Now I have almost all the goodies: laptops(both mac and windows), Kindle DX, and an android phone, I start to compare the reading experience on them. The answer, is full of surprises.
First, to my surprise, my least-like reading device is my mac laptop. For some reason, even with the high resolution screen, the display of my mac laptop doesn't look as good as my 3 years old DELL. My eyes get tired much more easily and there is no way to adjust both brightness and contrast (only brightness could be adjusted from the system preferences). I basically avoid using it if I can (I have to use it for work).
Second, I found my android phone works really well for reading (and many other things). Yes, the screen is small, but the display quality of this tiny phone is superior to my laptop. Also, the Kindle for android reader has better navigation than the Kindle for PC. The same ebook even looks better on it. (I tried a few other eReaders, they are fancy but the reading experience was actually not as good as the plain kindle reader.) After trying it a few times, I start to use my android phone to read more and more*.
Now comes the final surprise. I found I liked my Kindle even more. Yes, the navigation sucks, yes, it's too primitive, but when I found I couldn't read from my android phone under the sun, I learned to respect my Kindle. I am also more focused on the reading itself. In fact, now I am thinking of getting a Kindle 3G since my Kindle DX is really showing its age (when doing side-to-side comparison with Chinchih's Kindle 3G). Will that decision get changed if I buy an android tablet? No, not until I can read it under the sun.
*It also allows me to read while waiting in line for coffee, what a time saver!
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Amazon Cloud Player - Thank You Mr. Bezos
I bought an android phone and switched to the mac platform lately, so I was left with the daunting task of copying all my music files to both platforms. Not something fun. After transferring a few albums to my cell phone I gave up, too much work (and too much space for my SD card). I made a mental note to research if there's any cloud service I could use to solve this issue.
The other day, I found Amazon announced their new "cloud player". Exactly what I need! I immediately upload a few albums, bang, I could share the music on my mac, my android phone (and my future android tablet)*, and my old windows laptop without any extra effort. (I was so happy I even bought a mp3 album online so I got a free upgrade.) Wow, Amazon really knows what I am thinking. Thank you, Mr. Bezos. You really keep you words, you invent for your customer.
* I have my eyes on the incoming Asus Eee Pad Transformer
The other day, I found Amazon announced their new "cloud player". Exactly what I need! I immediately upload a few albums, bang, I could share the music on my mac, my android phone (and my future android tablet)*, and my old windows laptop without any extra effort. (I was so happy I even bought a mp3 album online so I got a free upgrade.) Wow, Amazon really knows what I am thinking. Thank you, Mr. Bezos. You really keep you words, you invent for your customer.
* I have my eyes on the incoming Asus Eee Pad Transformer
Monday, March 28, 2011
Finally A Sunny Day
Finally a sunny day after two weeks of rain. I can hardly hide my excitement. (Photos from my cell phone.)
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Have Fun at the Home and Garden Show
Peonies and orchids |
Lovely garden decorations |
Friday, March 25, 2011
Two Interesting Videos from Jeff Bezos
One more personal, one more business-like, equally interesting. Note, start the first one from the 6th min and you can skip the introduction.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Simone Dinnerstein on Bach and her new album
What caught my attention in this video is her fingering. Notice how she uses a lot of fourth finger and pinkie moves. These two fingers are usually weaker and harder to control. I wonder if it also gives her playing some special sound quality.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Most Interesting Book I Read Lately
After Deep Blue beat Garry Kasparov and Watson beat Ken Jennings, the next big question is, when will computers pass the Turing test? (Alan Turing's own estimation was year 2000, he was a bit too optimistic. My own estimation is before the end of this decade.) But what does it really mean to be human? This book provides many fascinating insights, a perfect book to read after visiting computer history museum.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
How To Make Your Home Repair A Science Project
My friend Chinchih bought her house "as is". Because of that, ever since she moved in, her home repair became the constant topic of our conversations. After the owners beefed up the insulation, replaced the water heater, installed solar panels (and numerous other fixes I lost count), the only repair left was the water leaking. The plumber they hired (another story there) relied on his experience to diagnose the cause. He first suggested replacing some old piping, which the owners followed. No use. Then he suspected the water was from the bath tub. They wrapped the bath tub, still the leaking happened. Then he thought the wall in the bathroom was not properly sealed and suggested the owners to use this chance to do some home remodeling.
