# Thursday, June 23, 2005

Dave Winer gives a sneak preview of what's to come tomorrow at Gnomedex. That's right- a demo of THE browser:

On Friday you'll see how deeply integrated RSS is in the architecture of the browser. But that's just the tip of what may turn out to be a very big iceberg. The people at Microsoft noticed something that I had seen, only peripherally -- that there were applications of RSS that aren't about news.

Anyway, there's a lot more to what they're doing, but I wanted to say in advance that I think what they're doing is cool. They apparently were concerned about what I would think. I want them to relax and give a really great demo on Friday, and know that the OPML Editor will support the very simple extensions to RSS that they are developing, and I look forward to collaborating on further extensions and perhaps even new formats as we go forward.

I am pleased that Microsoft is working with the community, this is a new model for them, and it's hard for big companies to turn this kind of corner. I see that they're really trying, and I appreciate that, and welcome them.

That's mighty praise coming from Dave Winer. And if you have no idea what all this RSS stuff is about, don't worry- the net-net is making information easier for you to consume.

RSS: Really Simple Syndication Blog
RSS: Dave Winer's Blog

posted on Thursday, June 23, 2005 6:48:36 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Have you ever gone temporarily mad trying to book a multi-stop business trip only to hit the back button and lose everything?  CoolHunting points us to AirTreks new TripPlanner, a Flash-based trip planning and pricing service that took 1/4 the time to pull up a 4-stop trip than a 1 stop at ahem... the other folks' site.  I cannot vouch for pricing but I'd pay $5 per trip just for the convenience of actually being able to work through what-if scenarios quickly.

<rant>While I'm at it, I want a flight pricing service that builds a calendar grid showing prices for the same flights on different days. Then you just pick and choose.  Most of us by now know that Tuesday is normally the cheapest day of the week to fly, but if I'm flexible in my vacation planning. How about just giving me the info instead of making me cobble together a little spreadsheet of "what if" scenarios?  What's that you say, most people just suck it up and pay the higher prices to fly the days they want to?  Damn. Does anyone else spend 2 hours trying to find the best deals?</rant>

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:52:58 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback

Some groups just get that developers are the key. Flickr had a good service, but not much to stand out.  So what did they do?  They learned from Amazon, from EBay and Google. They built a rich yet simple API set, added feeds, made it public and easy to build to, and evangelized to the geek community.  The result?  Some really amazing apps.  Check out this one: type in any series of words and Spell with Flickr will grab live images of text from Flickr pools to create a montage. Oh and it's done in script. Nice.


ADDNeon I, SeattlecLetter Te at windsorD
TSC The O in TOY BOX
Pink DGAAAL
\elopes_dIM\

 

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:41:30 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Commodore to door

Now, I don't think this is a true "Portable Media Center" (hey, no Green Button folks!) but Stuff magazine is reporting on a new portable media player from the once, twice, many times sold company formerly known as Commodore.  No additional details however I can say that I got a call from some folks at Commodore's parent company a while back and put them in touch with some other folks internally.  Now I see the device was WMV support.  I hope by playing "connector" I helped in making that happen.  Time to hit them up for my eval device I think :)

From Stuff onine:

A capacious, nay, rapacious 30GB hard drive gobbles down MP4, DivX 5.0 and WMV9 files, while also despatching MP3, AAC, WMA and little known G726 audio files with aplomb, whatever a plomb is.

Read more here.

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:31:26 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

My bad: I neglected to post that the RAW Image Thumbnailer and Viewer for Windows XP is now available for free download and it works with Media Center! Things have been a bit busy- more details on that shortly.  Oh and Longhorn will still have native RAW uncompressed photo format support ;).

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:24:38 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

acs_mce_front_panel_controller.jpgVia eHomeUpgrade: If you've been looking for slick and inexpensive way to control your MCE PC from any room in the house, checkout ACS' new, $99 Graphical Media Center Remote Front Panel (via F-Stop Blues). The manufacture claims: "Not only does it display the current MCE state [on a 128 x 64 LCD], it also allows you to control MCE using the membrane switch overlay – change radio stations, browse photos, control your PVR and more. Take a look at the manual at the link above for more.

I love this idea.  I have a dream of putting one of these on the side of the house by the patio to control my MCE playing through the patio speakers.  I use the remote today but have to keep a keen eye on the little remote control gnome who likes to eat batteries (known as my son).

My wish-list:

  • Powered USB - serial is so 1991
  • How about an IR receiver built-in?
  • Weather-proof enclosure? I can probably do this myself. 

