Thursday, March 31, 2011

Dropbox: Friend of the Writer

Aside from writing this blog, I am also a writer of fiction (among other things). I've tried the past few years to find away to keep my drafts all up to date in the same place. I have to move from home computers to work, to the phone, to the iPad and to have to manually move files from one place to the next was always a disaster in the making.

So a couple months ago I found Dropbox. Not only does it save your stuff in the cloud, it also keeps all that stuff up to date on all the rest of the machines you've attached to your Dropbox.

Now I can access all my files and work on them at any time, on any machine, anywhere. Just thinking about that makes my shoulders relax. Check it out.

The best stereo $800 can buy


So, we made out OK on the tax return this year, and the lovely wife allowed me to indulge myself with a chunk of the return. When we moved into the house five years ago, it came with a home theater built into the basement, Infinity speakers in the walls, a control center with all the wiring and the connections for the projector built into the ceiling. I got an 84" screen and an HD projector and I was in movie and gaming heaven. I was not, however, in audio heaven. But to pay for all that stuff, I sold my low end hi-fi setup. I did have the studio, which was great for listening to stuff, but not exactly a comfortable hangout when I just wanted to kick back and take in some tunes.

I'd been considering replacing the janky home theater setup in the upstairs living room with a 2.0 hi-fi for a while and this tax windfall seemed like the perfect time.

Let's be clear: If you think you can go to Best Buy and get anything that sounds like a good sound system, you are mistaken. I did my due diligence and went out to check out what they had. I suppose that some of the Polk and Klipsch stuff would be ok, but I listened all the way up the line and it wasn't until I got to the higher levels of the floor standing models that stuff sounded alright. But I didn't want to spend my whole budget on what were really some uninspiring speakers, so it was off to the local hi fi store.

There's really not a lot that you can do for $800 at the hi fi store, but if you know what you're looking for, there are options.

The first set of good speakers I ever bought was a pair of Paradigms. Bought them at Sound Investments in Morgantown west Virginia when i was 18 or 19. They were awesome. This was in the time before bookshelf speakers and they were the smallest I could get. I had those speakers for the next ten plus year. Then I moved to a set of Energys. They were also great.

These days, Paradigm makes a nice set of speakers called the Atom. They've been around for several version s and have always gotten raves for their sound and their price point (they run about $350 or less a set right now).

I should also say that I don't really care at all for things like bass extension. I'm a firm believer that the artists and engineers who made the records put a lot of time and thought into making eq choices, so I never futz with eq settings at all. I like natural, balanced sound. But even more important than balanced sound is sound stage. Now, some of you might not be familiar with the idea of sound stage, but it is what it sounds like: the stage on which the sound is presented to the room. I went into the hi fi store looking for sound stage. And in the Atoms, I found it. There might be some of you out there asking "How can such a small set of speakers give any sort of sound staging?" Well, I'm not an engineer. All I know is they do. These are great sounding speakers that present tight, focused, and alive in the room. That's what speakers are supposed to do in my book.

Of course, the speakers are at the mercy of what powers them. With the rest of my money I really had two choices in the store (there're certainly other choices out there): a Cambridge Audio stereo receiver and a Marantz SR 5004. I went with the Marantz mostly because it had a built in phonograph amp and the reviews read quickly on my phone were really great. Not to mention that the set up in the store was the Atoms plus the Marantz. I went to the car and got a cd (Dark Side of the Moon). I like listening to that record because it's really dynamic and theres a great sound stage on it.

Well, the results were amazing. The record sounded great. It felt like it was surrounding me. The sound stage was awesome. Just to be sure, I had the guy in the store set up my current speakers (which they also sold) the Polk TSi100s. Te difference were night and day. I never hated the Polks, but listening t them after the Paradigms was like loosing a dimension. They were congested and lifeless. S the Paradigms and the Marantz went home with me and I've been rediscovering my music collection now for the past coulee weeks.

