Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/27/2009 in Photography, Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
A little while ago I decided I wanted a better camera to travel with and the Nikon D200 was a bit much to fit into my regular bag. After doing a bit of research, I stumbled across this little gem, the Lumix G1.
Now why is this camera special? Well, it looks like a DSLR, acts like a DSLR, but it isn't a DSLR. It is one of the first of a new generation of interchangeable lens digital cameras that is based on the micro 4/3 system of Olympus and Panasonic. The micro system is different from standard 4/3 in that there's no mirror box, so the image plane is much shallower and the camera can be made much smaller. The viewfinder lump actually houses a high-resolution color video monitor that for me is very familiar -- it is much like the viewfinders on high-end video cameras. The shallower image plane means that virtually any film lens can work on this camera and that was the attractor for me -- I've always wanted a Leica for the fantastic glass, but couldn't afford one. Now with the Lumix G1, I can mount Leica M-mount lenses, 39mm screw-mount lenses from yesteryear, Nikon glass, and even Bolex C-mount lenses.
This little camera is a lens collector's dream. I've stumbled upon my perfect camera and can't wait for the HD video version to come out. Will I keep my Nikon bodies? Only time will tell...
The stuff:
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/26/2009 in Photography, Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
In 1993, my Apple PowerBook 170 was stolen from my office. Faced with replacing the machine, I seriously looked for other options as the portability was fantastic, but it was sorely lacking in instant, daily use capabilities. At that time, I explored the limited pen-based options and almost ended up with an EO. Availability and price kept me out of the EO, and I ultimately settled on a Apple PowerBook Duo 210. Despite the sub-notebook's benefits, I still could not get the idea of a pen-based, instant-on, part-of-my-life computer out of my mind.
Shortly thereafter, Apple released the first mass-market PDA, the Newton MessagePad. Despite its numerous shortcomings and failed marketing, the technology was exactly what I was looking for - a small, lightweight, instant-on, part-of-my-life computer that could, potentially, work as fast as I could. The key feature (which received a lot of criticism) was the natural handwriting recognition. Once trained, the Newton would have a near symbiotic relationship with the user. It would adapt to the user rather than the user adapt to it. We have come far enough to demand adaptability of technology and Apple was the first to bring that idea to life.
Knowing the limitations of any first-generation product, I waited until Apple released the Newton equivalent of the Macintosh Plus - the MessagePad 120. I picked one up at a developers conference and it immediately changed my life. As expected, I could not live without it. In no time, it started to learn my handwriting and within months, it and I were inseparable. In fact, I trusted the MessagePad more than my new PowerBook 5300.
Like most computer users, I will find any reason for smaller, faster, and better technology. The MessagePad 120 was fine, but it was slow and lacked enough memory for my needs. The next big leap was into the MessagePad 2000 (and at the same time, a desktop platform change to a Dell Latitude laptop and Windows 95). With its speed and storage, the MP2000's larger size was something I could live with. The operating system improvements were good, the recognition was better with the added speed, and all in all, a fine upgrade. By far, the best pen-based operating system got much, much better, and the future for the little platform looked bright.
Then Apple dropped the platform.
Faced with looming integration issues with my workplace Windows 95 environment, I had to make a tough decision - give up the best handwriting recognition technology and pen-based computer or live with a dying platform with no support and little integration capabilities. In 1998, I turned away from the Newton (actually, I gave it to Kathy where it happily lived on for a time synching to our grape iMac) and looked toward the two other mass-market options - Windows CE or PalmOS.
In the early days of my MessagePad experience, I tried the Graffiti glyph-based recognizer. I hated it. I tried the PalmOS hoping that the recognizer was better. Nope. That left Windows CE. Given the wide array of Windows CE options, I chose to go with the Philips Nino as my replacement PDA (yes, another good company choice). The Nino worked fine, but the handwriting recognizer was not so hot. It had potential, but just did not work the way I wanted it to. Shortly thereafter, I started using the pop-up keyboard for data entry. It was slow, but it worked.
Early in January 2000, my Nino began to exhibit some technical ailments (it was dropped one too many times), so I decided to look at the PDA market again for another option. Eventually, I decided on an HP Jornada 430se based on speed, form factor, size, and of course, color. Unlike the Nino, the Jornada did not have a natural handwriting recognizer. So turning to my tiny, trusty Sony Vaio PCG-505, I began to search for a new recognizer on the Web.
In my opinion, once someone has worked extensively with natural handwriting recognition, it is almost impossible to learn something else. I guess, I just don't know how people can use something like Jot for letter-by-letter data entry. When I write, I think in phrases - I don't spell out every word letter-by-letter. How can other people do that? I know I can't.