If they release a powered USB version, I just might have to invite my electrician buddy over and do a how-to on this one.  It can be done. Oh yes, it can be done.

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:19:47 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Could it be?  Could The Podcast Network be the first group to offer a Media Center Podcasting client? Almost. The beta version of The Podcast Network for Media Center offers a wide range of programming on-demand from where else but The Podcast Network. Ian Dixon has been hard at work on this and released the beta available for download here based on mNewsCenter.

Speaking of which, my friend John Canning was interviewed by Ian in his latest episode of "The Media Center Show". John sounds much too serious in his interview. John is one of the most passionate people I know about his job and his life in general.  I hear next week, my interview with Ian will air as well.  Ian and I had a heck of a time getting Skype to behave but after 1.5 hours and 3 attempts over 3 days, everything came together.  I hope. :)

The time is about right for a full-fledged Podcasting Client in MCE.  We have sync to portable players. Someone will bring together an directory listing optimized for 10' with a download engine and display show notes with album art/photos from the podcast in such a way that makes it compelling in 10' as well as 2'.  It's just bound to happen.  Perhaps what we need to do is a community development project?  Newsgator has a bang-up RSS reader for 10'- it's almost there. Anyone interested or is your company working on a podcasting client we should know about for MCE? Feel free to post here.

Oh and for those who have been asking, sorry, the only comment I have on recent rumors of an update to Media Center is... no comment.  :) I work on Longhorn now but still have a passion for Media Center.

 

 

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 9:03:27 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

I finally fixed an annoying issue on the site with my CSS page rendering the main body.  Appears I ran into an IE6 bug that was causing the images not to render, but was fine in Firefox.  Guess what, another version of IE didn't have that issue either ;)

Oh and for the gentlemen who keep spamming me and putting random comments in my blog- welcome and enjoy CAPTCHA now that I've turned it back on.  Remember folks, always be smart before clicking on links.

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 8:32:59 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

One of my favorite Mac apps (yes you read that right) is iPodderX. It's a great general-purpose RSS client plus a great podcasting client.  Now I've caught wind over on the iPodderX Developer's Journal that iPodderX for Windows is coming very shortly. To quote:

If you're at Gnomedex, you might see a few early versions floating around, so keep an eye out. iPodderX for Windows will be introduced in the next few weeks as a public Beta, so if you’re using a PC, get ready to ROCK!

Way to go iPodderX team and welcome Sean Jackson to the Thunderstone team.  The Podcatchers  on Windows are heating up.  I hope I can get an early build at Gnomedex.

RSS: iPodderX updates

posted on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 7:47:45 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, June 21, 2005
Top 10 Newest Plug-ins on WMPlugins.com (a.k.a. Rise of the Codecs)

and while we're at it,

Top 10 Most Popular Plug-ins

You'll notice the Batman Begins viz isn't available yet.  I've been pinging the team and they found a few bugs in testing. I'd expect it to be up this week. 

RSS Feed: WMPlugins.com Latest Additions

posted on Tuesday, June 21, 2005 5:09:57 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Deerfield, Ill high schooler builds tri-level treehouse complete with home automation and what else but Media Center :)

You can see MCE05 approximately 1:30 into the clip from the Chicago ABC affiliate. Nice.

posted on Tuesday, June 21, 2005 6:42:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, June 20, 2005

Steve Lacey puts out an idea for creating a standard format for Podcast show notes.  I think this is a fine idea. Besides offering a simpler way to archive show notes and cross-reference based on contextual tagging, I can see real-world applications for this in the Media Player space.  Show notes are small- imagine if the notes were "stuffed" into the header of an MP3 or WMA file. Media Players and Portable Music Players could read this data and present while you're listening to the broadcast.  Add support for a simple mark-in and mark-out tags, and you have a searchable index of audio segments so you can jump directly to that segment you wanted to hear earlier.  Imagine if on your portable media player you could jump directly back to the last "chapter" of a podcast, just like a DVD you turned off last night?  It's not full bookmarking, but its a rough approximate and good enough for most.

Of course, there are still some problems with this idea such as if you're licensing ASCAP music for example. According to the ASCAP non-interactive license 5.0, "Examples of non-interactive music uses that qualify for Release 5.0 include...Radio broadcasts or pod-casts that do not offer a play-list, program guide, and do not make advance lists of the songs contained in the programs available prior to their transmission."

