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RIAA is going too far
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Sunday, 30 December 2007
Digg!

So have you heard the latest out of the RIAA ? In case you don't know this is the group bringing all those lawsuits against people who share music online. Its an acronym for Recording Industry Association of America.  But now they are going after persons who legally purchase music and download that music to their personal computers!  Thats right, you heard me!  I am sorry, but this is ludicris! Once I LEGALLY purchase something, it is mine to do with what I want!  Don't get me wrong.  I support efforts to protect the companies and the artists.  Online sharing is WRONG!  It should be enforced and with an iron hand!  But it should stop there!  Think about it. . . . . .  Once you buy something, it is yours, and you should be able to do with it what you want. As long as your not duplicating it and giving it away, what is the problem? To this day, I still buy CD's and many of those end up on my personal MP-3 player.  According to the RIAA, I am breaking the law! 

In my very humble opinion, this is why the recording industry is struggling.  They have a business model that is failing!  When the media we had in record stores were Albums, that by the way, took extreme care to keep sounding good, along came the cassette tape.  Most audiophiles made copies of their albums and a few of us actually listened to the tapes to protect and preserve the original. No one sent me letters threatening me then.  The best I remember, cassette companies actually charged a little extra and paid "hush" money to the record industry. When the personal computer hit, and the net opened up the easy sharing of files, then the business model had to change again.  

And I agree that it should change!  In a Los Angeles Times poll, 69 percent of teenagers surveyed said they thought it was legal to copy a CD they own and give it to a friend. The RIAA cites a study that found that more than half of current college students download music and movies illegally. If we are going to continue to enjoy great entertainment, people have to get paid and producers have to make money! But they shouldn't necessarily be greedy!!!!!!!!  

And that is exactly what they are being when  someone leagally purchases music or a movie and digitally puts it on their computer for their personal use!  And every consumer out there recognizes them for being just that.  GREEDY.  RIAA, you are making more enemies than you are helping your cause when you go after people like you are now going after.  You had my support when you went after persons downloading and sharing on the peer networks.  Those need to be stopped.  Me taking a movie or CD that I have purchased, dropping it on my computer or iPod for my pleasure shouldn't be a crime, and just because you convinced the government to make it one, doesn't mean you should pursue persons who do.  We are not your enemy.  Persons using peer networks are!

 

 
Tom Tom One 3rd Edition Real time Demo
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Friday, 28 December 2007
Digg!

First of all, I appreciate all the email I have received on my review of the Tom Tom one.  I appreciate all the comments, and to the one guy who just emailed to point out that I am a redneck ,  yea, I am a redneck!  And after visiting your youtube site, I realized I would much rather talk like a redneck, as to spew four letter words constantly!  And remember, where I am from, I don't talk weird . . . . . . you do!

After I did the review, I thought it might be a good idea to capture the Tom Tom in action.  This morning I had to go to the hospital, and so I grabbed my video camera and a tripod, set it up to capture the Tom Tom, hit the record button and let it do its thing.  When I got home this afternoon, I edited out the stuff where it really wasn't doing anything other than tracking, to shorten the video up!  Hope you enjoy! 

 

Last Updated ( Friday, 28 December 2007 )
 
Shomi Digital Player Adding Photos
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Friday, 28 December 2007
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Wow!  I was not prepared for the response I got when I posted the Shomi Specs and a little bit about the unit!  The emails and comments have been very nice to say the least!  But the bottom line here is that the Shomi has terrible documentation and no web site that I can find, thus the many questions that you are having.  Let me stress, I am no Shomi Expert.  And this is my first Digital Picture Frame!  I shopped a couple of stores before buyiing this one and really was buying on price alone.

Many of the questions you had, were to do with the best/easiest way to get photos from your camera to your Digital Player.  My suggestion would be to dedicate a card to your Shomi Player and if you don't have a card reader to buy a USB card reader.  The video below covers a few options on getting those pictures from the camera to player and the steps you might have to take.  

