kevin barnett

Archive for March, 2007

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Under The Weather

First off, what in the hell does that mean? Under the weather. A quick Google search reveals:

The phrase “under the weather” came from British sailing ships. When a sailor became ill he was confined below deck out of the weather, so it was said that he was under the weather.

For the past week, I have been dealing with a festival of sinus issues, scratchy throat and flu-type aches. I was down for four days and bounced back to a near-100% day yesterday. Today, I’m back to 60-70%. Strange, but I am suspect of spring allergies. The difference between yesterday and today must be that I had a vent open in my bedroom, breathing the outside air while sleeping.

Allergies are something I never have a problem with but after moving to a new part of the country, you never know. I remember feeling invincible from the cedar pollen in Austin, TX while others dropped like flies. Chicago was when I first suspected allergies although I don’t think they were necessarily related to pollen. I’m not sure what makes it’s way through New York other than the blooms of bacteria on the streets and subways but it’s most likely something in the air.

My friend Mike, who blogs (brilliantly) at The Lunar Gemini inspired me to write this post for no reason other than to document personal illness. Perhaps after a few years of doing so, it will reveal patterns in which predictions can be made. I also wonder if we could somehow link through to local New York bloggers who are all being hit with similar symptoms in order to somehow measure the ills of the season. If you live in the area and happen to come across ye ol’ blog, write up a post and hit me with a trackback. Oh, and feel better.

I was just listening to Nightmares On Wax - Flip Ya Lid

Posted in New York, Personal

March 29th, 2007 | 1:41 PM

Apple TV Will Make a Nice Paperweight

Aside from the iPhone which probably deserves most of the hype, I think the Apple TV which started shipping this week, does not.

The Apple TV can connect via HDMI/Component cables to HDTVs to deliver photos and iTunes content; movies, TV shows, music and podcasts. First coined by Steve Jobs, Apple says “Apple TV is like a DVD Player for the 21st Century”. I disagree.

First, let’s consider the content and alternative ways to distribute this content to your television. Since the birth of the iPod video, there are all sorts of docks and cables — including Apple’s own iPod AV kit — to get all of this content on your television. And they don’t cost $299.

But what about HDMI and HDTV? This has to be the biggest farce of Apple TV and nobody seems to be talking about it. Since none of the videos, TV shows and movies sold on the iTunes store are of HD quality, I really don’t see a point. Minimum HD resolution, 720p displays at 1280 x 720. iTunes store video formats are limited to 640 x 480, neither HD quality or aspect ratio. Not to mention the older videos iTunes customers may have when they were pushing out 320 x 240. I’m sure they look great on the iPod but certainly not on an HDTV.

Other nitpicks I’ve read about Apple TV include storing photos on the local drive instead of streaming. Coming from someone who shoots with a digital camera outputting 8+MB for each photo, I think I could fill up the 40GB hard drive sooner rather than later. And Apple may insist on having a minimalist interface but when it comes to remote controls used from the couch, people insist on having a lot of buttons to control a lot of things. As such, the tiny Apple remote, which lacks volume control, among other things is useless.

Aside from all of these issues, journalists and analysts are reaping praise upon Apple TV. Perhaps it’s because they want to see AAPL’s value to rise and convince others of the worthy investment. I just don’t see the value, especially when the iTunes store doesn’t sell HD quality media. And until they do, they should have a hard time competing with DVD formats that do support near-to-true HD quality support digital surround sound. Unless consumers are as dumb as Walt Mossberg and Piper Jaffray suggest, this device is going to flop.

I was just listening to Dntel - Dumb Luck

Posted in TV, Technology

March 23rd, 2007 | 6:28 PM