Apr 29

I’ve finally had an opportunity to get my hands on an iPad. Because Apple has seen fit to place it’s closest store 6 hours away, hearing that my local college bookstore had some iPads in stock was kinda exciting. However, I can’t be too excited by it as I’ve already declared to my friends and co-workers that the thing is “just a giant iphone without the phone, or camera”.

Regardless, here are my impressions:

1) It’s smaller than I expected it to be. I guess I never really spent much time visualizing the dimensions of it. My wife also thought it was smaller than she expected .
2) It’s not that heavy. I had read other people’s comments that is was heavier than they expected, but it was just about as heavy as I imagined it to be.
3) Pixel doubling didn’t look quite as horrendous as I had expected. I did not, however, try a pixel doubled app that had any substantial amount of text. I played a Simpsons fighting game, and a version of Rock Band.
4) You wouldn’t want to do a lot of typing on this thing. Typing without any tactile feedback is just about as rough as you would expect it to be. I’m not too sure I could get used to it. I’ve been doing it for about a year on my iPhone, but with the iPhone (and most mobile devices) there is the expectation that you are only doing minimal amounts of data input.

Overall the iPad looks like a really fun gadget which almost seems useful. I think it might be nice to read on, but I’m not sure a backlit document is the ideal reading device. I think it might be fun to game on, but I can’t see it becoming something I can play some of my favorite side scrollers on without some actual buttons (the same goes for the iPhone, actually). I think it might be convient to surf the internet with while relaxing, but I like to play flash games which aren’t supported. My wife loves those flash games even more, so without flash there is no way I can convince her that we should buy one of these.

Despite the negatives expressed above, the iPad is a pretty cool gadget. This is probably only something that you’ll appreciate once you have it in your hands, at least this was the case for me. It gets very close to being useful but never quite makes it. I’m sure that if I think about it enough I’ll concoct a reason to buy it, but for now my rational side won’t allow me.

Tagged with:
Dec 18

Here is a little video I put together on the building of my new i7 (1366 socket) pc.

PC Specs:
Motherboard: Asus P6X58D Premium
CPU: Intel i7-920
PSU: Corsair TX750W
Memory: Corsair Dominator DDR3 (3 X 2GB)
GPU: EVGA GTX 260
HDD: WD Caviar Black
OS: Windows 7 Ultimate & Ubuntu

I originally purchased a Sapphire Radeon HD 5770 video card, but the video card driver kept rebooting every half hour or so. Even with the latest drivers (both for Win 7 and the video card) it wouldn’t let up.
So, I RMA’d the video card and bought an Nvidia GTX 260 card. So far the Nvidia card is working out much better than the Radeon. The only thing left to do to this system (hardware related) is install the hyper 212 plus CPU cooler that is coming in the mail.

Disclaimer for Apple fanboys: I love macs…really, I do, but the mac pro is way too expensive for what I need, and the imacs are not very expandable (also, I’m not a fan of “all-in-ones”). For 3DS Max, Corel Painter, Photoshop, and gaming this machine is a good fit. If Apple made a mid-sized tower with similar hardware I’d buy it in a heartbeat, but they don’t. If Apple offered OS X for a machine like this one, I’d definitely install it, but they don’t. So, the machine that I need just doesn’t fall into Apple’s current lineup.

Tagged with:
Nov 27

Two days after Asus released their x58 motherboard with sata III and usb 3.0, Gigabyte has done the same with their GA-X58A-UD7 motherboard. In the U.S. there are now two socket 1366 motherboards available with sata III and usb 3.0.

Gigabyte’s board: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128413
Asus’ board: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131614

Still waiting on user reviews. C’mon people, jump onto the bleeding edge and let us all know how it goes!

Edit: Looks like their are plenty of reviews up now, and even a video review from com.puter.tv. (12/21/09)

Tagged with:
Nov 25

It looks like newegg finally has an X58 1366 socket motherboard with sata III and usb 3.0. The ASUS P6X58D Premium is priced at $300, which is not too horribly expensive for an X58 motherboard (I was expecting $400, myself)!

Yeah, yeah….I know; few have usb 3.0 devices and even fewer have hard drives which can push themselves beyond sata II bandwidth limitations, but that is bound to change pretty quickly.

