Digital Magazines: Bonnier Mag+ Prototype

February 3rd, 2010

From Bonnier:

This conceptual video is a corporate collaborative research project initiated by Bonnier R&D into the experience of reading magazines on handheld digital devices. It illustrates one possible vision for digital magazines in the near future, presented by our design partners at BERG.

Mag+ from Bonnier on Vimeo.

The concept aims to capture the essence of magazine reading, which people have been enjoying for decades: an engaging and unique reading experience in which high-quality writing and stunning imagery build up immersive stories.

The concept uses the power of digital media to create a rich and meaningful experience, while maintaining the relaxed and curated features of printed magazines. It has been designed for a world in which interactivity, abundant information and unlimited options could be perceived as intrusive and overwhelming.

The purpose of publishing this concept video is first and foremost to spark a discussion around the digital reading experience in general, and digital reading platforms in particular. Thus, we would be more than happy to hear what you have to say regarding the concept and ideas expressed in the video: the magazine reading experience, digital browsing, text versus images, as well as hear about your own digital reading experiences and thoughts. We are all ears.

Follow the discussion in the comments below, in our blog and on Twitter.

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Wireless Cogeco hotspots in Milton

January 30th, 2010

From MiltonSearch.com:

Out and about in Milton and need your internet fix?

Well, right off the bat we’ll give you two great places you can get a caffeine fix along with the web: Starbucks and Cafe Deda.

The catch with Starbucks is that you have to first purchase a Starbucks gift card — then you’re good to go — you get two hours daily to use.

Cafe Deda at the corner of Derry Rd. and Trudeau in Hawthorne Village is probably the best spot — free high-speed wireless and a fairly spacious, comfortable location. The owners are friendly and yes, you have to make a purchase….

There are also a number of Cogeco wireless hotspots around Milton as well. We’ve decided to post the ones we currently know of below (as well as map them out for your convenience).

If you hear of any others, please shoot us an email at: info@miltonsearch.com or let us know in the comments section below.

Happy surfing!

Cogeco wireless hotspots in Milton:

Fifth Wheel Truck Stop
40 Chisholm Dr.
Map it

Apple Dental Milton
400 Bronte St South Suite 206-208
Map it

Chris Hadfield Park
1 Chris Hadfield Way
Map it

Flourgirls Catering Inc
174 Mill St #103
Map it

La Toscana Ristorante
165 Main St E
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Matt’s Rib House
500 Laurier Ave Unit 15
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Midas Auto Service Experts
420 Steeles Ave
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Milton Public Library
45 Bruce St
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Chris Hadfield Park
575 Ontario St S
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North End Nissan
610 Martin St
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Scremanzi’s Restaurant
500 Steeles Ave
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South 202 Mediterranean Cuisine & Jazz Bar
202 Main St E
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The Grand Chalet
324 Steeles Ave
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The Whistle Stop Restaurant
154 Main St N., Campbellville
Map it

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Bing now cooks up recipes

January 22nd, 2010

From TechCrunch.com:

You can filter recipes by convenience, type of cuisine, occasion, ratings, course and main ingredient.

Each recipe will result will show the source or name of the site, user ratings, and a measure fat and of calories. You can filter recipes by convenience, type of cuisine, occasion, ratings, course and main ingredient.

Bing just launched a nifty new feature for any cooks out there. When you search for a food item, Bing will now show recipe results that involve the item. So if I search for macaroni, I’ll see a tab to the left of results that will show me “Macaroni Recipes.”

Recipe results are pulled from a variety of recipe websites including MyRecipes.com and Epicurious.com. Each recipe will result will show the source or name of the site, user ratings, and a measure fat and of calories. You can filter recipes by convenience, type of cuisine, occasion, ratings, course and main ingredient. Unfortunately, the recipe feature doesn’t show up for every query. I typed in macaroni and cheese as well as spaghetti and meatballs, I didn’t get the recipe results for either search term.

It’s important to note that Google doesn’t do this with recipes. With many recipe portals on the web, it can often be difficult to sift through large amounts of recipes on the web within search engines. As an avid cook who uses sites like Epicurious and Foodnetwork.com often, I am a big fan of this addition to Bing.

