The Best of Macworld SF 2006 168
ptorrone writes "We podcasted live, we posted over 100 photos real time via a WiFi camera + EVDO as we walked around and now we've picked the top 5 products we liked the most at Macworld San Fran 2006. It's safe to say our picks aren't likely to be the same ones you'll see in the usual "best of" lists. We gave top marks to products, services and software that we think fit the "Maker" mindset - technology on your time and a bit of news from the future... Here they are..."
Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:2)
Re:Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:5, Insightful)
I know this is Slashdot, and OSS is the best thing in the world, but programs that charge sometimes really are worth it. I used to use Strata StudioPro. The productivity increase between it and the other 3D programs at the time (mid- late-1990s) was ridiculously high. (As it happened, Strata was at least half the price of the Autodesk tools.) Based on my friend's recommendation, I'd not hesitate to at least try the software. If your business is in design mockups, it's well worth the $500.
Re:Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:2)
I'm not OSS zealot, and i pay gladly for software if i think it's worth it. I'll try the demo tormorrow, and i'm pretty sure i'll like it from
Re:Google Earth + SketchUp (Score:2)
Party like its 1985 (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, there's a little bit of a Jordie LaForge factor, but the 50 or so people we watched try these on at the booth all pretty much said "these ain't that bad, I could wear them."
Yes, but they are all geeks. This isn't going to take off the way the iPod did. The iPod is sexy. The glasses are more like an ersatz contraceptive.
But if nobody was looking, I would try them out for sure!
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:4, Funny)
You know that's something I've never understood: if geeks aren't able to reproduce, where do the new geeks come from??? It's not like there's ever any shortage of geeks, new ones are cropping up all the time.
Is there some sort of recessive mutation? Some little gene with thick glasses and a lisp that randomly takes over the Y chromosome and then WHOOPS the blonde hunky adonis dad looks down and sees that (gulp) his newborn son is a geek?
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
This isn't going to take off the way the iPod did.
i thought "yeah, because
heh. vr goggles. No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:3, Interesting)
If nothing else, they should revolutionize video games. Experiencing the virtual world through a small motionless rectangle is so limiting... we only accept it because we don't know better.
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
Nah. VR was just was a false pretender technology back then.
The headshets were way too bulky, expensive, and from my experience they always gave me a eyeache after an hour.
If they can solve all three of those problems then it would be accepted in the market place. VR has got a few more generations to go with the size and quality and I believe eventually they'll get the image projected straigh
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
The optics in these sorts of units are supposed to present you with an image that would require your eyes to focus at the equivalent of some reasonable distance. 10ft to infinity, for example.
Like when I look through my SLR viewfinder at the focusing screen. In reality I am focusing on a small screen 3cm away, but op
Re:Party like its 1985 (Score:2)
Did VR really pass? When I was at college all those years ago and VR was a chosen subject of mine, VR was considered to have roles in visualization (medical, architectural, etc), simulation (flight, driving, etc) and games.
I think it has been with us the whole time. Certainly 3D goggles make the emersion into a virtual reality more realistic, but I don't think goggles are required for something to qualify as being VR.
Battlefield 2 sure gets my heart racing at times. Even
sensors (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:sensors (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:sensors (Score:2)
Re:sensors (Score:2)
is a little review of the device.
the german website for
digitech is
http://www.digitech-gmbh.de/ [digitech-gmbh.de]
but it basically says the sites in development but you can email them on
webmaster@digitech-gmbh.de
btw this was just a £7.99 device
my point basically was a remote sensor doesnt need to eat batterys to be wireless
Re:sensors (Score:3, Informative)
Re:sensors (Score:2)
Re:sensors (Score:3, Informative)
Scientists and science students. I spent many many hours of my college life driving/walking/travelling into a field to check the rainmeter and temperature. This would have saved me a ton of time, if I could afford them.
And to emphasize what the other poster said, wireless is very power hungry and would increase the battery requirements by quite a bit. Those little sensors wouldn't be so little anymore.
