Archive for September, 2009

PSP Go Review Quote

September 28th, 2009

I’ve been reading through the reviews of the Sony PSP Go, and while many voiced many of the concerns similar to what I posted a few days ago, I came across this one quote that really jumped out at me.

When you hold a Zune HD, the thing seems to be carved from the future itself. When you hold the PSPgo, it feels like a free-with-contract tween’s phone.

~ Mark Wilson, Gizmodo Editor

So there it sits pretty clear as dirt. I personally love my first generation PSP. Its a beautiful machine that is breaths technology, but ever since then every incarnation of the PSP series has been about fighting piracy and making the device feel cheaper and cheaper. Sony has all but admitted that the jacked up price was so that they could entice retailers to even carry the device. Personally I hope this acts as a wake up call to the PSP team.

[ Gizmodo PSP Go Review ]

Open Music Letter To Lily Allen

September 26th, 2009

As a regular user of the internet, and a believer in the core belief of freedom and collective community, I regularly read the blog, TorrentFreak. The blog covers a lot of the file sharing news from around the world that would not be available to people through normal media outlets.

This past week the UK artist, Lily Allen has been a topic of hot debate as she has declared that she will be leaving music because of piracy. The internet quickly set to steamroll the artist, quickly plastering evidence that the artist herself shares music in a case of classic hypocrisy.

One UK artist, Dan Bull, who is pro-sharing created the following song, that is a truly artistic piece of work. I just wanted to embed the YouTube version of the song here because of its great message, and to show my support.

[ TorrentFreak ] [ Dan Bull MySpace ]

The Playstation without the Play

September 25th, 2009

Next week Sony will be releasing its diskless variation of the Playstation Portable series. With the PSPGo Sony is hoping to unburden itself with the horrible choice of including an optical disk drive on a portable system. The problem is this one move has the potential to invalidate the purchases of an estimated 55 million users who have already purchased one the system’s previous incarnations and the software titles to go with it.

I’ve heard of removing backwards compatibility (Sony seems to be mastering that concept of late) but to remove current generation compatibility from a system would seem like a death sentence. In the end they have created a device that is not compatible with the millions of units of software sold around the world, and cost more than any other version without any physical update besides form factor. I cannot see a reasonable reason that any customer new or returning would want this device. New users can get the regular PSP for less, and existing users have no reason to buy one since it cannot play any of the game they already own. Even more of a concern is the longevity of such a system, being built on an already aging hardware, this is clearly only a move to try and milk the last bit of money out of consumers in this console’s end of life cycle.

Unless Sony can make it possible for users to painlessly transfer their games to the PSP Go without the lost of the physical media, I fear this new version will suffer a dark fate. I can see it now, a brand new shiny PSP Go stocked right next to a wall of game that the system cannot even play. I mean it’s like Nintendo releasing the DSi without a DS cartridge slot.

WPtouch

September 16th, 2009

It’s interesting to see some people’s solutions to some of the internet’s vast issues and problems. While I never really cared one way or the other how my website viewed on the iPhone / full mobile web browsers as I felt that developing strictly towards such a platform defeats the purpose that those browsers serve.

Looking around in on WordPress.org I decided to load and try out one of the plugins for these browsers. For my purposes I chose WPtouch iPhone Theme, and over all I have been more than presently surprised. The design is snappy, and to the point, with much of the interface actually being very usable.

If anyone is interested in looking for something to make their blog pop on the iPhone I would highly recommend taking a look. There is quite a cross reference list of compatible plugins which I felt was very helpful for those who run installs with a wide range of addons.

[ WordPress Plugin Download ] [ Developer's Plugin Home Page ]

I’ve added a few screenshots of Jukidon though WPtouch.

