Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

Paying for content

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

I love free things. If I could get music for free I would, but a lot of us understand that nothing is really “free”. I get that, and that’s why I buy music on iTunes instead of download it via a p2p network. I’d prefer to give away a lot of things for free too, but then I wouldn’t be making any money, and without that little bit of income, I wouldn’t be able to continue what I was doing.

It might just be me, but I feel obligated that if I’m going to use something that someone else created, that I should compensate for it. I listen to music a lot, I watch video a lot, and use software a lot. If I just keep taking all of that for free, then the people making it wouldn’t be able to keep making it, and that would mean I don’t get the enjoyment I used to.

I think Steve Jobs understood that all of us would pay for music, if it was affordable, and what we got in exchange for the money was something that we wanted - 99 cent downloads, instant enjoyment, good quality. I think he’s trying to do the same thing with video (be it TV shows, music videos, or movies), and I’d love to support him in that, but the quality of the video just isn’t good enough for the $1.99~$12.99 price tag.

A lot of my friends would agree with me when I say that we listen to music many, many, many times more than we watch a single episode or movie, so I don’t see why the movie industry won’t let Apple provide better quality products to customers that would prefer to pay and download then download for free off of a p2p network.

Hopefully this will change in the near future, I love using iTunes to manage my media, and can’t wait for it to manage my video too.

PostSecret Video

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

Ride the Bandwagon

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

I’ve got 6 external hard drives totaling 2.7TB of storage, and I have about 1.2TB free. My music only takes up 67GB and I use two of the hard drives for backup, and one dedicated to my work (and since I never delete anything, a few of them are just filled with junk that I need to clean out).

Even with two drives dedicated to backup, there’s no real way to sync my iTunes music across the two computers I have. I’ve multiple ways to do it, but they all just never seem to work right. (Slow response, pauses while playing, etc.)

Thanks to a DreamHost blog post, I got to find out about Bandwagon. It’s essentially an iTunes backup and sync service that allows you to backup to Amazon’s S3 or an FTP server.

They’re doing a promotion now where Dreamhost customers get a free year of Bandwagon, and since I had nothing to loose, and 500GB on my Dreamhost account to spare, I signed up for it.

Bandwagon is as of right now in the process of uploading my whole iTunes library (8672 items) to my Dreamhost account. I think that’s pretty neat. I’ve used my Dreamhost account in the past and still use it now to backup my iPhoto library, so I think it’s going to be pretty neat to have my iTunes library backed up there as well.

The Cafe Idiots

Saturday, July 14th, 2007

Every year our school host’s a festival. The students use each classroom to make haunted houses, art galleries, restaurants and use the GYM for doing performances like dance and music. It’s customary that the seniors get to use classroom #158; it’s the largest classroom in the school.

Before I start talking about what happens, I’m going to explain a little bit about how the people who organize it are chosen. At the beginning of the school year we get to choose which ‘chore’ we want to do, this ranges from organizing a yearly sports festival, school festival, etc. and also organizing events within the grade to do things together (like cook together, yes, we do cook together).

Once we choose what we want to do, the chosen ones get to start planning and organizing it within the school’s rules, and the whole process is heavily monitored by the school staff. Everything needs to have paperwork and approval by the teachers (not just receipts for costs, but also what your plans are, how you’re going to do it, when you’re going to do it, who’s involved, who’s idea was it…. you get the picture).

Last year was great, they had one restaurant setup in it, and had a dark, laid back setting. I remember it was kinda green-ish, but that’s about it. Oh, the food was great too.

Apparently though, this year’s organizers didn’t like last year’s restaurant, and wanted to make it more interesting. Guess what they did?

They split it up into four different restaurants. They thought this would be easier, more cost efficient, and less work for each individual, and more interesting for the customers (keep note on how they worry about the customers here). When I heard this plan, and before it became final, I did try to tell them that it would make things more complicated and cost more.

  • Since each group would be doing different restaurants inside the same room that used to only house one, the amount of customers we can have is very limited.
  • Each restaurant would be selling different things, and thus it would need to stock up on different things, which means each student would have to pay more (whereas if it was one restaurant, they could buy in bulk, save, and not have to buy a variety of things because they wouldn’t be offering that many choices)
  • It would get more complicated and give each student more work to do because each restaurant requires its own decoration and planning

In the end, they sort of listened to my advice. They decided we will be running three restaurants instead.

I guess I should also mention that the head hancho for the seniors used to be a friend of mine, but, for reasons unknown to me, is not anymore. (I’m assuming this is also why he didn’t put me in the same group as his).