I'm not a lawyer but the net-net I'm hearing is that you'd need to omit the show notes in order to be eligible under ASCAP's license.  If you have more details on this, feel free to share.  Otherwise it sounds like you'd need pay to play but there are still a number of reasons to do this.

So is support for Show notes support the next thing for Audio Tag Editors?  I don't know. But I think it's something worth discussing. 

RSS: Steve Lacey

(BTW:  I HATE summer colds :( )

posted on Monday, June 20, 2005 5:59:48 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Sunday, June 19, 2005

Musical mashups or "mash-ups" are a relatively new thing in the space of music remixing.  Mashups are based on the simple idea that many songs out today use primary chord progressions and lyrical stanzas. Last year's, "The Grey Album" offered up a mash-up of Jay-Z's, "The Black Album", with the Beatles', "White Album".  The result? Entertainment Weekly's album of the year and a lawsuit.  Then came, "The Beastles", a mash-up of The Beatles and the Beastie Boys showed this was a burgeoning new space with some definite talent.

Over the past few months, Adam Curry has played one mashup in particular that I think leaves all others in the dust.  A combination called, "Boulevard of Broken Songs" mashes Green Day vs. Oasis vs. Aerosmith/Eminem in such a way that shows there really are only 3 chord progressions in rock. Good thing I like those chords. I love listening to it driving with the top down on the ride to/from work.

You may have heard it on the radio, you can find links to it out on the net - just read the SFGate article on the topic and you can learn where to download it, and the back-history. Sorry no links today for obvious reasons :)

posted on Sunday, June 19, 2005 4:14:51 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

This is too cool for words. MSN has an incubation team working on a next-generation Web portal/online RSS client called, "Start".
http://www.start.com/myw3b/.  Click on the Start logo in the upper-right, add a feed- just type the URL for the webpage and the service auto-detects and validates an RSS feed (if available).  This is brilliant.

While you're at it, go play in the MSN Sandbox. Lots of cool stuff happening in incubation these days.

posted on Sunday, June 19, 2005 3:38:15 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Saturday, June 18, 2005

My friend Chris Pirillo (who often takes a baseball bat I call, "Sense" to MS product groups) was just featured in the Seattle Times.
Chris is definitely not your average user, but I have to hand it to him- he was extolling the virtues of RSS over two years ago and was toying with Podcasting long before others got it. Chris- congratulations and I'll see you at Gnomedex and I'm giving my mom your 1-888 line for support ;).  Anyone else want to do a meet-up, drop me a line.

RSS: Chris Pirillo's Blog
RSS: The Chris Pirillo Show
RSS: The Seattle Times

posted on Saturday, June 18, 2005 10:20:57 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Friday, June 17, 2005

Major Nelson, the (un)official spokesblogger for Xbox Live is doing an Xbox 360 Faceplate Design Competition. Winner gets a special edition E3 faceplate. They already have over 350 entries in less than 2 days and are using Flickr to host em. Check it out, a lot of very cool designs up there. You can view a slide show of the entries here (hint: use your keyboard arrow keys to navigate) or subscribe to this RSS feed and get them in your feed reader.  Oh and if you have the chops, enter to win up to $125,000 designing a PC too.

RSS: Major Nelson.com
RSS: Xbox 360 Faceplate Entries on Flickr

posted on Friday, June 17, 2005 7:16:04 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

Yesterday I had the opportunity to meet Furrygoat (a.k.a. Steve Makofsky) in person.  We've chatted over the years but never had an opportunity to meet. Steve points us to Lou Amadio's new blog, "Ooey GUI" which besides being a cool name for a blog, offers up some great GUI tips and tricks for developers.  From Furrygoat:

Do any Windows programming?

I'm happy to say that after several weeks of peer pressure between Shawn and I, Lou finally buckled and started a blog. Head on over to Ooey GUI, a new blog by Lou Amadio.

So far he's posted some great tips of Fast Solid Fills and DIB sections. Lou's the man when it comes to GDI, GDI+ and layered windows (yes! It's the Lou, who wrote the only MSDN article on Layered Windows).

Welcome Lou!

RSS: The Furrygoat Experience
RSS: OoeyGUI (technically RDF but who's counting) ;)

posted on Friday, June 17, 2005 5:22:44 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Our friends at Niveus dropped me a line yesterday to note that the Niveus Denali Media Center PCs are now available at Magnolia and Tweeter home AV stores. In my estimation, the Denali is the "Escalade of Media Center PCs," and was recently named by Computer Shopper as, "...the Ultimate Media Center PC". The Denali has the attributes of high-end A/V gear, including an A/V-style form-factor, silent operation enabled by the passive cooling technology, and a complete A/V rear panel of high-quality connections, including gold-plated RCA and BNC connectors for Component Video. Additionally, the “Denali Edition” is built with only the highest quality audio and video components, including television tuners, and video processing certified by the Image Science Foundation (ISF).