WPtouch Screenshot 1 WPtouch Screenshot 2

Zune HD

September 16th, 2009

zune_banner

So it finally has arrived, the long awaited next generation Zune. I am still waiting to get my grubby little fingers all over one of these devices, but overall I’m still awe struck by the work of Zune Originals. Since Apple plasters the back of their products with Apple logos, it really is a contrast to see such refined artwork laser etched into the back of a Microsoft product. I’ve said before, I’ve always felt a much stronger artistic / design vibe from the Zune team when compared to the iPods, it’s like comparing a sterile room with a museum.

As I figured news on the release is tepid. I’ve seen more news about the all holy camcorder slapped to an iPod and have found next to nothing in terms of reviews for the new Zune. I really wish some people would get their head pulled out of Apple’s collective ass and look at the rest of the world. The Mac OS X operating system and iPod line are not the only products in the world; they are just the most unchanged in the past decade.

I really would love to see the Zune do well as it looks like (shall see soon) another brilliant piece of hardware that in my opinion is extraordinarily underrated for nothing more that the stereotypical anti-Microsoft rhetoric.

[ Zune Originals ]

Waiting for Microsoft’s Move

September 10th, 2009

Zune HD vs iPod TouchTiming in the electronics industry is a fascinating thing, with Apple having shown its updated iPod lineup, the light will move to Microsoft later this week with the release of the Zune HD.

In typical Apple fanfare, the iPod will continue on another 6 – 8 months with a handful of upgrades and color choices. With such a  lack luster performance, one would think the public would tire of the same over blown announcements. The only two major pieces of news, the Nano gaining a camcorder (no camera capabilities) and iTunes 9 aren’t even really all that interesting as much as confusing.  A standard iPhone GS camera in the iPod Touch would have gone over better and made its upgrade more enticing. In place they claimed it was a gaming platform, stating people had no interest in a camera on the touch. One could debate the claim of the system as a gaming platform with the input limitations of the system, not to mention the cost comparison to a Nintendo DS. The iTunes 9 announcements were especially odd considering the lack of new features. With a few changes in how iPods and iPhones syncs with the software the other changes relate to the iTunes Store, in an attempt to clean up some of the mess that has plagued the web driven interface. Until Apple completely scraps the interface for a more natural and graphically pleasing one the store will always be one of the sore thumbs in iTune’s side.

In contrast Microsoft is in the process of a major upgrade to their Zune hardware and software. Considered by many as the competitor to the relative Monopoly the iPod line has on the mobile music industry, the Zune HD has the potential to regain some of the ground lost to the popular iPod Touch. It remains unclear as to how the platform will do beyond music; possessing limited gaming and internet connectivity does not quite put it on the same operating system level of the OS X Mobile. From a purely media standpoint, the Zune line has for the past few generations shined like a giant artistic beacon in the overly sterile design tones of Apple. With smooth interfaces and inventive media organizational skills the device has an ease of use and stability that puts the iPod to shame, especially in the syncing and moving of media between devices. Driven by an Adobe Flash interface, the software side of the Zune has had a silky and way about it, the release of version 4 should prove interesting considering the changes to the Zune HD interface.

Regardless of how well the Zune HD does later this week, nothing short of Apple going bankrupt will change the current iPod dominance in the market. I have always been a fan of the Zune software, especially in the time I’ve been forced to use iTunes with my iPhone. OS X Mobile might be a good mobile operating system, but both its media capacities and its sync software leave a lot to be desired. Considering Apple’s painful commitment to sameness I doubt that is going to change any time soon. If ever there is a proper marriage of the Zune line and the Windows Mobile OS maybe then we will see change in the markets.

One Among Many

September 9th, 2009

I’m not a devout writer or a very good one at that, but I feel that every once and a long while I have something to contribute to the general consciousness of the Internet. That is what Jukidon is to me, as one part of a vast sea of knowledge and opinion.

Let me post out a few things that are important about myself. I do not consider myself a fanboy in any usage of the term, but like all users of technology I have a bias towards systems and techniques that I grew up with. So of course take everything I say with that grain of salt. (Though reading the internet one must always keep buckets of salt handy lest you fall into oblivion.)