 

  

Last Updated ( Friday, 28 December 2007 )
 
What the Foleo could have been
Treo
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
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I just read over at Engadget that they got their hands on a Palm Foleo and will be offering up a review shortly.  Many credit (blame) Engadget with the death of the Foleo.  But I think it was the Palm community as a whole who brought about this untimely death! But I did get to thinking about something.  We all know that the techie gift of 2007 was the seven inch, Linux OS Eee PC from Asus!  Its basically a bare bones PC with four gigs of Flash memory, WiFi, and a camera.  Its very limited in what it can do, and retails for $399.  Remember the Foleo retailed for $599.  So with that in Mind, I thought it might be fun to compare the two as we know/knew them, just to see which one might have come out on top since the two were very similar in their approaches.  Of course, the Foleo was going to depend upon a Palm OS Treo to function, and the Eee depends largely on a WiFi network, to function.

  Palm Foleo
 Asus Eee
Function Foleo
 Eee PC
 Flash Storage
 128 megs of RAM and 256 megs of flash,4 Gigs of Flash RAM
 Weight 2.5 Pounds
 2.0 pounds
 Display LCD Size / Type: 10.2" Wide
 LCD Size / Type: 7" Wide
LCD Resolution: 800x480 (~WVGA)
 Chipset *?  But seems like it was the same as the Treo chip the best I can remember
 Processor: Intel Mobile CPU
Chipset: Intel Mobile Chipset
 Operating System Linux developed and hacked by Palm and who is now Acess Linux
 Linux Preloaded
(Windows XP Compatible, Drivers included)
 Ethernet Communication
 None, as it depended upon the Treo's data connection or Wifi  10/100
 WiFi  B  B/G
 Camera for Video Conferencing
 None for the Foleo  Eee has this covered
 Expansion Slot
  SD and Compact Flash SD Card Slot
 Price $599 $399

The Eee PC for $400 delivers a unit that does email, surfs the web, runs on WiFi, has much more storage, would handle pictures, includes Windows drivers, and is generally a much more versatile device.  And for a list price $200 cheaper than the Foleo was supposed to debut at.  I too, vented about the Foleo and how stupid I thought this idea was. And my biggest argument at the time, was that for the same amount of money that the Foleo was, I could go to my local Office Depot and come home with a Laptop that also played music and movies as well as sync with my Treo and all that it cost me was a couple of pounds.  

If you look at Eee sales, you know that they have a winner on their hands!  This little Linux Wonder is a big hit for sure! This was what the Foleo could have been!  These could have been Foleo sales!  But Palm didn't want to build a Linux Laptop, they wanted to build a companion device to a unit whose OS was dieing a slow death.  Palm, you were close, but no cigar . . . 

 

Last Updated ( Friday, 04 January 2008 )
 
Review: zLauncher
Treo
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

zLauncher is one of my favorite apps for the Palm Treo.  It does so much more than just launch Palm apps!  Here is a short video review of this very cool app!

zLauncher is very affordable!  Only $19.95 and you can get it here .   This app makes your Treo much more useable!  I would highly recommend!

Last Updated ( Thursday, 27 December 2007 )
 
Bad day for Democracy
Politics
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

Today I have been watching the news coming out of Pakistan.  You know, I viewed this one lady, Benazir Bhutto as a democratic hope for that Region.  It really is scary when you get to thinking about all those radicals in one area.  And lets not forget, they have nukes!  Most guess at around 30 of them!  Believe me, 30 nukes can do a lot of world damage.  Stability is something that that region has never really had and from what I am seeing coming out of that region, its about as unstable right now as its ever been. 

I don't know who I am going to vote for.  But its probably going to be the candidate I think can best deal with the east, and our borders.  I am not campaigning for more war, but I am afraid that something has to be done before it gets done to us! This lady was a voice for democracy!  She was very popular and the reason why she is not alive now!  Lets hope that someone with some sense steps forward to carry on her legacy.