Here are the specs per NewEgg:

ASUS P6X58D Premium

CPU Type: Core i7 (LGA1366)
FSB: QPI 6.4GT/S

Chipsets
———-
North Bridge Intel X58
South Bridge Intel ICH10R

Memory
———-
Number of Memory Slots: 6×240pin
Memory Standard: DDR3 2000(O.C.)/1600/1333/1066
Maximum Memory Supported: 24GB
Channel Supported: Triple Channel

Expansion Slots
———-
PCI Express 2.0 x16: 3 x PCIe 2.0 x16 (at x16/x8/x8 or x16/x16/x1 mode)
PCI Express x1: 1
PCI Slots: 2

Storage Devices
———-
SATA 3Gb/s: 6
SATA 6Gb/s: 2 x SATA 6Gb/s
SATA RAID: 0/1/5/10

Onboard Audio
———-
Audio Channels: 8 Channels

Onboard LAN
———-
LAN Chipset: Marvell 88E8056
Second LAN Chipset: Marvell 88E8056
Max LAN Speed: Dual 10/100/1000Mbps

Rear Panel Ports
———-
PS/2: 2
USB 1.1/2.0: 4 x USB 2.0
USB 3.0: 2 x USB 3.0
IEEE 1394: 1 x IEEE 1394a
S/PDIF Out: 1 x Optical, 1 x Coaxial

Not too shabby, eh? I’ll probably wait for a few reviews to come in before I pull the trigger and buy this mobo, but it looks promising.

Check it out at http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131614

P.S. Thanks to engadget for including my tip on this piece of hardware and including a link to my site.

Note to self: spell and grammar check blog posts before potentially getting linked to by engadget….ugh.

Tagged with:
Sep 01

This is a video review of the Macally G-S350SUAB “Mac G5 look-alike” External Storage Enclosure….actually it’s more like a “hands on” than a review. This fanless enclosure includes an external power source, a firewire 800, firewire 400, USB 2.0, and eSata interface.

Overall I am very pleased with this enclosure. The thing I like about it the most is the aesthetic. It looks like a little G5 (as you can see). It is a little pricey, however.

Tagged with:
Aug 18

I think I may have purchased the coolest looking HD enclosure around for my Time Machine backup drive.

Macally HD enclosure

Macally HD enclosure

I’ve got to admit that I bought this mostly on looks, however it’s got a ton of connections (Firewire 400/800, eSata, USB ).  Unfortunately, since I am running a 2008 mac mini, I can’t utilize the eSata or Firewire 800, but I have it available for the next machine I buy.  BTW, inside I am running a WD Caviar Green 1TB drive.

Tagged with:
Jun 18

I got this email from AT&T today:

Your iPhone is ready and can be picked up at your local AT&T store as early as June 19th. For your convenience AT&T stores will open at 7 AM on June 19th. Remember you have 7 days from this notification to visit your AT&T store to pick up your order.

Awesome! I was worried that since I pre-ordered my phone so late (6 days before launch) that I might have to wait an extra week. Looks like that is not the case. I suspect that demand for this iteration is not as high as the last, since there aren’t too many things that differentiated the two models.

Jun 13

As my first post to myiphoneadventure.com I thought it was apt to mention that this Friday (hopefully) I will be finally getting an iphone 3GS.  For the past few weeks I have been experimenting with the iphone SDK in an effort to develop an application.  Hopefully this week, or next, I should actually have some hardware to test on.

With regard to my iphone app, I am planning on doing an animated fortune teller who dispenses fortunes.  Although there are a number of fortune teller, and fortune cookie type apps I hope to make mine stand out by being visually interesting and uniquely stylized.  Because the number of apps in this category, I can’t realistically expect much income, but I hope to at least cover the cost of the iPhone Developer Program membership ($99).  Additionally I expect that this app will provide experience, and code, that I can use with the next project.

This is a blog is meant to be a journal of my experiences developing my first app, as well as my experience using my new iphone.  I have found a lot of literature written by people about their experiences writing iphone apps, but many of them are written after the fact.  I find the ones written during the project’s progress to be more interesting, and I hope I can add this blog to that list of interesting journals.

P.S. Can you believe that myiphoneadventure.com was not already taken (well, now it is) ?  It was the first domain I came up with when thinking what to call this site.  I guess sometimes you just get lucky.

preload preload preload