So if you want to see one in person, drop by a store.  If you live in the Seattle area, drop by Magnolia in Bellevue and ask for Dennis- a 10+ year veteran of the AV retail biz, he's helped me and a few friends out from time to time.  Perhaps we'll get a geek dinner together.

Also be sure to see their Terabyte server- a best of CES 2005 Innovations award winner. It stores days of photos, music, video and more,  this integrated solution requires only power and a wired ethernet connection. Somehow I think Thomas Hawk will end up getting one of these.  Now we just need an RSS feed for their latest and greatest announcements ;).

posted on Wednesday, June 15, 2005 7:36:15 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Monday, June 13, 2005
"Please keep your hands and feet inside the ride at all times"  Dean Hachamovitch (the leader of IE7) is keynoting Gnomedex. Let the fun begin. Chris writes more here.
posted on Monday, June 13, 2005 12:09:33 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Friday, June 10, 2005

More from around the world of Media Center development:

- mceSAPI - add Speech and Voice Recognition to your MCE apps (HowTo)

- DirectX Shell for Media Center (under development) - Developers are looking for a way to develop rich, animated UI for applications in Media Center.

- MCE Controller (v1.1, source available on SourceForge) - control MCE via TCP/IP commands over home network (all-purpose, designed for home automation)

Know of any other projects- shared or otherwise?  Drop a comment here.

posted on Friday, June 10, 2005 8:21:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Search and Browse Smarter Using MSN Search Toolbar with Windows Desktop SearchLooking for tabbed browsing in IE?  Faster desktop search?  Check out the new MSN Toolbar with Desktop Search and Tabbed browsing released this week.  I've been running it through its paces and have to say, after using Copernic Desktop Search for a while, I really like it.  It even has a feature to pause indexing if you're running on battery power- I've hated this on laptops and it shows they're thinking through the end to end scenarios.

S lightning fast and if you have Mac Spotlight envy, you'll be sated in the meantime until Longhorn arrives.  MSN Desktop search gets the job done. The implementation is sound and faster than other solutions I've seen.

My favorite feature thought is support for a broad range of add-ins for searching everything from .zipfiles to .chm (compressed HTML help files).  You can get more at http://addins.msn.com.

In other MSN news, they've announced plans for a subscription service. Gee, I don't know how anyone saw that coming... ;)  MSN Music also has a buy 1 get 5 free deal on right now- no subscription required (heh, sorry I couldn't help myself).

posted on Friday, June 10, 2005 6:57:52 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, June 08, 2005

I'm not a huge fan of Player skins I have to admit, but I do appreciate a well-designed visualization. Visualizations for Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center move and pulse to your music and are a good diversion when you're throwing a party or cleaning the house. The quality has been getting better- more responsive and reacting more to the music. Psychedelic visualizations are fine- but I like others with purpose, a theme, and a/or a mood.

Warner Bros. recently partnered with Gordon Williams, creator of the R4 Viz used in many popular nightclubs to create the new, "Batman Begins" viz for Windows Media Player and Media Center. While I can't give you the viz yet, here's a small taste that just hints at the coolness. 

One of these days, the video card manufacturers are going to realize that visualizations are a good way to promote their products and demonstrate what their cards can do (I've tried to convince a few of this). Game demos are great, but visualizations are easier and free candy for all. :)

The viz will be available in the next day or so.  I'll post here as soon as it goes up on WMPlugins.com or keep your eye on the RSS feed.

RSS Feed: WMPlugins.com Latest Additions

posted on Wednesday, June 08, 2005 8:29:02 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Mark Cuban (yes, that Mark Cuban) offers up a good blog post/manifesto on the decline of movie theater ticket sales and how to address.
His short answer: Let everyone watch what they want, when and where they want- but at a premium.  I'm not sure this helps the movie theater owner but agree they need to step up the experience. 

Here are some additional ideas:

- SkyBox Seating - people will pay a premium, just like they do for business or first-class tickets. I can see this being used for kids parties and more- maybe even corporate entertaining if the event is right just like a stadium event. 