Re:sensors (Score:2)
Any number of scientists and engineers could make use of such devices. Sure, you stop the datamining as soon as you pick up the device, but the idea ( should you want continuous data ) is that you put down a new one when you pick up th
Re:sensors (Score:2)
Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2, Insightful)
This, to me, only reflects Google's broader philosophy. They don't release products that give people what they need
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:5, Insightful)
Ow. Harsh.
I would suggest that while both are famous for numerous features covered in uglyness, the reasons differ. Microsoft looks at the market and thinks "how can we control this?" Google is more like a bunch of engineers sitting around saying "you know what would be cool to build?". In both cases the thing is ugly, but in the case of Google it's just a lack of asthetics. Everything feels sort of proto-typish.
Now that I've said it, I admit that I don't see how it matters.
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:4, Interesting)
D
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Insightful)
No - the Mac is a very nice Unix-like o/s with lovely eye-candy.
It is however nothing like linux.
Does it run in embedded environments? Can I access the source? Can I port it to sparc? If there's a bug can I fix it?
Under linux - the answer to all of them is yes, under Apple no.
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
MacOS X rests above the open source Darwin project, so if you want to make Darwin embedded, go right ahead.
D
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Interesting)
What? You think you don't need a gui in an embedded environment?
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Informative)
I was trying to point out that OSX is not just linux with lots of polish - because it lacks the one of the things that makes linux really great - access to the source.
Your arguments that I don't want the source, have no need for the source, etc are not relevant to this thread.
Now, on to your point.
I think Apple's GUI is way too high-overhead for a portable device, so I think the desirablity of such in embedded environments would be questionable at best.
Embed
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Interesting)
1) I specifically said that I was not asking Apple to open anything.
2) I stated that OSX was a great system, but was not 'linux with lots of polish' because it lacked one of the things that made linux great - access to the source.
3) Embedded was an an example of what you can do with access to the source.
Anyway, the original post, to which you replied rudely, by the way,
I think you need to read the entire thread - the post you refer
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:5, Insightful)
Overall I'm going to second others and say that I've always been impressed at the 'fit and finish' of Mac OS X. It's not perfect (in particular I wish they made it easier to run X apps on top of Aqua) but despite some people's claims to the contrary, in my experience it's far easier to configure, mostly because of its consistency. Linux will always have an Achilles' heel because its flexibility also breeds complexity. For example, configuring wireless on a Mac is a no-brainer, because there is basically only one option for the cards: Apple.
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Sadly, I don't see that as being likely, unless someone takes this message as a challenge and goes to work
Why has Linux/Unix (other than the Mac) been stuck with such ugly tools, anyway? Do open source people not care about how things look
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the same mentality that makes my colleagues force my co-workers to type their stuff in HTML instead of using a simple Rich Text Editor, use a green screen instead of a GUI, tell them that typing a command is easier than pressing a bu
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:3, Informative)
The dialogs are bundled in the executable instead of being attached as Interface Builder files. There are a bunch of icons, like the "info" icon (i in a speech bubble), take right from Windows 2000. The buttons are placed at the wrong locations in dialogs and the default buttons are not always s
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, I find it rich that Mac users whinge when getting ports of Windows apps yet when Apple ports Mac apps to Windows blatant HIG/toolkit violations are the order of the day. *cough* QuickTime *cough*
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would a Mac user care how software acts on Windows?
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Um... wow. (Score:5, Insightful)
2. Google, wanting to be nice, releases program as freeware.
3. Mac users look at program, go "Wow, that's great! But why can't we use it?"
4. Google, wanting to be nice, gets someone to do a quick dirty mac port, because they are a web technology company and don't have a team of mac engineers or anything.
5. Guy on slashdot yells mercilessly at Google for not having gone all-out to re-engineer this free application they didn't even write to conform to the interface standards of an operating system they don't even officially support.
YAY!
But Google wants me to buy it (Score:3, Informative)
If it looks bad it's a damn poor enticement for me to spend more money. Not to mention that parts do not even work, like To and From hardly ever working with addresses that are valid for "Fly To".
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
A huge number of ph.d.s doing whatever "because we can" is kindof elegant. imo.
