Archive for March, 2009

HD-DVD still not dead?

Photo-0067.jpgIt is just over a year since in February 2008 Toshiba officially abandoned the HD-DVD format for Sony’s Blu-Ray to take pole position and become the next generation digital format of choice.  Now I got the Xbox 360 HD-DVD player back in January 2008, yes I know I was gutted when I heard the news, and admittedly I haven’t played as many High Definition DVDs on it as I would have liked but every time I go to the shops there is still stock there.  For many it may show that the format was a massive flop but there are some amazing deals out there right now! Not only for early adopters like me but also people who’ve never considered it before. Yesterday I picked up Apollo 13 (great film) on HD-DVD for only £3.99 -- even cheaper than bog standard DVD so I thought I’d take a moment to assess the situation and share it with you.

Now the defunct format isn’t going to last forever but HD-DVDs will be knocking around stores and online like eBay for at least a couple of years.  With this in mind why not pick one up? I’m not talking about the separate HD-DVD players because they’re damn rare and expensive. No, I’m talking about the Xbox 360 addon device that will also play your regular DVDs on the system so you have that extra ability to leave your “gaming discs” in the console internal drive thus less time wasted fiddling with discs. Less time changing discs = more time gaming!  So obviously you’ll need an Xbox 360 for this and because it’s HD-DVD you’d need it connected up to your HD TV either via HDMI, VGA or the high definition composite cables.

Now there are so many good deals around with the one which caught my eye being at Gamestation.  Here you could get the Xbox 360 HD-DVD drive + 5 HD-DVDs for only £34.99. Now with five HD-DVDs at £3.99 each that comes to about £20.00 which for some of the films out there isn’t bad bringing the play itself to £15. Now that might be a bit steep for something which is technically obsolete and will be worth little in a couple of years time but then that’s the price of a meal out. Why not stay home and get this baby as even though it’s £15 you’ll make that up in extra enjoyment of the films. Trust me, you will.  What’s great about the HD-DVDs is they’re cheaper than their normal DVD counterparts but have way better image quality and some have better sound as well.

So are you going to take the risk? In my opinion it’s not that much of a risk, and the benefits of a greater picture even if only for a couple of decent films, is worth it.  It all depends on your choice of films and if they are available on HD-DVD or not but you have the opporuntity, then treat yourself and enjoy the remnants of HD-DVD.

Airport Mania for the iPhone/iPod Touch Review

photo.jpgImagine having the stress of having to land,co-ordinate,refuel,fix and take off planes on a minute by minute basis? Well Airport Mania is exactly that and Mania is what it seems like. With a rather cartoony clean graphical approach you are in charge of the airport. You must keep up with planes wanting to land while making sure no departures are late! Quite a busy job…

So at only 59p this game will take up your day and when I’ve been playing time seems to fly by! Get it? Fly by? Ah I crack myself up.  Anyway the easy touch interface makes controlling the complicated task really easy, all you have to do is tap on the plane and tap on the destination be it either the terminal gate or the fuel depot.  The only problem is that during the mid and later levels the planes are coming in thick and fast which can get so busy on screen you tap on the wrong destination.  When you’re trying to get all the bonuses by making all the red planes dock with the red terminal it is very annoying when you accidentally tap the wrong colour terminal which is so frustrating!  All your hard work will have been wasted and the way to cancel a command is to double tap the destination but because the screen area is so small you don’t have enough time to cancel it effectively so it’s all a moment of loss….

Airport Mania does combine some kind of RPG elements albeit small, as you can customise your airport at the start of each stage.  You can add another gate, another runway, a spray paint centre, a VIP stand all to improve the speed of the airport process.  To gain these addons you collect money from completing flights early and making sure they’re not late or delayed.  Pretty simple really and it’s not until you get to the really late levels that you will struggle to make 99.9% of your flights early/on time.  As I mentioned earlier Airport Mania employs a colour coding system.  Each plane has a colour and every time you dock the plane to the gate, the gate also changes to that colour.  To start with there are only a couple of colours so it is easy to send all the blue planes to one gate and all the red planes to another gate.  The benefit of this is that you get a points multiplier x2,x3,x4,x5 etc which makes it a lot easier, and in the later levels necessary, to reach the best medals.  When the levels get on they introduce more colours and because you can only have so many gates you have to choose whether to play for bonuses or risk late, or losing altogether, your flights.  This tactical aspect to the game works quite well and is not required at all to enjoy the game for the majority of the levels.

So with more airplane and airport apps flying into the iTunes App Store, is the craze stale?  Well in this case at least, no.  It’s a different genre altogether from XPlane and is more of a puzzle than action game.  Levels aren’t long and tedious which really sucks you in to just play one more level.  The music is cheesy but works well and Airport Mania is full of light entertainment while also putting in some logical technique across 8 airports and 48 levels.  Will you take up the challenge of running an airport’s arrivals/departures? I know I did.

My Compilation: Rugby Match Rugby Team v Football Team Highlights

A bit of snazzy video editing as I compile some action clips from last weeks rugby match. I used Final Cut Express and a track off the Requiem for a Dream album. Seems to go quite well together don’t you think?