- Cry Rooms - We amped up our home theater to HD and an improved surround-sound system for one main reason: Baby.  We cannot get out to the theaters.  Who wants to spend a stress-laden night with their child jabbering the whole way through the movie?  One of our local theaters has outfitted a soundproof cry-room next to the projector room.  Unfortunately they only have one screen.

- Day Care - Let's face it- baby sitters are hard to find and matinees are rarely sold out. It works at the Gym, Ikea, and our local grocery store.  The lumbering Ferries in Greece even had a kid's play room.  Why not offer an accredited day-care service? 

- Schwag - People love free stuff.  A movie poster, t-shirt, book, bobble-head etc.- they'll clamor over stuff for their favorite movies. Some Sci-Fi franchises used to do this with local radio personalities. Teens in particular collect movie posters and marketing material like life-sized cutouts. Why not do a better job of recognizing your customers have a choice in whether they wait a few short months to watch at home, or come in to sit in your plushy seats. Work with the studios to offer up free cheap stuff to make them feel wanted.  Sorry, a mint and a thank you from some pimply-faced kid with an "iPod stare" on his/her face isn't going to do it. Sporting events figured this out a long time ago.

- Retail tie-ins - Someone will figure out a way to get customers an instant discount on DVD/HD-DVD movie purchases as they're coming out of a good movie for pre-orders.  Partner with Best Buy, Amazon or another retailer to offer a simple way to preorder the DVD movie for their collection.  Oh and get rid of your own membership programs- tie them into Best Buy or another retailer and a solid recommendation engine with value.

- Soundtrack downloads - Get a discount or digital download of the movie soundtrack through a music service tie-in.

I'm sure there are other ideas out there as well.

RSS Feed: Mark Cuban's BlogMaverick

posted on Tuesday, June 07, 2005 9:44:27 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Well, my site provider took my site offline again without notice and I sent a tersely worded email to them (tech support is outsourced).  They've moved my site onto another server and hopefully things will stabilize.  Just in case they don't... I'm investigating other providers.

Thanks for your patience :)

posted on Tuesday, June 07, 2005 7:58:56 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Sunday, June 05, 2005

Not sure how I missed this one. David Berlind exclaims in "Between the Lines, The blog for discriminating IT buyers":

...Is there any doubt that  Microsoft is not only poised to repeat its successful Windows formula, but that that success will, over the long run, actually dwarf the company’s success with Windows?  ...OK, you’re a doubter. The Podderati will surely eviscerate me for being a Microsoft sycophant. If you want to go into denial,  that’s your business.  The facts speak for themselves.  No single company has circled its technology wagons around the digital media universe the way Microsoft has.

That's a pretty bold statement. As one who worked on the Digital Media Division product team (left 1.5 years ago) I'd prefer the term, "partnered with the digital media universe". I'd like to see the "Gilmoor Gang (Reloaded)" duke it out with some special guests on this topic - (Welcome back Steve & co) :).  Say what you will, the PlaysforSure program makes it a hell of a lot easier for me to tell family and friends what devices and services to consider when deciding whether to go the Pod route or another.  Oh, and for the new readers, I own a Creative Zen Touch Micro and an iPod and actually use both. 

RSS Feed: "Between the Lines, the Blog for discriminating IT Buyers."
RSS Feed: The Gilmoor Gang (Reloaded)

posted on Sunday, June 05, 2005 5:28:57 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

(Disclaimer- this is particularly geeky and not a mainstream upgrade yet) :)

Remember the "old days" of playing back a DVD on a PC?  When it required a beefy processor and you couldn't do anything else with the PC at the same time?  Then the video gurus figured out you could free your PC's CPU to do other tasks by moving video decode to your 3D graphics card with a technology called "DirectX Video Acceleration" (or DXVA). Well thanks to a new update for Windows Media Player, if you have a card that supports DXVA video acceleration, chances are you're going to see a performance boost when playing back HD content compressed in Windows Media Video High Definition (WMV-HD).  WMV-HD paves the way for reasonable delivery of HD-quality movies over the Internet and reduces the requirements on CPU speed when pared with a mid to high-end video card.

WMV-HD has been around for a little bit now, delivering true 720p and 1080p video quality in a reasonable package.  Unfortunately, you've needed a beefy processor (recommended 3Ghz) in order to play back.  Thanks to work done in hardware by ATI, Nvidia and others as well as the Windows Media Player 10 team, you can now drop CPU usage by some reports up to 40%! 