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Bill Gates joins Twitter

January 18th, 2010

From CNet News:

Bill Gates has launched a Twitter feed, with his early posts focused on the events in Haiti and his foundation work.

Bill Gates has launched a Twitter feed, with his early posts focused on the events in Haiti and his foundation work.

Bill Gates is many things: software giant, philanthropist, and now Twitter user.

As of a few hours ago, the Microsoft chairman is one of the millions offering brief takes on their world to anyone who wants to follow them. I doubt that he’ll be sharing what he had for breakfast or bemoaning the fact that his cell phone just dropped a call, but Gates is now on Twitter.

The “@BillGates” account existed before, but it wasn’t actually Gates or anyone on his staff doing the posts. Now, though, the account is held by Gates and is also one of the pages that Twitter lists as a “verified account.”

The first post by the real Bill Gates was a note that he plans to release the second of his annual foundation letters on Monday, charting the progress and challenges in his philanthropic efforts.

“‘Hello World,” Gates wrote. “Hard at work on my foundation letter–publishing on 1/25.”

The first foundation letter, posted a year ago, noted that it planned to increase its spending in 2009, despite the recession.

Gates also retweeted posts from Time and Ryan Seacrest on Haiti, thanking Seacrest for his work in the quake relief effort.

As of this writing, Gates has about 8,800 followers, but I’d expect that to jump very quickly. It was 3,000 followers when I started typing this post.

Among the first people Gates started following–even before @Microsoft–was actress/singer Ashley Tisdale. Tisdale was added, I’m told, because of the work she does with Microsoft and her efforts working with developing countries.

Gates was also once on Facebook, but he said he eventually gave up on the service after being inundated with friend requests.

Update: Sure enough, Gates has already topped 50,000 followers within just a few hours. He’s following only 40 people so far. In addition to Tisdale, Gates is following an array of folks, from early eBay executive Pierre Omidyar to ABC’s George Stephanopolous. He’s also following group accounts, including the Microsoft corporate account to the Carnegie Foundation to Malaria no More.

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How fanboys see operating systems

December 17th, 2009

From Accordion Guy:

Sad, but disturbingly true.

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Google to launch new music service

October 22nd, 2009

From TechCrunch.com:

The Facebook gift shop has just started offering music, the Facebook blog reported Thursday morning. And two news sources said Google is also about to join the music business.

The Facebook gift shop has just started offering music, the Facebook blog reported October 22, 2009. And two news sources said Google is also about to join the music business.

Google will soon launch a music service, we’ve heard from multiple sources, and the company has spent the last several weeks securing content for the launch of the service from the major music labels. One source has referred to the new service as Google Audio.

We’re still gathering details, but our understanding is the service will be very different to the Google China music download service that they launched in 2008. That service, which is only available in China, allows users to search for music and download it for free.

The Google service, according to the New York Times, would run through LaLa, Imeem and iLike (a division of MySpace), accessible through a pop-up box.

The Associated Press reported the Google search pages will package links to news, lyrics, videos and song previews with pictures, similar to its financial news service.

Facebook “sees the gift store as a way to obtain the credit card numbers of more customers and develop a one-click payment mechanism that third-party developers can later use to sell virtual goods,” the Times reported.

Apple’s iTunes is currently the leading provider of song downloads.

Update:

More details on the service, which is in partnership with LaLa and iLike, here.

Screenshots and more information, here.

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Apple unveils wireless mouse inspired by iPhone

October 20th, 2009

From the Toronto Star:

Apples new computer mouse works with the same swiping motion that users are accustomed to making with the iPhone.

Apple's new computer mouse works with the same swiping motion that users are accustomed to making with the iPhone.

Apple Inc. updated its iMac desktop computer line Tuesday and introduced a mouse that responds to the touch of fingers instead of using buttons or scroll wheels.

Those were among the finishing touches on a holiday line-up Apple hopes will help maintain the momentum of the past several quarters, in which the company has grown stronger despite the economic downturn. On Monday, Apple reported its net income soared 47 per cent from a year ago, sending shares up sharply in Tuesday trading.