 
Mobility Today reviews the Curve
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

You know when the converged device really got going, you had Palm and Blackberry!  Palm became the device for almost anyone, and Blackberry was more of a Business only device. Well, as Mobilitytoday shows the blackberry has come a long way in being a great device when they introduced the "Curve".  Nice unit!

 

 
In-flight Internet is coming
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

Its being tested!  High Speed bandwidth internet will soon be available on almost all flights!  So what kind of laws and limits will be put on this?  I am hoping for many!  Lets face it!  I don't want to sit next to some guy on a plane while he Skypes with his girlfriend and emails his wife.  I don't want to have to deal with porn and I am really not sure I want someone looking over my shoulder while emailing my wife and kids . . .  

Now let me say that I love Skype!  It rocks! But just like Cell phones intrude on others in public places, make no mistake that the internet in a public place like a plane will intrude on others also!  Lets face it . . When you go to Starbucks, you have a little space.  When you are on a plane, you could have as many as seven people within 8 feet of you.  So talking to your computer is also going to be like talking to those seven persons.  I am hoping that the appropriate filters or workarounds can be put in place on this flights to minimize the impact of the intrusion that this is going to cause for many.  Lets face it, most people (me included) like to use flight time for sleep.   Skype calls on handsets would almost be acceptable, but not quite in my opinion. 

Don't get me wrong!  I welcome the ability to have internet on airplanes!  I am just not sure I want to whole internet with me on that flight . . .

 
Web Censorship in the Mid-east
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

I just got through reading a very interesting article.  Here is a link to it , but I have copied it here to save you the trouble.  Reading this article, I suddenly realized how great it is to live in a free country!  There are things on the web that we probably shouldn't be looking at or reading about, for sure.  But I don't want my governenment or any other govenment determining that for me!  While reading this, I realized that many mid eastern governments try to control the truth, while blocking many internet sites.

CAIRO, Egypt — In Iran, a large red icon pops up on computer screens. In Syria, there's a discreet note from the filter. Other Arab nations display "blocked" in bold lettering or issue crafty "page not found" replies.

However the censors put it, the message is clear: You're not permitted to see this Web site.

Governments in the Middle East are stepping up a campaign of censorship and surveillance in an effort to prevent an estimated 33.5 million Internet users from viewing a variety of Web sites whose topics range from human rights to pornography. As a result, millions of Middle Easterners are finding it harder by the day to access popular news and entertainment sites such as Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and Flickr.

Five of the world's top-13 Internet censors are in the Middle East, according to the most recent report from Reporters Without Borders, the journalism advocacy group that lobbies against Web censorship.

"The Web makes networking much easier, for political activists as well as teenagers," Reporters Without Borders said in its annual report for 2007. "Unfortunately, this progress and use of new tools by activists is now being matched by the efforts of dictatorships to fight them. Dictators, too, have entered the world of Web 2.0."

Internet regulations vary widely across the Middle East. Predictably, the most authoritarian governments have the most aggressive filters, but even some without advanced censorship systems have prosecuted bloggers for controversial postings on religion or politics.

Just as Internet users have banded together on social networking sites to challenge the wave of censorship, the region's governments also are uniting to share filtering software and the latest online surveillance technology, activists said.

"Now there's some common work among the Arab governments to censor the Internet. They're acting like they're fighting terrorists," said Ihab al Zalaky, the managing editor of a respected Egyptian newspaper and the chief author of a comprehensive report last year on regional Internet censorship. "There's no good news. They're all making it harder for people to access the Internet."

Only four Arab countries have little or no filtering: Lebanon, Morocco, Jordan and Egypt — but Egyptian politicians are considering a law that would criminalize some online activity.

At the other end of the spectrum are Saudi Arabia and Syria, consistently described by human rights groups as the most hostile toward the Internet. The rest of the region falls somewhere in between, with governments importing the latest technology to narrow the number of sites available to the public and drafting laws to curb online dissent.

