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The Ying and Yang of getting a new iPhone

Last night, I dropped by the local Bellevue Square Mall with our two boys in search of a birthday present for a 10-yr-old(Legos are still considered superbad, by way of the new Indiana Jones sets). 

Good news: we found exactly what we were looking for in record time.

Bad news: As we entered the mall, we saw the bad news: a line extending outside the Apple Store, where 30-40 people were still waiting to purchase a new iPhone.

applestore_2100

Worse news: This was the post-line line: as we continued, we found another (and much longer) line — I’ll guess as with 50 or more people — snaking down a service exit hallway as to not block the mall aisle. I heard from people there that many had been waiting in a stagnant line, and were still encountering delays that were widely reported yesterday, related to the registration of new handsets. 

I guess that they don’t read Rob Pegoraro’s blog

"So if you’ve got an older phone, iPhone or not, that still works fine and is in no danger of expiring imminently, let other people fill the lines and crowd the stores. Waiting another week or so won’t kill you. This isn’t like getting tickets to a Fugazi reunion at the Black Cat; there will be plenty of iPhones to go around.

"If, however, you are going to queue up with the masses, please report back here on your experience–I’m out of town today, thanks to prior plans, and so will miss the festivities. (Bonus points to the first person to post a comment from a newly-purchased iPhone 3G!)"

A couple of interesting articles greeted me in today’s paper:

Tags: iphone.

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SETI@home, new iPhones and other bits for a quick post-vacation reading list

Back from vacation and waiting for a meeting to start (whilst hungry attendees grab lunch 😉 I find that I have a couple of minutes to post – normally I wait until after work’s done for the day, but here’s an exception to the rule.  Last night I made a quick spin by Engadget to catch up on what I missed, as well as a few other sites and mail items from the news this week.  Much of my reading over the family getaway was keeping up with the daily news in a sleepy little area on the Oregon coast (thanks, Amanda and Edgar).

I noticed that on my first day soaking up the sun of an active effort to “Save the Arecibo Telescope.” Just before Independence Day (pardon the allegory 😉 in the States, SETI@home put out a call on the future of Arecibo Observatory (where SETI@home collects its data). Turns out that the funding may be cut for Arecibo, and replacement is due to be operational until at least 2020 at best… so some people are upset… 

“If you are a U.S. citizen, please write your representatives to support the Senate bill and House resolution to continue Arecibo’s funding.” 

The link takes you to a web-based form letter where you can voice your support for Senate Bill S. 2862 and House Resolution H.R. 3737. You can use the form to automatically look up and generate letters to print and mail to your representatives.

iPhoneOf course, the big news today is Apple’s new iPhone: we made it back home just in time to witness the first day of the new iPhone going on sale, with a few problems as noted by Suzanne Choney on MSNBC…

“iPhone 3G launch day was supposed to be about long lines for the popular devices, not about problems getting them activated. But across the country, new 3G iPhones failed to activate after purchase…”

I’ve seen a number of reports today about the new iPhone retail launch, and the news is not all doom and gloom, as I’m sure that the kinks will get worked out.  With new features, there is some tremendous appeal in this shiny, new device: the Apple Remote software, to turn your new iPhone into a WiFi remote control that Engadget says…

“the new freebie from Apple which turns your iPhone or iPod touch into a remote control. It works with Apple TV and iTunes over the WiFi network to play, pause, skip and shuffle your songs stored in your iTunes library…”

An interesting view is Walt Mossberg’s video review of the iPhone 3G: Walt is generally thumbs up on the new version of the device, with a few downsides.  And in Canada, I read that Rogers “caved on iPhone 3G plans” with new offers of 6GB for $30 a month: “Rogers is launching a promotional offer along with the iPhone of 6GB of data for $30 a month — not quite unlimited data, but close enough — which can be added on top of any regular voice plan.”

David Ewalt of Forbes reported today that…

“At precisely 9 a.m. this morning, I plugged in my first-generation iPhone… The update started as expected, began to sync with my phone and proceeded normally for about half an hour. Then I got a pop-up warning… Repeated attempts to disconnect and reconnect the phone resulted in the same warning. And worst of all, the upgrade is not completed, so my phone has been bricked–it’s stuck in emergency mode and won’t start up. I can’t make or receive calls or access any of my data.