If you're looking for a great, reasonably priced stereo set up mainly for music (although it does sound great for TV as well) you could do a lot worse than this combo. In fact, you'll have to spend a lot more money to do much better.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Lots to share

Been a busy week in the real life, so I haven't been able to get in here, but suffice it to say that I now have two iPads in the house--a 64gb iPad and a 16gb iPad2--and I'm deciding which one I should keep. Let me know what your thoughts are. The 64gb was on $49 more expensive than the iPad 2.

Also, Nintendo 3ds comes out today. Saw this clip from Jimmy Fallon and my GAS (Gadget Acquisition Syndrome) has flared again. This time mostly for the daughter, who would love the 3D pet game they have for the thing. Will I survive this Sunday without getting her one? We shall see.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Tablet Wars: A retreat

Well, I returned the Motorola Lapdock and the Motorola Xoom. Both very cool products that are half-baked. In a year, they'll be awesome. Right now, they are awesome ideas not worth the money required to purchase them.

I'm on the waiting list for an iPad 2, but when a 64GB Wi-Fi iPad can be had brand new for $529, is it really worth spending $500 for a 16GB iPad 2? Well, we shall see. 64GB iPad is syncing now...

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Tablet War: Why do I need a tablet, anyway?





Wallet Moths:

Motorola Atrix 4G

Motarola Atrix Lapdock

OK. for thise who've been following with bated breath, you'll know a week or so ago I got the Motorola Xoom in anticipation of the iPad 2 release. I've had an iPad since day one last year and I've really liked it. But since then, I've been curious as to what the upstarts (Android) can do.


I gravitated from an iPhone to the Samsung Captivate last summer. I liked the promise of Android and aspects of the Captivate, but at the same time, the phone was buggy and frustrating from day one. I wanted to throw it against the wall most of the time. But when I upgraded the phone to Android 2.2 it got better.  Not good, but better.

The Xoom has better specs all around than the iPad 2. Android doesn't have the ecosystem of apps that Apple has. So I picked up the Xoom with every intention of returning it after i played around with it a while. And return it I will. At this writing, there's no other option in purchsing the Xoom other than buying the 3G version for $800, even though I have no interest in 3G. There is a wifi version coming out in a couple weeks, but that's going to be $600. Still more specs than the bargain basement iPad at $500, but still the same problem in terms of the apps and usefulness. I know that the Android Marketplace will catch up eventually, but what am I going to do with the thing until then?

That question got me thinking: What the hell do I need a tablet for anyway? The iPad is cool and I've used it, but my real hope was that it'd become an extension of my studio and a real boon to on-the-go writing and, well, it hasn't. It's a fun toy and great for surfing the web (but not as great as the Xoom). My daughter uses it more to play games like Big Buck Hunter (don't ask) than I do. What I use it most for is taking quick notes in meetings and such. Is that really worth $500?

Then I got to thinking. I hate my current phone, I like the Xoom. Motorola just came out with the Atrix, which is exactly the same as the Xoom inside, but is a phone. If I could convince the folks at ATT to let me upgrade early--really early--then I could solve all my probelms, because the Atrix also has waht they call a "Lapdock." It's this 11.6" super thin laptop shell that is powered by the phone itself. You can access all the functionality of the phone, including calls and texting. You can access all the apps. And the Lapdock uses a Webtop interface when paired to the phone to access a really limited bunch of apps and Firefox.It's a barebones setup, but compellig because it kills two birds: I have to have a phone but I also want to be able to do work with a lighteight, portable interface. Honestly, while using the keypad on the iPad was fine most of the time, it wasn't ideal and i'm not sure it ever will be. For one thing, as a writer, I cursed the burying of the quotation marks on the second screen of the keyboard. It made it impossible to do serious work on the thing. I found a couple apps that change the keyboard, but they had their own problems. I did like to edit on my iPad though, for some reason.

So yesterday I was at the mall for a few errands and I stopped into the ATT store to complain more about my Captivate. And I took a look at the Atrix. A very sweet phone. Comparable to Xoom in terms if speed, etc., although I like the unadulterated Honeycomb OS of the Xoom better than the Motoblur of the Atrix. Then my ATT guy (I know, weird I could say that, right?) jacks the phone into the Lapdock. It boots right away, like, in a few seconds. There's the phone. There's Firefox. Seems cool. I'm more than intrigued.