The updated iMacs have bigger screens – 21.5 inches and 27 inches, compared with existing models’ 20 inches and 24 inches. They also have speedier processors and better graphics. The least expensive model costs $1,199 (U.S.), the same as the past generation, but the top-of-the-line iMac is now $200 cheaper at $1,999.

The wireless Magic Mouse, as Apple calls it, will be sold standard with iMacs or by itself for $69. It lets people manipulate what they see on the screen by pinching, swiping and using other gestures, similar to the control mechanism made popular on the screen of the iPhone.

Tim Cook, Apple’s chief operating officer, said that after using the new mouse for a few months, sitting down at a computer with a traditional mouse makes him “want to throw it out the window.”

Apple also made its least expensive laptop, the $999 MacBook, sleeker, faster and more like the higher-end MacBook Pro machines, with a “multitouch” track pad and a sealed-in battery that can’t be removed.

Apple, which is based in Cupertino, Calif., told analysts Monday that it will pay more than it usually spends on air freight to ship the new iMacs and other items in time for holiday shopping.

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iPhone payment system in the works?

October 20th, 2009

From the Toronto Star:

An Apple iPhone 3GS and an Apple Macbook Pro are shown at the Apple retail store.

An Apple iPhone 3GS and an Apple Macbook Pro at the Apple retail store.

Trend tracking web sites reported details Monday of the supposedly top-secret project the co-founder of Twitter is working on: a mobile payment system.

Engadget has put together pieces of evidence to report that Jack Dorsey’s “Squirrel” project first speculated about in May has launched itself at a half-dozens businesses in the United States.

The project – called Square – basically turns an iPhone into a portable cash register that would eventually be used to pay for anything anywhere.

Coolhunting.com described it as a small, plastic card reader that plugs into the headphone jack of an iPhone. The store enters the amount, the iPhone owner “signs” for it with their finger and the receipt goes to the buyer’s email address. The money is sent to the store’s bank account, with Square taking a fee plus a small percentage.

No paper, no waiting. The receipt shows a map of the store, handy for future reference.

Dorsey left his post as CEO of Twitter one year ago after co-founding the social networking site.

SquareUp.com offered little information other than icons of three shops in San Francisco, a new jeans store on the Lower East Side in Manhattan, a flight school in San Carlos, Calif., and a store in St. Louis, Mo. Dorsey is said to be trying out his new app at those shops.

Cnet.com said Dorsey is reported to have established his new start-up in New York City with employees in New York and San Francisco.

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iSuck: Apple’s Five Worst Products, Ever

September 22nd, 2009

From Wired.com

Apple, it seems, is all about the hits. The iPod, the iPhone and the MacBook are all phenomenally successful, both as designs and as commercial wins. These highlights, though, lead us to expect a lot of the company, and serve to make the misses stick out all the more. Apple has some embarrassing techno-skeletons in its beautiful white iCloset. Here are five.

The Hockey Puck Mouse

For a company that built itself on the first commercial, mouse-equipped computer, it’s odd that Apple hasnever made a good mouse. Even the current Mighty Mouse isn’t so mighty, pretending as it does to have just one button while actually sporting two, and inexplicably copying the ThinkPad’s red nipple instead of using a scroll wheel.

But the prize for Worst Mouse Ever goes the the “hockey puck”, which shipped with the original iMacs in 1998. Not only was it ugly, it was hard to hold due to size and shape, and frustrated users with a too-short cord. Rarely for Apple, style not only triumphed over substance, it utterly buried it.

The iPod Hi-Fi

Apple’s $350 speaker lasted just 18 months before it was taken out back, shot and sprinkled with lime. It was an odd product from Apple, which normally leaves these kinds of accessories to a healthy third-party market. The Bose-designed box had stereo speakers and an iPod dock on the top, and the high price tag and poor performance meant market failure.

Earbuds

Just like the lack of a good mouse, the dearth of decent headphones from Apple is another paradox. The sound quality may be comparable to or even better than the bundled ‘buds from other manufacturers, but they’ll break, and the $30 Apple wants for a new pair is better spent almost anywhere else.