According to this support update, the software update enables WMV-HD decode acceleration after users meet the following prerequisites:

  • The graphics adapter must support this update. Check with your card manufacturer to see if your card supports DXVA and get the latest certified drivers.

  • The user must install hotfix 891122 first<- Very important.
  • Download the update at http://www.support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;888656 

  • The content must be WMV-HD clips (720p and 1080p) with a frame rate that is less than or equal to 30 frames per second.

Here's a link to feedback from others who now have WMV-HD playing back on 2.66 Ghz systems and others with reduced

Go download free WMV-HD trailers and clips at http://www.wmvhd.com and enjoy.  I'll check with the team on plans for new trailers etc.

Enjoy :)

posted on Sunday, June 05, 2005 4:34:42 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, June 04, 2005

The latest episode (#11) of The Media Center Show is now available.  Be sure to vote for the show over at Podcast Alley - it's simple!

This week Ian talks to Jeremy Allaire, founder and President of Brightcove about Internet TV and how the future of TV is changing.

RSS Link: The Media Center Show

posted on Saturday, June 04, 2005 10:13:08 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

I just realized the Seattle P-I's Business Section is perma-linking to me from their Microsoft Blog. I feel honored.

RSS Link: seattlepi.com Microsoft blog

posted on Saturday, June 04, 2005 9:11:06 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Terry dropped me a line that Warner Bros. and The Skins Factory have just released their new Batman Begins Skin for Windows Media Player 10. The new skin is very cool, a high-res image of the design is below.  You can download it for free yourself at www.wmplugins.com.

While we're at it, a reminder that there are RSS feeds for the latest add-ons for Windows Media Player available anytime. WMPlugins also has forums and a good list of 3rd party codecs that work with the Player. Enjoy.

WMPlugins RSS Feeds:

  • Master RSS Feed (all 4 below)
  • Latest Additions to WMPlugins.com
  • Featured on WMPlugins.com
  • Highest Rated on WMPlugins.com
  • posted on Saturday, June 04, 2005 8:30:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
    # Friday, June 03, 2005

    I've decided to start doing something new.  Every time I link to another blog, and an RSS feed is available, I'm going to include a link to the RSS feed.  Why?  Because it's a pain for users who have moved to Web aggregators to visit the sites I link to, only to hunt for the RSS feed. (No more hunting on my site- it's in the title-bar)

    Will this get annoying?  Maybe. You tell me if it's useful.  Or maybe it's just another courtesy we should all extend.  I wonder if Scoble will start including RSS web links in his blog entries too.

    posted on Friday, June 03, 2005 7:09:09 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback

    Vic Gundotra is Robert Scoble's "Boss' Boss". He's excited about Longhorn.  An excerpt:

    [Then] there is "sexier". Some will claim Microsoft doesn't know even what this word means. I can see their point. Yet Longhorn will be the first generation of Windows where we have put very significant effort into the fit, finish and polish of the Windows experience. Look - in the early days of the automobile industry cars didn't have interior lights. Experience refinements like dimming lights on exit came decades later. We've reached the point where "experience" improvements matter. How fast the PC starts up, the feel of the windows, the experience of moving between apps, and many other attributes have received careful and thoughtful consideration from a design perspective.

    Vic's RSS feed

    posted on Friday, June 03, 2005 7:02:08 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
    # Thursday, June 02, 2005

    First there was Sony's Qualia line of products.  Now, Dell announces their intent to bring a new brand of PCs (not Dell) focused, "...on the folks who recognize what the PC can do". Priced at between $1,200 and $3,500, things just got more interesting. More in the Cnet article here.

    What did the automobile industry do when their industry was being commoditized?  Reinvent themselves- establish new brands such as Lexus, Infiniti, and Acura to introduce new technologies, test and invest, and drive down component costs to eventually incorporate into their more value-conscious product lines.  A good example of this is the Navigation system in our Honda Pilot- effectively the "older model" as the Acura MDX had two years prior (Acura had voice-activated navigation, the Pilot did not).

    The premium systems will also come with a premium service package, which Dell calls its "white glove" treatment. The service packages will include expanded online and in-home support. Dell is currently conducting extensive test programs on its online support.

    Let me ask- how much is peace of mind and hassle-free assurance of customer support worth to you?  Next time my Mother needs a new PC, I'll point her in this direction.  She's had more trouble than any one person deserves with customer support and would be willing to pay a little more for the assurance she'll be taken care of when it happens.

    posted on Thursday, June 02, 2005 9:45:17 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [7] Trackback