Let's get this out of the way: minutes before I'd bought a $100 gift card at Best Buy to reserve an iPad 2 when the next bath comes in (I was shutout on launch day because of personal issues beyond my control). But before that I was bemoaning to the wife how in many ways a netbook is more attractive to me than a tablet, especially if the idea is productivity. Now, I have no desire for a netbook. But there in the ATT store was what amounted to a netbook that I could power with my phone. If I could convince the ATT folks to let me upgrade after only 8 months with the Craptivate.

So I asked my guy what I could get out of the store paying  for the phone and the Lapdock. Out of contract, the phone is $600 and the dock $500. No way. And supposedly you have to add tethering to a data plan to the tune of $45 all tolled. Also not happening. I thought my dreams of trying this combo instead of the iPad were dead. But then my ATT guy worked some magic and I walked out of the store with the Atrix and the Lapdock for $500 and no tethering plan. It was black gadget magic. Pretty slick.

So now I'm typing this blog post on the Lapdock. The Lapdock is powered by my new phone (which is awesome) and it is nice to use a real keyboard while watching round one of the Tournament. Could I be using the Macbook resting three feet away? Yes, but this is compact and light. I said IT'S COMPACT AND LIGHT!!!!

Is it an iPad killer? No. But I think its also a harbinger of the future. As phones get more powerful, they will subsume the other devices, making the iPad obsolete, until the head of Steve Jobs in a glass jar invents the iPaper.

The Lapdock is good enough, but not full featured. It's balky in performance and ultimately won't offer enough performance to justify keeping it, just like the Xoom. But it is a device worth noting.

But let's be honest, when the call comes that my iPad 2 has arrived, this thing will go back to the store and the iPad will take its rightful, if not reluctant place in my bag as the best of a bunch of imperfect devices out there. If Moto and others really wanted to compete with Sensei Jobs, they'd do a better job of matching price points and concentrate on a few products and making them great instead of many that remain underdeveloped. That's how Apple dominated the market. Others who wish to compete need to learn the lesson.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Motorola Xoom vs. iPad vs. iPad2: The prelude

I got a Moto Xoom over the weekend to take on a test run in the lead up to the iPad2 release. The Xoom is the first real contender to challenge the iPad's supremacy (or should I say "magicalness"). It's specs outstrip the mach one iPad by a landslide. It's actually more specced out than the iPad2 as well. You can find detailed descriptions of how the thing differs from King iPad all over the internet, so I'm not going to dwell on that here. Over the next few days I'll keep fooling with it and then on Friday I'll check out the iPad2.

What concerns me most is whether either device builds on the foundation of the iPad1 enough to make them worth buying. I have used my iPad a lot in the past year. I'd like to see if either of these machines can build on that.

I can say that the Xoom is crazy fast and the notification systen is WAY better than iOS. Android 3.0 (Honeycomb), is the best iteration of Android I've seen yet.

Major downside: the thing costs $800. Can I justify keeping it with that price tag when I can go iPad2 for $500?

Stay tuned for the full smackdown coming soon.

Monday, March 7, 2011

In which I try to stream music Pt 2: And the winner is....

APPLE TV!!!!!

(FYI: This post is Part 2 of an exploration. See Part 1 here.)

I fooled around with the PC for the whole weekend a week ago. I got XBMC loaded. I tried to get Ubuntu working and finally got it to connect to my network but then couldn't get it to access my music library. And then I just stuck the thing downstairs connected to the home theater, still running Windows XP, still slow as Moses, and I'm going to use it as a glorified jukebox when I want some music in the HT.

The Apple TV was just so simple to setup up. And the Remote app makes it so easy to control it's just a no-brainer. I've watched a couple movies streaming and they're great. Watch Netflix with no problems. But for me the big win is that my whole music library is now available upstairs. And the Apple TV even knows what I last listened to at the PC. Pretty darn slick.