“I’m not alone. Since the update became available, Apple’s support boards have been flooded with complaints from users having the exact same problem. So far, Apple hasn’t responded to tell them why it’s happening.”

Ouch.

It appears that Apple saw all these new iPhone owners (as well as old iPhone owners in search of the new software) crowding the web which resulted in overloaded servers. For the most part, customers seem pleased with their new device and software with the reviews of Apple’s iPhone 2.0 software pretty positive across the board.  It was nice to see in Sascha Segan’s iPhone 2.0 review in PC Magazine that…

“Microsoft’s Windows Mobile remains our Editors’ Choice because it’s available on a much wider range of devices, and has an even wider range of software and capabilities than iPhone 2.0 does.”

imageI’d certainly like to see a positive experience for Windows Mobile users similar to the one-stop-shopping (so to speak) that users get with the Apple’s App Store, included in the iPhone 2.0 firmware (or an iPhone 3G) where iPhone owners can download new programs on to their iPhone. 

The Windows Mobile site offers a link to the Windows Mobile Catalog where you can view information on popular applications, offering everything from entertainment and productivity software to dev tools and utilities, with links to MobiHand, Poketland and Handango to purchase.

But where are the links to free software on the site?  Handango offers downloads to some free and trial versions of software on their site, and their “Handango InHand” site offers access to apps and content directly from the phone.

Sorry, WM: this isn’t as slick as App Center.

Apple's App StoreApple’s App Center also offers a service to keep you on the latest version of the apps you purchase. (“Buy an application from the App Store and you always have access to the latest version. iPhone tells you whenever an application update is available.)  As David Pogue of the Times posted on his blog

“Well, the iPhone Apps Store went live last night, and it’s just crazy, insane fun. I’ve just downloaded about 30 programs to play with on the iPhone 3G. As I predicted, it’s just a blast…

“It looks like the App Store’s army of programmers are making quick work of the iPhone’s missing standard features. So far, you can install apps that restore video recording, voice dialing, radio and instant messaging to the iPhone. No word yet on an app that adds copy/paste, MMS sending or a removable battery.”

Now on to the news, and have a good weekend.

Customer Service – Firms Seek Out Disgruntled Customers on the Web — By Carolyn Y. Johnson, July 9, 2008 — “At Southwest Airlines, the social media team includes a Twitter officer who tracks comments and monitors a Facebook group, an online rep who interacts with bloggers.  Also see Comcast Wins With Twitter – C.C. Chapman’s “an amazing experience in customer service from Comcast…”

Social Media: Get Productive with Social Media (and Stay Sane) — “lifehacker asked self-described social media junkie Steve Rubel for his tips on how to participate in online social sites like Twitter and FriendFeed without losing your entire workday. Here’s what he said.”

Video: Ira Glass on Getting Creative Work Done — “Ira Glass [of NPR] features some great advice about working through those first few attempts—or even years—where your product doesn’t quite meet your standards, as well as Glass pulling out some honestly awkward examples from his own portfolio.”… saved by 72 other people

Stuff We Like: Multi-Use Car Charger with Dual USB Ports — “This $20 Multi-Use Car Charger sports two built-in USB ports to power your iPod, cell phone, GPS, and whatever else you’ve got that charges via USB. And since USB cords are generally smaller and less clunky than a regular wall plug…”

Self-help: Shame Yourself Into Spending Less With A Hello Kitty Debit Card — Reader Mervin Gleasner has Hello Kitty to thank for his unique method of curbing personal spending.

Xbox 360: Do More Than Just Game on Your Xbox 360 — “With some free tools and a little elbow grease, that compact, networked PC sitting under your television can offer a whole lot of useful media functionality. The fact is, your 360 is capable of so much more than just gaming. Let’s take a look at a few…” saved by 369 other people

Apple Ups The Ante With 3G iPhone – But RIM’s Almost Ready to Counter – Seeking Alpha – We asked consumers who currently own a smart phone or who plan to buy one in the next 90 days to tell us the manufacturer.