I have gone through a lot of them, and the longest any set lasted was a few months. This includes the latest, remote and microphone-toting model, which managed to last about six weeks before dying.

QuickTake

Long before Apple put a terrible camera in the iPhone, it put a terrible camera into a camera: The 0.3-megapixel (640 x 480) Apple QuickTake. The camera had no way to focus, and zooming was done by walking closer to your subject. Neither could you blast away like we do with the digicams of today: The QuickTake 100, built by Kodak, could fit just eight pictures into its 1-MB memory.

The problem was that the market was immature, and the QuickTake was one of the first consumer digicams on the market. Compare this to the successful strategy of Apple since the iPod: Wait until the market has been established, then make a simpler, better product than anyone else.

iTunes

It started so well back in 2001. Apple’s jukebox software was built on the third-party SoundJam which it bought the year before, and was a slick, quick and easy-to-use music player for a long time.

Then Apple decided that iTunes should be the conduit for the iPhone, and kept piling on bloated features. What had started as a pared-down, single-minded and simple application started to sync with Outlook, gained the useless cover flow view and, on the Mac at least, appeared to have a monopoly on the spinning beach-ball of death.

Worse, the iTunes Store, a fantastically user-friendly music store, gained weight in the form of the awful, hard to navigate App Store.

Of course, these days we have a new, simple and fast music app. It’s called Spotify. Apple, though, has shafted itself. The problem with selling a revolutionary device which is an iPod, a cellphone and an internet device, all in one, is that the software to support it needs to be similarly multitasking.

Anything we missed? While these failures are big, we have restricted them to the modern-day Apple, and ignored the Jobs-less wilderness years of beige boxes and overpriced printers. Feel free to add more in the comments.

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7 Good Reasons to Switch to Windows 7

September 22nd, 2009

From Wired.com

Do the cons outweigh the pros? That probably depends on how committed you already are to Windows.

A superficial reason, we know, but we’ve become so intimate with our gadgets that their looks are important, too -- Windows 7 will make your new PC look new, unlike the boring-as-vanilla UI of Windows XP.

Landing in stores October, Windows 7 is sparking a surprisingly heated debate on whether or not upgrading from XP is a good idea. If you’re in the “nay” camp, we’re going to lay out seven reasons why you should consider switching your stance to “yay.”

When scanning our list, we politely encourage you to ask yourself, “Do I really want to continue using an eight-year-old operating system?” Followed by “Don’t I deserve better?” Because no matter how comfortable you are with XP, you do deserve an OS that’s both newer and better, and Windows 7 will deliver. Not convinced? Then read on.

You Asked for This
Remember Vista? We know most of you don’t want to, and that’s because the OS fell short of many consumers’ expectations. As a result, many — especially power users — elected to skip Vista entirely, and have continued running Windows XP. Hence Microsoft’s attempt at a redo with Windows 7. This time around, the software giant made an effort to crowdsource feedback from Microsoft enthusiasts by distributing a free beta version of Windows 7 in January.

You complained, you demanded, and in response Microsoft slapped something together to ship October 22. The result? The overall presentation of Windows 7 is familiar enough to welcome XP users, but fundamentally it’s different enough to make you change the way you think of Microsoft. (I can vouch for that, being a long-time Mac user and ex-Windows fan).

Upgrading Won’t Screw You Over
Microsoft has its loyal fans in mind, including those clinging for dear life to XP. The tech giant promises that Windows 7 has been coded to support almost every piece of software that runs on your XP system. If, in the rare case one of your XP programs doesn’t work on Windows 7, you can still run it in a virtual environment called XP Mode. What’s especially cool about this mode is you won’t have to toggle between an XP emulator and Windows 7. The apps running in XP Mode appear like ordinary windows that are part of Windows 7.

Also, the Windows 7 upgrade chart may appear intimidating and confusing, but prior to release Microsoft plans to release a compatibility checker that will automatically scan your system to tell you which version of Windows 7 is for you.

