettes. It just so happened that I was fortunate enough to have acquired (meaning my parents bought me) a Sony camcorder, the TRV-55E (Video8, the analogue predecessor of Hi8) in 1990, well before the era of the digital hub had arised. Compared with other cams of the time it was quite compact. I believe it was probably the most compact video camera of the time. Remember this was a time before it was commonplace to have a videorecorder and camcorders were very novel indeed. A couple of months ago I tested my camcorder to see if it was working; it had been laying around for many years and I had just assumed that it would be in working order. Some of the LEDs flickered on, but it wouldn't eject (good thing there was no cassette inside). The outer black surface had deteriorated leaving a very sticky gloss on the outside. Although the camera itself is apparently dead, the memories have been preserved in the cassettes in Video8 format.

This task has been nagging me for quite some time now. In fact I justified my decision to completely switch to the Mac OS environment because I believed that most media should be put into digital form. As of this writing I have now finished digitizing the first batch, about 9 tapes in all. It's a pretty time consuming task. The main question is how to get the distill the video information wrapped up in the magnetic film. The problem starts with trying to find out exactly what is on the cassettes. I did a half-hearted job of documenting what was on the tapes which themselves usually on carry names such as "Home Videos 2", "California Tour III" and "91-". So essentially I am left to guessing. I have about twenty cassettes in all.

First using iMovie, you have to play the tapes through a digital-analogue converter (in my case the Miglia Director's Cut Take II) to the computer and this takes place in real-time. And those DV files are huge, a 60-minute tape takes almost 12 Gigs of hard-disk space. And then, in order to preserve the DV-files I transfer these to DVDs as data files, which also takes a while. And in between you also have to sift through the material adding dates and cuts to the files since the Video8 format does not provide this information.

The new iMovie app has been harangued in the press and personal blogs after its appearance about two months ago in iLife '08. Missing time-line, missing audio-manipulation. But something what it really is great for is as a sort of visual database for all the video material you produce. It's comparable to iPhoto in that respect.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Reserved iPhone and clueless Telekom

I was walking down Schlossstrasse on a sunny October day, actually on my way to exchange a seat post for my bike. Stumbled upon a small T-Punkt store and on the spur of the moment, decided to inquire about the iPhone. Although Telekom via their merchandising arm T-Punkt, are the sole distributors of the iPhone in Germany, there were rumors that some shops would not have iPhones to sell. But the sales rep assured me that they would have some in inventory and took my name and telephone number. I also asked if it would be OK to pick up the phone on November 12 (sales start officially on the 9th of November) and he seemed quite confident that that would also not be a problem.

But he was entirely clueless as to the tarif structure that Telekom will have arranged for us (gullible?) geeks. in 17 days they will sell the darn phone, but they still don't now how much it will cost to use it? Give me a break? I fell kinda sorry for the sales reps. He also couldn't tell me if the German retail package will include a dock. But he did say that registration of the phone will take place in the store - not like in the US where you initialized the iPhone via iTunes.

Since I don't talk on the phone that much all I'm really keen about is a true data flat rate, be it in EDGE or the quite numerous Telekom WiFi hotspots. That is the reason I am getting the iPhone in the first place. But if they botch up the tarifs, or if their data plan is volume based I will probably back out and wait for the unlocked iPhone that is supposed to appear in France.

Friday, October 19, 2007

iPhone sighting in Germany

Whilst strolling through the shopping mall in Berlin today I passed one of Telekom's own T-Punkt shop. The sales people were accepting complaints from aggravated customers (something that they probably do alot). In the back they had a small shining stand in white with the Apple iPhone logo on top - preparation for the iPhone introduction on November 9. A technician was working on a keyboard in front of this terminal and to my surprise the software was running on Windows XP. Before I had enough time to digest the dichotomy between the Apple logo and the Microsoft the log-in screen had disappeared.