Book Excerpt: How Priorities Make Things Happen — “Project manager and writer Scott Berkun knows how to get things done when you’ve got a team of people, a to-do list, and a deadline. Today he offers an excerpt from the updated edition of his best-selling book The Art of Project Management (our review)… saved by 175 other people

New report says SSDs are, in fact, more efficient – Engadget notes that “LAPTOP magazine published a report confirming what most people already believe to be true about SSDs: they use less power than traditional drives. Apparently they got up to 20 minutes more battery life when testing an SSD against a platter-based drive…”  Also see SSD-maker responds to nasty report, says it’ll do better next time – Engadget — “Tom’s Hardware article which benchmarked (and gave failing grades) to power-consumption of the non-mechanical drives was flawed because, “They are using legacy drives, none of which will be used by any major PC OEM.”

Study says more than 10,000 laptops go missing at US airports each week – Engadget reports that “A new study has now found one not entirely surprising place where your laptop is particularly unsafe: the airport… more than 10,000 laptops are reported lost at the 36 largest airports in the US each week and, of those, 65 percent are not reclaimed.”

Turtle Beach intros Ear Force X3 Xbox 360 headset – Engadget notes that there is a new way for me to look silly in front of my kids as I play team games via Xbox Live, with the new Ear Force X3: “Turtle Beach has just expanded the headset options for Xbox 360 gamers even further, with it today introducing its Ear Force X3 unit, apparently the first wireless headset to boast independent volume control of amplified chat and game audio.”

Project Grizzly guy forced to auction Trojan ‘Halo suit’ – Engadget reports on some silly stuff up for auction: “Normally we’d start off a post about the sale of Canadian Troy Hurtubise’s Trojan fully-armored exoskeleton with a few amusing Robocop quips, but the reason Troy has to let his crazy, high-tech creation go makes such frivolity seem a little inappropriate…”

Yamaha Tenori-on: everything you wanted to know (with video) – Engadget reports that Tenori-on is “an 8 x 8-inch magnesium square brimming with 256 tiny, pressable, blinking LEDs and even gestural controls that make it easy to sequence electronic music on the fly.” $1,200 from Yamaha.

Keeping on the audio gear news, see this article on the Aurora open source hardware mixer (hackaday.com). It is a dual channel USB-powered mixer with two linear faders, one crossfader, eight backlit buttons and 24 potentiometers, all built around a PIC 18LF4525 microcontroller.

Acer rolls out the Aspire X1200 home theater-friendly mini PC for $450 – Engadget’s view of the new Acer Aspire X1200, which for $450 includes on-board NVIDIA GeForce 8200 graphics, an AMD Athlon X2 2850e processor, and HDMI port. Acer promises full 7.1-channel audio support as well as the guts to work with H.264, VC1, and MPEG2…

And just what is going on at Kodak?  New cameras, wireless digital picture frames and HD video players? 

D-Link DSM-210 unboxing, hands-on, and mini-review – Engadget’s look at the D-Link DSM-210 Internet Photo Frame, “a 10-inch, 800 x 480 LCD display with built-in WiFi and ethernet connectivity — promises to upgrade the familiar static nature of its ilk with a handful of networking enhancements…”

Tags: iphone, misc, articles, what I read, Microsoft, Windows Vista, Xbox 360.

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A look at Gates’ last day (courtesy of the BBC)

"Bill's last day" video clip Happy Canada Day. 

And now a little something for my friends on the “time” team concall, here are a couple of additional links on Bill Gates today, including the latest news and a link to portions of the humourous “Bill’s last day” video.

See also the article in the New York Times by Steve Lohr

Bill Gates is retiring, sort of. He is still only 52, and he is going off to spend more time guiding the world’s richest philanthropy, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He will still be Microsoft’s chairman and largest shareholder, but Friday is his last day as a full-time worker at the software giant, marking the unofficial end of his career as a business leader.”

Tags: Microsoft, Bill Gates.

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Oh, Canada, meet Independence Day: a reading list for a holiday week

Tomorrow is Canada Day so a shout out to my friends north of the boarder as well as the many local Canucks we have on campus, at the Microsoft MCDC and MS Canada. Canada is so much more than Bob and Doug McKenzie (I’m shoring my age).

And with a nod to the Office OFFline Web Comic and to please the kids on this reading list day (published late, or early as I don’t expect to post much of anything later in the week), here’s a little something that I have fun with at home, with reference to the article “Hey Bill, sorry I kept your book since high school” in the Seattle Times Newspaper.  Seems that Bill Gates used the latest word-processing technology available at the time to create his own ex libris: an IBM Selectric typewriter with a rotating typeball that produced italic (by Rami Grunbaum)…

dingalings.com

Good to note the importance that employees placed on getting feedback from Bill at Microsoft (Joel Spolsky has a very interesting account of what it was like working as a program manager for Microsoft in 1992).