Automatically Installed Device Drivers

This is only a minor improvement, but it addresses a major pain in the ass in earlier versions of Windows. Who has time to scour the internet for a device driver to work with hardware such as a video card or an external hard drive? Life is too short for that garbage work, and fortunately Windows 7 does this chore for you. Plug in a new piece of hardware, and the OS will find and install the driver for you. XP has this feature, sort of, but it works better in Vista and much better in Windows 7. No more of those annoying yellow question marks. Good riddance.

Piracy
Yarr! We know there are plenty of you out there downloading pirated digital booty, especially in Windows land. But it’s never been convenient to be a pirate compared with being a paying customer. For example, if you’re a legitimate buyer purchasing movies off iTunes, you can easily stream your media to your legitimately purchased Apple TV. If you’re a pirate, you’d have to go through roundabout programs and hardware to re-create the experience.

Windows 7 is an OS practically made for pirates. Want to display your movies, photos or music on your TV? Bam! Windows Media Player will do that out of the box if you have a Wi-Fi enabled TV, or an Xbox. No extra programs to install: Windows Media Player seamlessly communicates with your Wi-Fi device to display your illegal content in all its glory on your fancy HD TV.

And sharing media is easy, too. Want to download all of your brother’s music? Bam! HomeGroup, an easy networking feature included in Windows 7, will make that super easy between computers running the OS. Immediately upon plugging in to your network with Ethernet or Wi-Fi, HomeGroup will ask if you wish to join the group on the network, allowing you to set up easy file sharing in minutes.

A Better Interface
The new Aero features, which we covered in our Windows 7 first look, will change the way you interact with your computer. Aero Peek will prove the most useful: The feature displays outlines of all your open windows behind your active window. Each outlined box contains a thumbnail previewing its corresponding window to help you choose.

Gizmodo’s Matt Buchanan, who has been using AeroPeek for six months, provides an excellent perspective on Aero: “It breaks the instinct to maximize windows as you’re using them; instead, you simply let windows hang out, since it’s much easier to juggle them.” Makes sense, doesn’t it, for a generation of multitaskers? Aren’t you tired of Alt-Tabbing over and over and over?

Another feature, Aero Snap, makes it easier to resize and tile windows to fit the available space. (Read more about Aero Snap and Aero Peek.)

Words aren’t enough. You really have to try the OS to understand why these UI enhancements are a big deal. We get the idea that the people dismissing Windows 7 haven’t yet tinkered with it, and we highly encourage you to download the release candidate and give it a test drive. But do it now: The download is only available until August 20.

More Advanced Hardware Support
Technology evolves faster than living organisms, and Windows 7 is also designed to work well with upcoming hardware. Touchscreens are getting more popular in the mainstream (thanks largely to the iPhone), and sure enough Windows 7 includes multitouch support. (Check out a video demoing how it works.) If 2010 is indeed the year of the tablet, as we predict, then Windows 7 just might be the winning OS in that new landscape.

If you’re not interested in touchscreens, think multiple processor cores. At some point when multicore computers are more widely available, affordable and energy efficient, an eight-year-old OS like Windows XP isn’t going to know what to do with all that extra processing power. Microsoft has already hinted that Windows 7 will scale to 256 processors. That’s more than enough, but you get the picture: This is a new operating system designed for newer systems. You’re going to need to upgrade eventually, so why not do it now, so you can get a good feel for the OS, rather than later?

The 64-bit version of Windows 7 can handle bigger system memory, too, scaling up to 192 GB of RAM, compared to the 4-GB limit for the 32-bit versions of Windows XP and Windows 7, and 128 GB for the less common 64-bit edition of Windows XP.

Oh, yeah, speaking of new devices — Windows 7 is tweaked to better suit those trendy netbooks, too. These puny devices are low-powered and thus limited in performance, and Windows 7 will run better on them thanks to its improved memory management. For example, Windows XP allocated video memory for unseen windows, but Windows 7 does not. It uses video memory only for visible windows. That equates to a more responsive netbook with longer battery life.

It Looks Sexier
A superficial reason, we know, but we’ve become so intimate with our gadgets that their looks are important, too. Windows 7 will make your new PC look new, unlike the boring-as-vanilla UI of Windows XP. Extra detail, polish, gradients and a UI that will clear your desktop of clutter should all make Windows 7 a more attractive choice.

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