The prohibitions have led to an explosion in circumventors, proxy servers that allow Internet users to bypass workplace or government filters. In cyber cafes from Damascus to Dubai, patrons furtively browse blocked sites and swap Web addresses for the latest "proxies."

The most tech-savvy young Arabs and Iranians use new proxies every day, trying to stay a step ahead of government censors.

"We've seen on the one hand an increase in Internet usage throughout the region and, in reaction to that, we've seen governments getting more sophisticated in how they arrest people and censor online content," said Nadim Houry, a Human Rights Watch researcher for Lebanon and Syria. "It's sort of the traditional cat-and-mouse game."

Last month, Syrian authorities banned several more sites, including the book and music vendor Amazon.com. The government reportedly uses a filtering system called Thundercache to block content from sites such as Blogspot, Hotmail, Skype and YouTube. Many Arabic-language news sites also are banned.

In Iraq and the Palestinian territories, the Internet is policed mainly by the owners of Internet cafes and by Internet users themselves, according to monitoring groups. In both places, Islamist militants have attacked Internet cafes, accusing patrons of looking at pornography or chatting with members of the opposite sex.

In Iraq, the U.S. military is the only official Internet censor — operational security measures prevent American troops from using some sites and commanders have shut down cyber cafes in areas where insurgents use the Internet to share intelligence and plot attacks.

More typical is the censorship that's spreading throughout Arab states in North Africa. Tunisian authorities block several sites, human rights workers said, but they've also begun to hold the owners of Internet cafes liable if political activists use their establishments to post critical news about the government.

After years of Internet freedom, Sudan reportedly has purchased a state-of-the-art blocking program that prohibits access to political sites and literary works that range from racy fiction to a book that the government deemed offensive to Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Morocco, Algeria and Libya also have come under fire from human rights watchdogs because of their prosecution of online dissidents.

In Egypt, the Arab world's most populous nation and home to an estimated 6 million Internet users, the government offers cheap dial-up browsing to anyone with a telephone line and authorities do little or no filtering, so video-sharing platforms, social-networking sites, most opposition sites and pornography are all easily accessible.

But police have rounded up at least three bloggers and harassed many more in recent years, according to Reporters Without Border. Activists also fear more filtering after an Egyptian court last year ruled that authorities could block, suspend or shut down any Web site that could pose a threat to "national security," vague wording that could lead to criminal charges for dozens of Egyptian bloggers.

Abdel Moneim Mahmoud, 28, has been arrested and harassed by Egyptian authorities several times in connection with his blog promoting the Muslim Brotherhood, a powerful Sunni Islamist opposition group. Because he uses Blogspot, the U.S.-based weblog platform, the Egyptian government hasn't been able to block his blog without banning the site altogether.

"They threatened, 'If you don't stop blogging, we will arrest you' every month," Mahmoud said. "Police officers ask about specific things on our blogs when they call us in for investigation. They use IP-address tracking to find out who is writing which blog."

Iran's hard-line Shiite Muslim leadership is another zealous censor of the Internet. The government boasts of filtering 10 million "immoral" Web sites in addition to all the major social networking outfits and dozens of pages about religion or politics.

For the past year, according to human rights groups, Iranian authorities also have zeroed in on online publications dealing with women's rights. Two prominent "cyber feminists" were arrested in the past month on charges of distorting public opinion and drawing negative publicity to Iran through the postings on the Web.

Across the Persian Gulf from Iran, the Arabian Peninsula is home to some of the world's most stringent censors, with Saudi Arabia at the top of the list. Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman are among other Gulf countries that filter online content.

Even in a place as glitzy and modern as Dubai, the regional shopping hub in the United Arab Emirates, a strict filtering system targets pornographic and political sites. Dubai residents can drink and party all night long, but they're not allowed to read about such exploits on some blogs penned by Western expatriates.