Have a good week… now on to the reading list:

Bill Gates Retirement Party: Things No One Gives Microsoft Credit For (But Should) — “Microsoft is rarely credited for being why mainstream tech has come this far—a computer on every desk, the explosion of the internet, even the idea of a common UI across applications. Even smarmy Mac and Linux snobs have a lot to thank Microsoft for…”

Also see…

Seth’s Blog: What Dave just did — “Dave Balter, an old friend and colleague, has written a new book. It costs $45 on Amazon. But, for my loyal readers…you can get a copy of the ebook (the entire book) for free here.”… saved by 40 other people

Seth’s Blog: Email checklist — Seth’s says that there are a few things that you shoudl do “Before you hit send on that next email, perhaps you should run down this list, just to be sure…”… saved by 486 other people

Windows Vista Tip: Use the Tab Key to Rename Multiple Files in Vista — Lifehacker reader “provides a tip for anyone who regularly renames groups of pictures, documents, or other files, but doesn’t need a bulk renaming utility to get it done. Just start renaming the first file in a folder or list…”

ICanada: Canadians Write Angry Letter to Steve Jobs Over iPhone Plan in the Great White North — With all due respect to my friends at Rogers: Rogers Communications in Canada “has a data plan that makes AT&T look positively philanthropic: $75/mo… 3-year contract, 100 text messages, 300 weekday minutes, and a 750MB cap on 3G usage.” So Canucks are sending a petition to Jobs himself asking him to “take a look” – the full “Dear Steve” letter on ruinediphone.com — Open Letter to Steve Jobs about the situation.

35,310 Lego Star Wars Mini-Fig Army: 35,310 Lego Star Wars Clone Trooper Army Invades Earth — “What are 35,310 Lego Star Wars Clone Troopers mini-figs doing together, apart from planning a planet invasion after breaking out of the giant Lego storage cathedrals? Raising awareness and funds for autism, that’s what.”

Zune MP3 Player Pilot Podcast (2007/2008 Missouri Teacher of the Year) — Eric Langhorst is the 2008 Missouri Teacher of the Year. On his blog he noted that his class is involved in a student Zune pilot. “Microsoft is providing each of my 25 students in my 3rd period 8th grade American History classroom a 4GB Zune to use…”  More also at Zune in School in Missouri, New Mexico, and at Local public school students get assigned Zunes – Engadget — Liberty, Missouri’s handing out a hundred and change media players — Zunes, to be specific — to local high school and middle school students for listening to lesson-supporting podcasts in the hopes of saving them “lost class time.” (June 29 2008)

How would you change Microsoft if you were Bill Gates? – Engadget’s Darren Murph posted (Jun 27th 2008) the question above and rants and raves ensue. A fun read.

Princeton to start publishing Kindle-edition textbooks – Engadget — Mark and I discussed Amazon’s Kindle ebook reader last night. Today I read that Amazon has won over Princeton University (Jeff Bezos’s alma mater) announcing “plans to publish Kindle version of its textbooks this fall, joining Yale, Oxford, and Berkeley…”

Zappos tries robots on for size | Crave, the gadget blog – CNET reports (June 27, 2008) that “Zappos.com, which now sells more than just shoes, has just finished outfitting it’s Kentucky warehouse with a robotic army to help fill orders, the company supplying the system announced Tuesday.”

AirPiano single-handedly redeems air instruments from irrelevancy (engadget) — I sense a lawsuit brewing in Lo Jolla… 😉 Pat, have you seen the AirPiano? It allows you to “emit beautiful tones without ever touching the “keys.” It’s even smart enough to sustain a note if you hold your hand over a particular area for an extended time.”

Evento’s BuzzBall: your own personal roller coaster — Evento’s BuzzBall is essentially a personal roller coaster, which reportedly features a “single seat inside a large outer ball that’s able to spin and roll independently of the ball itself” alongside a pair of electric motors used to power it.