They split it up like this:

  • A Cafe
  • The Sea House restaurant
  • EcoMc (Eco friendly McDonalds, get it?)
  • Overall decoration

I thought this would mean it’d be kind of like the cafeteria floor in a mall, where stores have their little booths and all the customers get to sit wherever they want regardless of where they bought their food.  When my former friend told all of us that the cafe was the only one that’s allowed to do drinks, we were all fine with that at first. So when the deadline to turn in the paperwork for what we were going to sell came, we didn’t think of adding drinks to it. The cafe group was kind enough to let us know at the last moment, that they were going to build a wall around the cafe to make it separate from everyone else’s.

I don’t understand their thinking. We sell food, when people buy food, most of the time they buy a drink to go with it. Now I get the fact that building a wall around the cafe might make it seem more like a cafe, but then they leave the big problem of not having drinks for the customers with the food groups.

I went ahead and asked a few teachers if it would be possible to add drinks to our menu, a few, not a lot so we don’t oversell the cafe. They gave me the green light. Here’s where the problem is, since my former friend has some sort of grudge against me, and he’s also one of the more popular kids, got in the way of me arranging a meeting with my group on discussing which drinks we should sell, and some of his other group members also stopped me with the reason that “because we didn’t approve it, you guys can’t sell it.” Does it sound like they would have approved it even if we did ask?

When I talked to one of the girls who I’m on better terms with, one of the reasons they didn’t want us selling is that if we do, people won’t buy drinks from their cafe, and then all the money they put into making it would come back, and it would have been a waste.

I totally understand that, and I don’t want that to happen to them either. But I’m also thinking about the customer and how they are going to feel when there’s nothing to drink and they’re thirsty.

So I proposed two options and with this common rule: we only sell drinks to those who are buying food, and if someone wants a drink, we direct them to the cafe.

  1. We sell a limited amount of drinks, and give the profits for the drinks to the cafe. (ie. It costs us $1.00 for the drink, we sell it for $1.50, and give them $0.50)
  2. They make a small stand in the food area that sells drinks

I don’t think there’s any downside to either of these options right? The customers are happy, and the cafe still earns money.

The situation is still in progress, and this is just how far it’s come. What do you think would be a better idea for this situation? Any suggestions, comments?

8 Random Facts

Saturday, June 2nd, 2007

I was tagged by Aki on Wednesday.

  • Players start with 8 random facts about themselves.
  • Those who are tagged should post these rules and their 8 random facts.
  • Players should tag eight other people and notify them that they have been tagged.

So, here are my 8 random facts:

  1. I say I don’t watch TV, but I was a whole bunch of TV Shows on my computer
  2. I love reading books, just don’t have as much time as I’d like to read
  3. I lived with a friend for about 5 months when I wasn’t getting along with my mom
  4. I wish I was taller
  5. When I was in 7th grade I would stay up days at a time using the computer and working on things related to networking, servers, websites…
  6. I think some things are better left unknown
  7. I have been to 10 countries and lived 5 in of them
  8. The first time I went on a plane by myself was when I was 7 years old (it was a flight on Northwest airlines from Tokyo to Bangkok

I tag these people:

  1. Steven
  2. themak
  3. Biscuitrat
  4. Michael
  5. Bekka
  6. Elyse
  7. Joseph
  8. Conner
  9. Plus one, Harrisony

StarCraft 2

Monday, May 21st, 2007

StarCraft 2My favorite game of all time, StarCraft will have a sequel coming out sometime soon! I’m pretty excited about it, and curious on how Blizzard will make StarCraft 2. So far they are going to be using a 3d engine that will be much more capable of displaying a large number of units, and larger units on the screen.

At the same time, Blizzard will also be overhauling their Battle.net service to help make StarCraft 2 a better multi-player game… I look forward to see how this turns out!

09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 58 D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0

Monday, May 7th, 2007

If it wasn’t for Apple, I probably would be ripping friend’s CD’s to play music… wait, I probably wouldn’t even be listening to as much music as I listen to now. I think it was either MacRumors or AppleInsider where I read this, but on average, every iTunes user only has approximately 8 purchased songs… Compared to that, I have over 400, and that grows every month… but I think it’d grow faster if there weren’t DRM.

Why?

Because right now most of my music is registered to a .Mac account, and if I cancel that account then I can’t authorize or reauthorize my computers. It is my music, and I’d be more at ease if something like that didn’t control my music library. So, without the DRM to bother me, I’d definitely be buying a lot more (even if it was +$.29 to get DRM free).

How does this all tie in with DRM for HD DVD’s and BlueRay? I love watching movies, but I like to watch them on my computer. I like to have them easily accessible any time I want to watch them. What’s the best way to do that? It’s to keep a copy (for personal use) on one of your own hard drives. My HDTV is connected to a seperate computer that I run as a media server, then I have my laptop, and another laptop, and another server, and well, you get my point. Lots of computers. The 5 computer limit (if they adopt Apple’s same DRM restrictions that is), wouldn’t be enough, and the DRM would make it impossible in the first place to make a personal use copy on my hard drive.