Earlier this year, residents were outraged by tentative plans to extend the censorship to so-called free zones, where media and multinational companies can — for now — surf the Web unfiltered. Foreign workers in Dubai have decried the ban on voice software such as Skype, which allows them to call home for free. Critics call it economic censorship of the Internet, an attempt by state-backed telecommunications firms to build their revenue from international calls.

The ultraconservative Saudi government, a close U.S. ally, blocks thousands of Web sites that deal with pornography, religion, politics and human rights. Medical students at Saudi universities have complained that they can't even access scientific sites to study human anatomy.

Fed up with the growing list of banned sites, a 25-year-old finance student named Hani Noor helped his cousin to create a Facebook group called, "We All Hope They Don't Block Facebook in Saudi Arabia." As of Monday, the group had 225 members and a message board that focused on tips for the best proxies to get around government bans.

Noor, however, hit on an even better solution: he signed up for satellite Internet, which means his connection is now free from the long arm of the Saudi censors.

"I'm off the hook," Noor said with a triumphant laugh in a telephone interview from his home in Saudi Arabia. "We are winning. They're blocking, but we've always found a way to overcome it."

McClatchy Newspapers 2007

 

 

 
Apple to control your iPod Volume
Technology
Written by Duke Carico   
Thursday, 27 December 2007
Digg!

 As adults, we have to decide what is good for us, and what isn't.  Now I know, sometimes we do a poor job of that!  Look at the many overweight people, or Drug addicts, etc . . . . .  But it looks as though Apple might be making a move that resembles something Microsoft might do . . .  They have patented an app that determines how long you have been listening to your music through your iPod or iPhone and then automatically adjusts the volume to protect your ears.  I guess I have a real problem with this . . .  I haven't tested it and don't know the limits, but I don't like software controlling things like loudness of my music!  Whats next?  "Your computer has been on too long, and will now shut down because you are a candidate for Carpel Tunnel?". 

This is probably Apple reacting to lawsuits or probable lawsuits . . .  According to the London Daily Mail , the iPod will be capable of calculating the amount of "quiet time" that the iPod has been turned off and will allow you to go full volume when re-started.  I think this sucks!  The truth:  Sometimes I would like my iPod to go louder!  Sometimes, its too loud.  And Jobs put this very cool volume wheel for me to easily adjust the volume to my liking!  This is something that doesn't need to be "fixed' in my opinion . . . . .  In case your interested, currently iPods on the market are capable of just over 100 decibels.  Anything past 70 is considered unsafe . . . 

 
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News Briefs

Yet another sign that our nation is in recession.  There are rumors everywhere that AMD is laying off 5% of its workforce.  That is guesstimated to be around 800 employees. AMD has struggled recently to compete head to head with Intel and as a result have made some Boo-boos. So when the economy turns, I guess its companies like AMD that are the first to show it.  This is not OFFICIAL!  But it is sounding like it is true.  We should know for sure by Q1 results at the latest!  Here is hoping and praying that 800 persons find bigger and better jobs in short order!

 



 

 
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Latest Message: 1 month, 3 weeks ago
  • dcarico : I received this email Sunday from Dennis at GiiNii. Look for a review soon of this new digital player.
  • dcarico : The shomi digital player continues to drive people to this site. People really seem to struggle with this very affordable player but almost worthless manual. They should pay me for being their support desk :) :roll:
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I am a middle aged guy who finds much pleasure in today's technology.  Once upon a time I kept a blog about mobile tech, a web site that featured my bike rides, and then a personal site where I shared photos and videos, basically of Family.  After a time, I decided it made much more sense to combine all those sites into one.  But what to call it?  Well, not very creatively, this site became "just duke".  Just stuff I am interested in and try to follow. 

By day I work for a large chemical company, and by night I play bass in a Christian Rock band. But every day I check out the web sites following the trends around mobile devices.  When I have time, I enjoy designing Templates for Joomla and Wordpress. You can download those here on this site! Just click on "Just Templates on the left.

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