Cizmo’s CX1730M gaming laptop packs a wallop – Engadget – I’m sure that my old friend, Paul, would love this namesake PC, the Cizmo CX1730M, a 2.26GHz Core 2 Duo proc notebook, 2GB + 160GB SATA HDD , 17″ WSXGA+ panel, 2 Mpixel webcam, DVD burner, NVIDIA’s 512MB GeForce 8800M GTX and a plethora of ports.

Creative’s ZEN X-Fi player with WiFi gets a lot more real – Engadget reports that “The Creative kids over at epiZENter have what looks to be a genuine scoop of an unannounced ZEN X-Fi… a new DAP with SD expansion and built-in WiFi, speaker, FM tuner, voice recorder, and the ability to stream media from Creative’s “Public Media Server…”

Credit Report Settlement: Trans Union Corporation Privacy Litigation Home — If you had a credit card, loan or credit account, you could get benefits from a class action settlement.

Real Estate | Credit-report settlement is good for mortgage seekers | Seattle Times Newspaper — Under the terms of a national class-action settlement, you may qualify for six or nine months of daily monitoring of your credit file, plus unrestricted access to your credit report and score, via listclassaction.com. By Kenneth R. Harney

Gizmodo lists Media Center as one of the 10 reasons why Vista isn’t so bad (Connecting you to your media blog) — “Endadget lists Media Center as one of it’s hits (but surprisingly left Clippy out as a miss). Gizmodo lists Media Center as one of the 10 reasons why Vista isn’t so bad, so I guess that puts Media Center +1 on the pundit scale.”

Funny Friday – Charlie Rose ala Samuel Beckett (Pla.NET Southeast) — Although this has been out a few months, many of you may not have seen this yet. Imagine a Charlie Rose interview re-imagined by Samuel Beckett. Surreal piece of filmmaking, this…

Hard to find Windows Vista help and how-to articles (The blog of Rob Margel) — Rob’s post has 2 aims, “firstly to highlight… available [content on the Windows Help and How-to site] and secondly as an experiment to see how quickly after this posting does the content appear in the Windows Live search catalogues.”

Ian Moulster’s blog : Using any email address for your Windows Live ID — IanM says that “you can use any email address to sign up for a Windows Live ID? Which means you can use any email address to access Hotmail or Messenger for example, or SkyDrive or Spaces or any other Windows Live Service.”

Shooting and Editing Better Videos – Expert Help by PC Magazine — I’ve known Jan Ozer for several years and he is a bright guy. In Jan’s experience, the secrets to shooting better video “can be broken down into two rules… and if you abide by them you will save yourself a lot of time and effort.”

Dell Studio 17 and Studio 15 review roundup (Engadget) — Paul Miller at Engadget has coverage of teh new Dell Studio line of laptops that “appear to combine the power of XPS and the prices of Inspiron, with some new perks like HDMI out and slot-loading drives to keep things fresh.”

On the scene: Microsoft’s farewell to Gates (Todd Bishop’s Microsoft Blog) — Microsoft is holding a town hall meeting here in Redmond this morning to send Bill Gates off into the new era of his life. It starts about 9 a.m. It’s clearly a big moment for people at the company — including Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer…”

More states say cellphones and driving don’t mix – Yahoo! News reports (Jun 25, 2008) that “On July 1, California will become the largest state to ban unlimited cellphone use by drivers. The law prohibits drivers under 18 from talking on the phone, and it requires older drivers to use a hands-free headset.”

Geek Girl Blogs – Home — Here’s a central aggregated blog site of “women’s blogs together in one place, to create a wealth of knowledge that covers the amazing strength, agility & force that is Women in IT! We also hope that by sharing our experiences we can encourage & enlighten…”

Windows Live for mobile — Do more from your mobile phone than just talk. Explore all the ways you can connect with your friends and to the information and entertainment you want when you’re on the go.

Sprint | Instinct “Movie” page – too cool for school.

Book Review: Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft Plans to Stay Relevant in the Post Gates Era — “What does someone who’s been covering Microsoft for 25 years think about Bill Gates’ retirement? Ask Mary Jo Foley, or consider her book, Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft Plans to Stay Relevant in the Post Gates Era.”

Xbox.com: Transferring Content Licenses to a New Console — Got a new Xbox 360 console? Great. But maybe you downloaded games or other content from Xbox LIVE Marketplace onto an older Xbox 360 console, and now you want all that content on your new system. Well, now there’s a way to do it.