Frustrated, the owners decided to take things into their own hands and solve this mystery scientifically (after all, my friend Chinchih was not getting her Biophysics PhD for nothing). The solution? They decided to use fruit dye as tracer and try it on different water sources to see where the leak was really from. So last week I accompanied my friend to Smart&Final and bought a bottle of fruit dye. (We settled on the beautiful blue color used in making cup cakes.) After a few trials, lo and behold, they found the source. It was from the toilet! (They just put the fruit dye into the water tank and after a few flushes, viola, there was blue water leaking out.) They could finally confidently tell the plumber where to fix. (The plumber then used an endoscope like device to look and confirmed it.) After that, as far as I know, no water (especially blue water) is leaking as of now.
P.S. lesson learned, instead of thinking of your old house as a money pit, treat it like a science project.
Frustrated, the owners decided to take things into their own hands and solve this mystery scientifically (after all, my friend Chinchih was not getting her Biophysics PhD for nothing). The solution? They decided to use fruit dye as tracer and try it on different water sources to see where the leak was really from. So last week I accompanied my friend to Smart&Final and bought a bottle of fruit dye. (We settled on the beautiful blue color used in making cup cakes.) After a few trials, lo and behold, they found the source. It was from the toilet! (They just put the fruit dye into the water tank and after a few flushes, viola, there was blue water leaking out.) They could finally confidently tell the plumber where to fix. (The plumber then used an endoscope like device to look and confirmed it.) After that, as far as I know, no water (especially blue water) is leaking as of now.
P.S. lesson learned, instead of thinking of your old house as a money pit, treat it like a science project.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Revolution - 2000 years of computing (Part Two, the Age of PC and beyond)
Xerox Parc 1, Predecessor of PC and Apple Macintosh, notice it has a mouse |
Another invention from Xerox PARC, bean bag. |
Apple vs PC, round 1 |
Can you recognize the young Steve Jobs in the photo? |
You heard of Steve Jobs, but you probably never heard of Dan Estridge, whose team created PC. |
An early "portable" computer, weighted only 23.5 pounds. Want one? |
This mock-up eBook was created in the 60s. It looks just like my Kindle DX! Some design takes decades to be realized. |
A mock-up prototype of Palm Pilot and its stylus. During the creation of Palm Pilot, engineers created different prototypes to help them testing their design. |
Google's home made servers, used to power their famous search engine. All the unnecessary things were stripped out. It mostly contains CPUs and network devices. |
Details of the Google servers. Note its resemblance to the logic unit of CRAY-1. |
Self Portrait |
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Revolution - 2000 years of computing (Part One)
Taking advantage of my 3-week between-job break, I visited the newly renovated computer history museum (used to be the SGI head quarter). It now hosts a wonderful exhibition called "Revolution, the first 2000 years of computing". You can see the Differential Machine designed by Babbage, the Enigma encryption device, various early computers, and a lot of cool stuff. I spent a wonderful afternoon there. If you have a chance to visit SF Bay Area, this is a must see.
Newly renovated computer history museum |
Entrance to the wonderful exhibition |
An early digital calculator, remember it? |
Vacuum tubes in ENIAC, mesmerizingly beautiful. |
The earliest computer memory. |
The famous Enigma encryption device. Looks just like a typewriter. Who would think the fate of World War II is so closed tied to this simple looking device! |
Maintenance console of RAND corporation's JOHNNIAC, another early system. Those old computer systems all had the size of a modern data center. Like ARPANET, they are also built for defense purpose. |
SAGE, another system built for defense purpose. At this time, vacuum tube is still used. |
Computing unit of a missile guidance system. Notice transistors had replaced vacuum tubes here. |
The interconnect of Cray-1. How to maintain it is totally beyond me. |
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Photos of Chinchih's New Home
I was having dinner at Chinchih's place and managed to snap a few shots before it was too dark.
front yard |
back yard view |
on the deck |
looking at back yard from the deck, now the poison oaks are gone |
looking down the creek |
another view of the creek |
it's like living in a forest |
the owners' CD collection |
and their two pianos |
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