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong, I love Google for what it is, but not what it ain't: particularly tasteful or particularly elegant.
have you forgotten google search, which embodies elegant, simple, usable interface design? or gmail?
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
Re:Google doesn't "get it" (Score:2)
I'm totally into design, GUI's and yes, the mac. But when accessing a service, I don't care how pretty it is, as long as it's easy and gives me useful results. Did I mention fast there? Any online service should be fast before anything else. If not, don't bother, I'm sure I won't.
Fast, easy, useful.
Apart from that, I try to judge free stuff differently from stuff I pay for.
So, let's see, free, fast, useful, and um, not so pretty.
In short, I don't
Re:Apple fanatics don't "get it" (Score:2)
So... only 2 of the 5 things are Mac specific. (Score:3, Insightful)
Pretty darn lacking I think.
Re:So... only 2 of the 5 things are Mac specific. (Score:5, Informative)
And Sketchup has been a cross platform app for several years. It might have been Windows first, but I can't remember. Oh, and the Google Earth plugin for Sketchup has been available for the Windows version since mid-November.
Re:So... only 2 of the 5 things are Mac specific. (Score:2)
Re:So... only 2 of the 5 things are Mac specific. (Score:2)
only in that they're items shown at MacWorld Expo, actually. That's it. It's pretty typical that most things shown at MacWorld also support other computers or operating systems.
And? (Score:2)
Couldn't you find anything else to complain about? Who ever said this was a super Mac related list? It's a blog by some nerds about the 5 coolest products they saw at Macworld and therefore presumably will now support OS.X. If AutoCad announced that it ha
Re:And? (Score:2)
No, not really.
Who ever said this was a super Mac related list?
Well, see, I figured, that being a Macworld event... and being that Apple zealo... enthusiasts... go on and on how much better the Mac is because it has much better hardware, apps etc. I just figured that the best of Macworld might, you know, consist of things that are truly Mac specific and cool... not just some little usb/video gadgets that don't really have much to do with a 'Mac' as such..
Re:And who get the real revenew from mac going Int (Score:2)
Honestly, what on earth are you talking about ? Name one current piece of hardware that works on a Macintosh but does not work on a PC.
Maybe the Mighty Mouse should 'just work' as a USB mous
My favorite (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:My favorite (Score:2)
That's not funny. That's sad. I'm not in the market for a computer any time soon, but stuff like that makes me very happy for Apple that they made the Intel decision.
I'm drooling over the prospect of a 2+ghz dual G4 upgrade
That's a more than $500 upgrade... I guess it *might* make sense, as long as you don't want a faster FSB and graphics card as well...
New Laptop (Score:2, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
What of battery life? (Score:2)
MacBook Pro's website makes no mention of battery life.
Re:New Laptop (Score:2, Informative)
1) MacBook Pro? That's what you're calling it?
2) Remote - cool (if of limited use); no cleverly designed place to stow it on/in the laptop - not cool (it will get quickly misplaced)
3) No FW800? I thought this was the pro model?
4) No PC card slot, just ExpressCard? (see #6)
5) No S-Vid out? I have to buy an additional adapter?
6) No modem?? I have to buy the external USB modem. I can't even use a PC card.
Live Podcast (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Live Podcast (Score:2)
Buzzword-free, Real-time, pODCAST
Yup, brodcasting is where the future is at. People in the future will say things like, "Don't you remember when brodcast had an 'a'?"
Re:Live Podcast (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, given the speed of light being as slow as it is, life isn't live either.
Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:5, Insightful)
They spent weeks talking about 13.3" widescreen iBooks and Mac minis with DVR capabilities, and high-def streaming from
And none of them got anything right.
Maybe now people will realize that rumor sites make everything up.
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, it is amazing how rumour sites seem to consist of rumours. Mind-boggling it is!
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2)
They predicted the G5s when they came out. The lid was just tighter this time around.
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2)
Well, they don't make everything up. They report stories that "sources" give to them. Maybe now they ( and some of their readers ) will realize that Apple feeds them BS before big announcements.