The original Microsoft ‘family’ (BBC NEWS) — “Albuquerque, New Mexico, there were only a dozen people working for the company – compared with the current number of almost 90,000 employees worldwide. Here we have 11 of the early pioneers…”

Et Tu, Intel? Chip Giant Wont Embrace Microsofts Windows Vista (New York Times Blog) — Steve Lohr of the Times reports that “Intel, the giant chip maker and longtime partner of Microsoft, has decided against upgrading the computers of its own 80,000 employees to Microsoft’s Vista operating system…”

Why I Still Use Windows Despite the Peer Pressure (gizmodo) — Adam Frucci at Gizmodo says that he “still rocks XP, and I’m pretty happy with that. Why haven’t I switched to Macs? Plenty of reasons, not least of which being that I’m just too smart to switch to a Mac… ” … saved by 61 other people \

Welcome to Akihabara News : Akihabaranews.com – add this to your blog roll for teh latest gadgets from across the pond. Apparently this is popular: saved by 980 other people

101 Photoshop Tips in 5 Minutes | dekeOnline — Photoshop enthusiast and frantic video editor Deke McClelland fits 101 tips for Adobe’s premiere product into five minutes of video, and the results are surprisingly watchable. Via Lifehacker… saved by 417 other people

Bill Gates Retirement Party: The Best Bill Gates Parodies Ever — Bill’s semi-retirement is later this week, so gizmodo provides “a mash-up of all these green sweater, glasses wearin’ characters.”

Japanese telco institutes upload caps… of 30GB… daily — By Jacqui Cheng, June 25, 2008 – “Bandwidth caps are coming to Japan, but not in the way to which North Americans are accustomed. OCN, operated by NTT Communications, has decided to impose a daily upload limit beginning on August 1. The limit? 30GB per day.”

Giz Explains: How the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Will Save the World — “The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is the world’s largest charitable foundation… It’s not your average charity though—and not just because two of its three trustees, Bill and Warren (no last names needed) constantly jockey for the title of world’s richest…”

British Police in High-Speed Chase … With UFO | Autopia from Wired.com — In a close encounter with the future of transportation, a police helicopter almost hit what its crew insists was an alien spacecraft. And then they chased it. Seriously. At least, that’s what Britain’s Telegraph newspaper reports.

Reviews of “Wanted” and “The Happening.” (The New Yorker) by Anthony Lane , June 2008

Dark Knight Director Shuns Digital Effects for the Real Thing — “The Bat-plan was simple: Base-jump off one Hong Kong skyscraper, smash through the window of another, grab the Chinese crime boss, then hitch a drag chute to a passing C-130 cargo plane for a daring aerial escape. And on to Gotham!”

WiiHD: WiiHD’s Homebrew Guide — WiiHD has a good walkthrough teaching you how to get Homebrew onto your Wii, if only for the privilege of playing Quake and various other games… saved by 55 other people

IPhone 3G: iPhone 3G Takes About $173 To Manufacture Says Estimate — iSuppli, an authority on taking electronics apart and figuring how much it costs to build one, has just put preliminary price tag on the iPhone 3G of $173. That’s quite a bit higher from the $100 analysts were quoting earlier.

Annals of Technology: Hello, Hal: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker — John Seabrook wrote a recent feature in The New Yorker about interactive-voice-response systems (I.V.R.) commonly used with customer service and tech support telephone hotlines.

Timepieces: Digimech Clock Does Digital the Old-Fashioned Mechanical Way — “The Di Grisogono Meccanica mechano-digital watch is indeed amazing, but I’m almost as impressed with Duncan Shotton’s Digimech clock (maybe it’s because it looks like I could afford it).”

X-Box 360 handheld console on the way? – www.t3.com — Fancy rocking some GTA IV on-the-go, if T3 get T3’s (no relation 😉 way Microsoft’s Zune MP3 player could be going gaming. Check out their artist’s impressions.

HP TouchSmart IQ504 PC (KQ436AA#ABA) from HP available now — The HP TouchSmart IQ504—an all-in-one 22″ touchscreen PC with a Core 2 Duo processor, integrated graphics and an impressive 4GB of RAM—is shipping now off of HP’s site and retailers like Circuit City

Two New TP1s from Sony : Akihabara News .com — The TP1 is the “Media Center” PC solution from SONY, and today the Japanese giant decided to update its line-up with the VGX-TP1DQ/B and VGX-TP1D. Very cool indeed.