Most--no all--of the reviews I've read about the Apple TV focus on the video viewing capabilities of the Apple TV. Yes, it is more limited than other options (Roku, etc.), but it is the only set-top that will stream music as easily as this thing. And for me, that's the most important thing. I can now sit on my couch upstairs and enjoy music again without hooking up my phone.

Thanks, Apple TV! You're swell.

The Apple TV, for being awesome, but not allowing me to rule the world with an all-mighty fist, gets 4 Wallet Moths:

Trying to jerry rig an old PC into a media streaming behemoth gets 2 Wallet Moths, mostly because it was fun to mess around with, but ultimately a waste of time.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

iPad 2...iPad 1 with cameras?

OK, so the big announcement has come. iPad2 is here. It's thinner. It comes in white (I'll believe that when I see it.). It has an available magnetic cover in different colors. But the thing is not a case, it's a cover. The back of the thing will remain unprotected by this precious-looking little piece of eye candy.

The good is that there's a dual-core A5 processor in there, so it'll be faster. And there's better graphics and a gyroscope like iPhone 4. And there are 2 cameras (front-facing and on the back) that are 720p.

I personally don't care about cameras on the iPad. I never thought it would be a device that taking pictures on would make sense. Just imagine holding the thing up and trying to steady it for a photo. There are some many devices better for that, like say, your camera.

But I digress.

The one important piece of tech that remains the same is the screen. I haven't been happy with the resolution on my iPad and have forsaken it as a reading device because the rendering of text was causing me a lot of eye strain. If the iPad2 had a new screen with better resolution, I might have been in line waiting for it, but now I don't know. It's pretty slick looking and I'm sure it's "Magical(TM)" but I don't see how the features that matter most to me have been significantly altered in this new version enough to make it make sense for me to buy one.

Will I suffer a bout of TAD (Tech Acquisition Disorder) and have to get one anyway? Maybe. But as of now It seems tome a nice update, but not worthy of selling the year-old iPad for the emperor's new clothes.

What do you think? To buy or not to buy?

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Amanda Hocking has sold over 900,000 books...

...since last April.

That's absolutely insane.

What's even more insane is she's completely self-published.

I haven't read any of the books (but I just might to see what the fuss is about), but from the descriptions, they're genre fiction. Now, that's not a pejorative; I like genre stuff. I say this because I continue to follow the self publishing thing with an eye toward going that route myself. But my finished novel is not genre fiction. It's literary fiction. If I had any proof that literary fiction could enjoy that kind of success, then I'd think about self-publishing even harder. Something tells me that it wouldn't be a bad idea to get out in front of the whole thing. Who knows.

Just for shits and giggles, I've copied in some sales numbers for ebook sales on Amazon for December. Very interesting.

These are DECEMBER sales figures for some indie authors. In other words, they account for only 31 days of sales.

Blake Crouch - 2500+
Nathan Lowell - 2500+
Beth Orsoff - 2500+
Sandra Edwards - 2500+
Vianka Van Bokkem - 2500+
Maria Hooley - 2500+
C.S. Marks - 2500+
Lee Goldberg - 2500+
Lexi Revellian - 4000+
Zoe Winters - 4000+
Aaron Patterson - 4000+
Bella Andre - 5000+
Imogen Rose - 5000+
Ellen Fisher - 5000+
Tina Folsom - 5000+
Terri Reid - 5000+
David Dalglish - 5000+
Scott Nicholson - 10,000+
J.A. Konrath 10,000+
Victorine Lieske - 10,000+
L.J. Sellers - 10,000+
Michael R. Sullivan - 10,000+
H.P. Mallory - 20,000+
Selena Kitt - 20,000+
Stephen Leather - 40,000+
Amanda Hocking - 100,000+


Part of me really wants to walk up to a publisher and invoke Amanda Hocking's name just to see if said publisher explodes.

Here's a link to her blog: http://amandahocking.blogspot.com/



What say you, writing friends? This could be the future staring us right in the face, n'est pas?