Having established that shorthand recognizers are not for me, I searched for something other than a PalmOS wannabe and the less-than-stellar recognizer in the Nino. In my search, I stumbled across CalliGrapher by ParaGraph. Not only was it what I was looking for, but it was the closest thing to Newton handwriting recognition that I have ever seen. I installed the demo and within minutes, my new Jornada was reading my handwriting like my old MessagePad. This software made my PDA useful again.
Since then, I switched to mobile phones (including a Smartphone), back to laptops, tried Tablet PCs, fiddled with iPods but in the end, nothing really was as personal as I wanted. Then the Newton came back -- only not as a Newton but as the iPhone. Much to my delight, Apple hadn’t dumped the original idea but only rediscovered it. Although the iPhone isn’t a handwriting-based device, it is quick and easy to use and now with version 2 of the software, able to be personalized.
The idea of a part-of-my-life computer is alive once again. The exciting part is that there seems no turning back and the options will only get better and better over time.
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/24/2009 in Articles, Technology | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
I was scrounging around my bookshelves and stumbled across an interesting bit of history. In amongst the coffee table books were a small collection of MacUser and MacWorld magazines from 1985/86. My, we've come a long way.
Inside were reviews of the Apple ImageWriter II and 20MB serial hard drive. Yes, you read it correctly, a 20MB serial hard drive. As a Macintosh Plus owner in college, I gave one a new home and saved it from the junk heap. It was a discarded unit that became a doorstop when SCSI and the Macintosh SE arrived, and as a student in the computing organization, it ended up being handed down to me as a gift for doing good work. Besides, all of the other students had Macintosh SEs, and I was the only one who could use the darn thing.
The review was amusing. It covered access time, platters, spindle speed, etc. Apple's floppy drive was actually faster than the hard drive, and in System 5 (or is it MacOS V?) one could not boot from the hard drive! I got it after System 6, so booting was no longer a problem. Of course, we've come full circle with USB drives and FireWire, but when they said serial, they meant the really, really slow kind. New, the drive listed for around $1800. Wow.
Oh, and one more thing. Lotus Jazz was the number one business software package. Microsoft Word and Microsoft Multiplan were a bit further down the list. Yes, Lotus and Multiplan. Do you remember that? I do...
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/11/2009 in Randomness, Technology | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
In all of my travels through rural airfields and metropolitian aeroplexes, I have decided that in the United States where the nation extends across an entire continent and flying has become a necessity, the process of air travel is terribly broken and shows no signs of improving. From cramped aircraft and overbooking, to poorly designed facilities and ridiculous compromises, air travel in this country is much more of a chore than it should or needs to be. Flying from one city to another is not like jumping into the car and zipping off on a roadtrip to Wisconsin. It tends to be an all-day ordeal that starts at the moment one leaves home and ends when one closes the door at the hotel. Consuming the attention and will of the average traveler, the process of air travel is twisted and misguided often ending in disgust, anger, and frustration.
And tomorrow, I start another travel cycle to prove it. Hopefully, I'll be wrong.
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/11/2009 in Randomness, Travel | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/04/2009 in Commuting, Stories | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/04/2009 in Randomness | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/04/2009 in Commuting | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
These mobile spider-like tanks are supporting characters in the anime series "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex."
Tachikomas are my favorite supporting characters in that they playfully ask the questions we viewers can't. At some level, they also embody the larger themes of GITS around technology and humanity, much in the same way (although less successfully in my opinion) "Star Trek: The Next Generation" tried to accomplish with Commander Data. One of the more disturbing ideas, however, is that Tachikomas are almost child-like and yet wield an immense amount of destructive power. When they start questioning their own mortality, things get really, really weird. For more information on Ghost in the Shell, check out the episode guide on Wikipedia. My favorite Tachikoma episode is #15, "Machines Désirantes."
In any case, this little image is the mascot for Friday Sushi -- always asking about and commenting on the little things to keep the story going.
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/04/2009 in Anime, Television, Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
For the last several years I've been struggling with the whole blog thing -- I want to put stuff out there, but I've over thought the execution and that has led to basically nothing. This spring I started having sushi every Friday night and a few folks in Facebook started following my sushi exploits. Part of the sushi ritual has been posting status updates, a few photos of the meal, and at times, blogging about the dinner experience up on Facebook. For me, however, Friday sushi has become a chance to clear my mind of all the things that transpired the week before. It gives me a chance to sit in a relaxing environment, sip some sake, enjoy some delightful fish, and reflect on what happened and what will come.
Posted by Chad Kainz on 04/04/2009 in Randomness, Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)