What I’ve Learned: George Carlin (MSN Lifestyle) — “Back in January 2002, George Carlin revealed his intimate thoughts on censorship, racism, and how the IRS saved his comedy career. With his recent passing, we represent his words here.”  Also see George Carlin mourned as counterculture hero, as Carlin died Sunday of heart failure at 71.

The Media Center Extender shootout – Engadget HD — Vista Media Center really sets itself apart from any other DVR solution out there, and the single greatest advantage Vista Media Center (VMC) has over the other options is the ability to have multiple Media Center Extenders. by Ben Drawbaugh.

PC Chipsets Today: Choice and Confusion — Loyd Case at extremetech “thought it was time to take a look at the landscape for core logic, to help you better choose what motherboard may be right for you. What we’ll cover here is not only the speeds and feeds of the different chipsets…”

Coding Horror: The Ultimate Code Kata — “programming every day may not be enough to make you a professional programmer. So what can turn someone into a professional driver or programmer? What do you do to practice? The answer lies in the Scientific American article The Expert Mind.”… saved by 492 other people

Xbox 360: Turn Your Xbox 360 into a Streaming Netflix Player — if you’ve got an Xbox 360 and a Windows Vista PC, lifehacker says that “you don’t have to shell out $99 for Roku’s Netflix Player box to get your Watch Instantly library on your TV screen—you already have everything you need.” Check out the free Windows Media Center plug-in…  But I’ll agrue that Anuthony’s new Roku Netflix Player is worth every penny, and doesn’t require a PC… and saved by 323 other people

SensibleUnits.com — Web site SensibleUnits converts virtually any unit of measure to real-world objects “to help you get a better understanding of the practical size of something.” (via LifeHacker) 537 other people have converted all sorts of things: it would be fund to see what coversions have been particularly popular:

     http://sensibleunits.com/

The Guru Pitka | The Love Guru Movie — enough said. GO see it when it’s released if you like Mike Myers‘ comedy.  I predict that his xRank will increase as we near the movie’s release.

Canon HD: Viral Video Superstars

New study compares 360, PS3 consumers – Joystiq’s Scott Jon Siegel (Jun 23rd 2008) says that “a new study released by the Experian Group compares the consumers of the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. The findings cover age breakdowns, leisurely activities, and personal philosophies about recycling (seriously).”

Marketing Apple: Secrets of the World’s Best Marketing Machine

PC World – Business Center: Nearly Half of IT Workers Snoop in Confidential Files — Carrie-Ann Skinner, PC Advisor – June 21, 2008 – Nearly half of IT workers have admitted to snooping around networks to look at confidential information, according to research from software firm Cyber-Ark.

Tags: Bill Gates, misc, articles, what I read, Windows, Windows 7, Microsoft, Windows Vista, Gartner, Xbox 360, utilities, Zune, podcast, dingalings.

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Zune in School in Missouri, New Mexico

Engadget reports that local public school students were provided some free Zunes in Liberty, Missouri… 

“handing out a hundred and change media players — Zunes, to be specific — to local high school and middle school students for listening to lesson-supporting podcasts in the hopes of saving them “lost class time.”

Turns out this was kicked off by Eric Langhorst, the 2008 Missouri Teacher of the Year. On his blog, Langhorst noted that his class is involved in a student Zune pilot…

“Microsoft is providing each of my 25 students in my 3rd period 8th grade American History classroom a 4GB Zune to use during the spring semester.” 

How did Langhorst get the Zunes?

Simple: he asked.

From the article via the Associated Press… (available here)

“He approached Microsoft at an education conference last year and pitched the project that allows 25 students in one class to have the Zunes. He now can beam notes on the Gold Rush, Power Point presentations and Civil War battlefield maps directly to the students.”

Zunes are also in use in a rural New Mexico school as well, according to the article. And what does Microsoft get in return? Data, with a promise to publish the info in time for a future education conference…

“In exchange for the donated Zunes, which retail for $129 to $249, the schools are providing data — expected to be more qualitative than quantitative — on how helpful the devices were in the classroom. Microsoft plans to post a case study on the pilot project following this summer’s National Education Computing Conference in San Antonio, Texas.”

Tags: Zune, podcast, school.