I’ve seen the quality of the new HD discs (both BlueRay and HD DVD), and they look amazing. Even though the DVD’s are double the price of normal DVD’s. I’ve also seen the quality of the movie downloads on iTunes, and truthfully, I don’t think it’s worth the $9.99 they charge. I think Apple should offer movies in at least 720p, and for an extra cost, provide it without DRM restrictions (just like music). So, $15~$17 for 720p video without DRM? Hell yes I’ll buy it. Have it released 1 week before DVD’s, I’d buy it before I rent it!

With storage so cheap today, why do we need new DVD’s? Why not just purchase and download, it’s much more convenient right? There’s one issue that comes up for me. When you go over to a friends house, and want to watch a movie you own, you bring your DVD and watch in on their player. That’s not illegal, but, in another example; you go over to a friends house, purchased the movie on iTunes, how would you play it at your friends house without copying it? There’s definitely some gray area here.

Got a little side tracked, but my point is, if the MPAA/RIAA wants us to stay legal, then provide good legal alternatives. Don’t fill things up with DRM just because you don’t want it to get copied. On the contrary, if you put DRM on the content, people will find a way to circumvent it and distribute it another way, without paying for it. Also, when things get out of hand, don’t try and cover it up. With last week’s Digg example, the information would spread faster (this is where my child analogy comes in :P ).

The Internet Study by Stanford

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Even with all these internet-based games, blogs, and myspace, email is still the most common internet activity!…. Okay, so maybe I’m not that surprised, I check my mail whenever I can (but it does take a while to write the replies)…

Anyways, that was one of the statistics Stanford got out of a survey of 4000 internet-using respondents. Some other facts are:

The more time people spend on the internet…

  • … the more they lose contact with their social environment
  • … the more they turn their back on traditional media
  • … the more they spend time working at home - and at the office
  • … the less time they spend shopping in stores and commuting in traffic

For more details, and more facts, check out the full report here.

Google Maps & My Maps!

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Google Maps & My Maps!Google’s added a feature that’s been in Google Earth to their Google Maps! You can add your own points just like in Google Earth, and they one-upped it too, you can share it with friends!.

This will be a great way to share those places where you hang out with friends, went on trips, or maybe even where you plan to go… Can’t wait to use this to show friends and family the places I’ve traveled to before. :)

Beyond the Red Line

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

I enjoy Battlestar Galactica. Sometimes it can get slow, but hey, what TV show doesn’t have boring episodes, right?

There are many games that are based on TV shows out there, but they all cost money. I guess this game, called “Beyond the Red Line“, will be one of the first that wont. When I mean one of the first, I mean a game that has fairly good graphics and based on a popular TV show.

The graphics look great from the screen shots, and I’m downloading it now… Hopefully the game play will be great too!

While you’re alseep

Saturday, March 31st, 2007

Have you ever wondered what you’re like when you’re asleep? Like, how often you move around, if you’re always sleeping on your back, etc.? I have, and thanks to the Gawker app, I was able to take a shot every 30 seconds with my iSight while I was asleep.

I was actually kinda suprised at how long you stay in one position… and then when you start to wake up, how often you change positions… anyways, here’s the vid that gawker made for me.

dandelife

Sunday, February 18th, 2007

dandelife
All of us have events we want to share with others in our lives, and since everyone is already sharing their life with each other (myspace, facebook, blogging, etc.), why not make a time line out of it? That’s what dandelife did.

It’s really easy to get used to the structure of dandelife. Why? Because it’s like one large blogging network. You post your entries, and your entries get organized by date. Nothing else, no categories, tags, or whatever, just dates.

How do you view all the content then? Especially if there’s thousands of people writing entries? Well, they made a nice AJAX timeline that lets you zoom in on dates, and view about 25 entries at a glance.

Like any other social network, it wont succeed without the community, so go ahead and give it a try! (Don’t forget to add me as a friend!)

Happy New Years

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Happy new years everyone! Sorry for my short leave of absence, it was after all, winter break! (I wasn’t on the net much, and I’m sure a lot of you were spending time with friends too, so give me a break!)

This year is going to be pretty eventful. I can just feel it.

Apple’s probably going to blow our minds away with some of its new products, Vista will be coming to the consumers (and we’ll see how it competes with Leopard and Linux as windows users start their transitions again), my life will probably change a lot (from school to work, I have no idea what’s coming next).

Hopefully, the changes will be for the better. Happy new years everyone!

Merry Christmas

Monday, December 25th, 2006

Merry Christmas ‘06 everybody!

Hope you had a fun Christmas and got presents you love! (They don’t have to be material things, the presents could be having a good time with your friends, etc.)