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December 2006 Archives

December 7, 2006

Digg'ing Diggnation - Follow-up

A few weeks ago, I wrote about my disdain for digg.com (I won't reiterate, since it is likely to show up as the last post before this one). Steph and I are "across the pond" for the next two weeks and I downloaded a ton of podcasts for amusement's sake on the plane and in the train. One set of which was the video podcasts of diggnation. At 17 hrs into our trip (we're still in transit to Hamburg), I'm thanking the lucky stars for having brought diggnation with. The podcast is one of the most amusing out there and watching Alex and Kevin drinking and interjecting true editorial (what the hell am I saying, the whole podcast is editorial...) into the week's most popular digg stories is fun. While I still haven't changed my mind about digg.com (perhaps it simply doesn't fit my mode of reading), I was reminded of why I even went to digg.com in the first place - via the diggnation podcast.

December 9, 2006

Cool... Was man in Deutschland lernen kann - Teleport

Thees (formerly brekelbaumspark.de, but now a CV for his girlfriend) hat mir heute etwas gezeigt, obwohl er noch keinen Mac hat: teleport
Es ist ein Progam, wo man Desktops zwischen verschiedenen Macs gemeinschaftlich benutzen kann. Ich wusste schon von so ein Program fuer Windows, aber nich Macs. Danke Thees.

December 19, 2006

BlueEye BT Phone Interface for the iPod (4th Gen and Up)

(I always say this:) I don't care much for advertising products I don't own here, but I came across this somehow last night and am smitten: BlueEye Bluetooth interface for iPods

Medium 235
This is the bridge-gap solution for those of us waiting for Apple's much awaited, but potentially never-to-be-released cell/mobile phone with iTunes/iPod integration. I don't use my iPod much unless I'm traveling, so I don't really know how much I would use something like this, but if you look at the details, they really seem to have thought of the whole package. Considering a good bluetooth headset runs in the $60 range, I don't think $100 is too much to ask. If anyone comes across this post and has one, I'd like to know what you think (email me at the address given on my site).

December 20, 2006

Internet 40,000 ft above the earth

Wow. I've read about it, I've dreamt about it, I've wanted to experience it... but never wanted to pay for the flights where it is available. Vis a vis a ridiculous circus in Hamburg this morning, on our way back to the States, Steph and I were rebooked on two Lufthansa flights, instead of American Airlines as had been planned. (A note to anyone trying to travel out of Hamburg using SN Brussels Airlines - formerly Sabina - stay away. I could not believe the level of incompetence shown by the check-in personnel in not rechecking with Brussels as to why our flight showed up as having been canceled in Brussels but not Hamburg.) When the ticketing agent offered us a flight back home with Lufthansa via Munich, I said, done. This was a flight I had been trying to take for some time because of [formerly] Boeings Connexion in-flight Internet service. The flights are long as is and the ability to use some of the time to truly get some work done was exciting to me. Plus, the tech geek inside me was curious how well the satellite service would work. Considering I had been a beta tester of Starband (two-way) satellite based internet service five years ago, I knew of some of the drawbacks of internet service delivered via satellite. The worst of which is latency. For most applications, high latency really isn't much of an issue. Also, when comparing it to even today's fast mobile broadband networks (e.g. UMTS, EVDO, HSDPA, etc.), it is actually quite fast. Data transfers burst and large files will fluctuate in download speed. Mobile broadband networks (of 2006) can be bursty, too, but not in the same high-up and low-down way. I am also fascinated by the multiphase-array satellite technology required to get a service like Connexion to work reliably. Plus, there's quite an interesting business hitch to Connexion:

"On August 17, 2006, the Boeing Company announced that after a detailed analysis of the Connexion by Boeing business, the company has decided to exit the high-speed broadband communications connectivity market. Boeing is now working with its customers to facilitate an orderly phase out of the Connexion by Boeing service. Passengers traveling on Internet-equipped flights will be able to use the service until it is phased out which will occur between now and the end of the year, depending on the airline. For the full text of the company's announcement click here." (via Boeing Connexion Service Advisory)

From reading what others in the blogosphere have written, I assumed that the service was still intact. I, frankly, find it a great value-added service to offer passengers. I never understood the price complaint, though. (Granted, I'm using the connection for free, as right now that's how its being offered on my flight. I would have been more than happy to pay $30 for a full flight's worth of access, however.) Here's proof, though, that it is working - and working well.
Because of latency and packet loss, VOIP applications will be sketchy at best. Normal data transfers, email work and web surfing have worked flawlessly. I'm ssh'd into a machine back home and the delay is there, but not bad enough to make it impossible to use. I would hate to be writing this via an ssh connection, though. In that case, long text input would be difficult to do.
Later I'll upload some pictures of the digs in business class on Lufthansa and my setup... I'd like to do so now, but my rear end is stuck in my seat and I'm unwilling to get out of it.

December 22, 2006

Sorry, if this is the supposed (Apple) iPhone

Take a look at:

http://www.looprumors.com/Pages/iphoneimage.php

Sorry, but I don't like the idea of holding an iPod Mini to my ear. I also agree with Chris that not having tactile feedback from buttons is bad (at least for numbers). There's a reason why some phones are better than others. Some are more like a phone and others aren't. I don't like the others...

(via Chris)

About December 2006

This page contains all entries posted to steven n fettig's Jitterin' Thoughts in December 2006. They are listed from oldest to newest.

November 2006 is the previous archive.

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Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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