They kept talking about iBooks and Mac minis, and I kept thinking "what low-end chips will they put in the mini? Boy, those Powerbooks haven't seen any real upgrade in ages, I thought the Intel switch was all about getting better portable options, an
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2)
If we see new iBooks and they are the same form factor as the old iBooks, then I'd say you have a point.
If the next revision of a Mac Mini has no PVR, then again you are right.
But we don't know since we have not encountered the next revision of either product. It will come up soon enough, I'm sure. It does seem logical to conclude that since the iMacs have dual core processors, the Mac Mini certainly might have th
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, usually the pro stuff is announced at pro events, such as Final Cut 5 being announced at NAB 2005, Aperture and dual core Powermacs were announced at a major pro photography convention i
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2)
Why would their video partners give a shit? You still have to pay for the video first. My Mac still comes standard with a CD burner, and they still sell well over a million songs a day via iTunes. iTunes lets you burn personal copies for backup purposes *cough* with ease, and I'm not sure how this would be any different. If being able to burn them helps them sell, then I promise you, you won't see any video partner
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2)
--Potential Rich Yuppie
New site in town (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah. But I heard there is a new site up that is supposed to be better than the rest. Even with a podcast. "Super Secret Apple Rumours" or such some.
Payback (Score:2)
Yeah I know it's overly paranoid. Just something to think about.
Re:Rumor Sites Are Bogus (Score:2, Insightful)
vs
"This is Mac-world," Jobs said in emphasizing that Tuesday would be about Mac hardware and software and not at all about the music player that's had such a vital role in bolstering Apple's fortunes. And so it was that the iPod, usually at the center of any Apple news event, went through the day without a single update or new release.
MacWorld Article [macworld.com]
Hrmmm... one of you is lying.
Oops. I Misread that as... (Score:2)
My favourite (Score:5, Informative)
what (Score:2, Interesting)
Windows Media Plugin for Quicktime (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/pla
Supposedly some incompatibilities with QuickTime 7.04 (released yesterday).
Re:Windows Media Plugin for Quicktime (Score:2)
Now, with the exception of the MacBook Pro itself, that may be the best news out of MacWorld yet!
Supposedly some incompatibilities with QuickTime 7.04 (released yesterday).
How very... typical. Any details as to the problems? Should we hold off on installing it? Does it work with 7.04 at all?
Re:Windows Media Plugin for Quicktime (Score:2)
I never tried it with anything before 7.0.4, so I don't know if this is caused by 7.0.4 or it's just inherent to Flip4Mac 2.0.
Re:Windows Media Plugin for Quicktime (Score:2)
Yep, I just tried it and it behaves as you said. Plays the wmv file just fine, but when you close the window when its finished Quicktime crashes and you get the crash report dialogue box up. I filled it in and sent if off to Apple.
Re:Not Microsoft, Flip4Mac (Score:2)
Re:Not Microsoft, Flip4Mac (Score:2)
Integrated iSight (Score:2)
Re:Integrated iSight (Score:2)
Wonder away... Generally OSX is highly scriptable
Re:Integrated iSight (Score:2)
Also, I personally use and like Evocam [evological.com]. It's great webcam software and scriptable, and can do the "auto capture every x minutes" thing.
There is a small green light that comes on whenever the camera is active.
My favorite thing at Macworld so far... (Score:3, Interesting)
You might want to check out Blender and it's RTE (Score:2)
And since Blender is open source you'll be paying 0$ rather than 999$
Check out Blender.org [blender.org] and also check out the Blender Game Kit Book [blender3d.org]. Not for the newest Ve
new mac question (Score:2)
Re:new mac question (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Early Adopters (Score:2)
Re:Early Adopters (Score:2)
Although apparently, talking about a shipping date of a new Apple laptop which was announced by Apple at an Apple conference which is also the subject of the fabled article (in the 'Apple' section, no less) is off-topic. Moderators, I ap
Re:ROCBIT 3 - USB ENCRYPTED EXTERNAL HARD DRIVES (Score:2)
You mean Freescale chip... (Score:2)
and wouldn't you rather have an IBM G5 chip keychain, anyway?