The Verdict: Belkin USB Anywhere Review

100_2519.JPGThis little beauty came from my random box of stuff from Bigpockets.co.uk and as the name suggests it enables USB use anywhere. But what does that actually mean? This nifty little device is meant to allow data transfer on the go removing the need for a computer which would make it easier. However the limitations seem to damage it’s purpose and what seems like a half finished product has made it to the customer.

On first look Belkin have done a good designing job and the silver finish makes it a modern decoration.  The control interface is simple and clean and the ports are all in the right place and feel right.  There is a battery compartment at the back hiding 3 AAA batteries which adds some weight to the device because even thought it’s built well, without batteries it seems a bit fragile.  This leads onto the next question, why would you not have batteries in it? As a portable device batteries are a must but then why would you need a power plug? The big catch with this device is that, as stated on the instructions,  certain USB plugs that draw more power than normal will not be compatible with the Belkin USB Anywhere  without the AC adapter plugged in.  Now if you need to use the AC adapter it will severely limit your ability to transfer files portably as you won’t be able to do it in the middle of a field after taking some photo snaps for instance.  On the other hand on a holiday where you will have ample electrical outlets and no need for outside transferring you’ll be alright and will save you taking a laptop/computer with you.

To control what you transfer you have to flick the switch on the left side of the Belkin device and then press the Copy button on the front and bingo you’re off.  The whole process has been simplified for quick transferring but does not allow you to select which files are transferred. It’s either the root directory or the whole lot. Now imagine when you need this it will be hard to know if you only want to transfer one file but it’s not in the root directory. It will mean having to copy the full source to the target which can waste space and time. Since the device has no lcd display the only responsive feedback you get on the transferring process is down to two leds.  A simple tick tells you when the process is complete and while it is working it but I would never trust it without plugging it into a computer first to check the file is there. Maybe it’s just me being paranoid but with something so highly prone to errors when it does finally say transfer completed I don’t want to delete the original file to see it crashed up somewhere else and I ended up losing it!

Saying that it is a good idea, just not perfected yet. With small lcd displays arriving like on portable photo printers you could easily see what files are on the source drive and which to copy. Then as the extra checking tool after the completed transfer process you could put the target drive into the source usb port and then check via the lcd display if the file actually made it over. Simple but effective and would alleviate all my worries about transferring important files on the go. As a first try I hope Belkin will learn, research and release a potentially better viable option to transferring files between USB devices.

How to use Yahoo Pipes to aggregate Feeds (Flickr and Twitpic)

pipes.pngRSS feeds are everywhere nowadays.  Nearly every other website spits out these lists of information and the large majority of people don’t use them.  Only a minority wake up every morning and check their mass of feeds to learn what’s going on but what about everyone else? Yahoo Pipes has been out since 7th February 2007 but in those two years it seems to have existed quietly. Well even though all the aggregation, mixing and sorting of web data sounds complicated, with Yahoo Pipes it’s simple.

Personally I use iGoogle to link some of my favourite RSS feeds together to read as my homepage but recently I was met with a dilemma.  The growing emergence of Twitpic means my usual photo site of Flickr is suffering.  Now I’m taking more photos on the go and uploading them to Twitpic through Twitterific on my iPhone because it’s just so much easier. However this means for my audience they have to follow my Twitter 24/7 to see the pictures as currently there is no easy way to sort them out and many people won’t bother visiting the account at Twitpic.com.  So, with my knowledge of RSS feeds still intact I booted up Yahoo Pipes with it’s clean interface to link my Flickr and Twitpic feeds together.  By aggregating them and filtering them into one feed I could then output that as a widget/script on my website which would make it quicker and easier to get all my photos across to my viewers.

Yahoo Pipes looks complicated when you first play with it because there are so many options in the left hand window with names that sound like they were made up. However clicking on each aforementioned option gives you a brief but concise description in the bottom right informing you what it allows you to do.  Not only does this dramatically decrease the learning curve but also increases experimentation with your feeds, which is great! Anyway I’ll let you play with it at your own speed but all I needed was to add the two feeds together then sort them in terms of date with the newest item first.  There would be no point just aggregating the feeds together with no sorting because then all the resultant feed would show would be all my Flickr pics then all my Twitpic pics which would be rather pointless and tedious for anyone to watch. Here’s how I did it:

  1. Open Sources and select “Fetch Feed” and drag onto the canvas section. Do it for however many feeds you want to mix.
  2. Open Operators and select “Union” and drag onto the canvas section. This will be the mixing device if you get what I mean.
  3. Open Operators and select “Sort” and drag onto the canvas section.
  4. Right now presuming you know your feed addresses, copy them into the fetch feed boxes.
  5. Now is the time to link them altogether and boy is it easy. Click on the circles underneath the boxes to link the “Fetch Feeds” to the Union. Then link the “Union” to the “Sort” before finally linking the “Sort” to the “Pipe Output
  6. The penultimate step is to change the “Sort” settings to item.pubDate in descending order.
  7. One final thing is to name the project in the top right and then save it with the button in the top right.

Then all you need to do is test your newly created masterpiece and then think how you want to implement it. Yahoo serve a badge feature which I used to output the new feed as a slideshow type widget on the Wordpress blog and seems to do exactly what I want.  There are also other outputs like adding to iGoogle or MyYahoo but with the new RSS feed you can try other third party services (like Widgetbox.com) to create whatever experience you want.  Yahoo Pipes really is an amazing gem if you spend time with it and makes managing numerous feeds a sinch.