AppleTV First Impressions

I recently received the AppleTV that I ordered about two months ago at work. The size was surprising– it's shorter than a Mac Mini but wider and longer. The first problem I ran into is I don't have a display at work with component or HDMI in on it. So I connect my composite TV monitor to the green component output to at least get some idea of what the OSD looks like. This resulted in a black and white image (and this worked because sync is also on green).

So I took it home over the weekend. I had to update iTunes to get it to connect together. All content stored in iTunes is available to the AppleTV (provided your computer is turned on) and it can pull content from multiple machines in your house. It will play anything an iPod can and won't play the things an iPod won't. So, no streaming your VIDEO_TS folders to it.

I'm not 100% into the whole iTunes-as-your-video-organizer yet so I had to add a few videos to my library to get a sense of how it works. And it works well, the video looked great and it never stuttered while streaming (I was connected via 100baseT ethernet).

Time will tell what the USB port on the back really is for.

Reasonably priced dimmable compact fluorescent bulbs

I found a reasonably priced compact fluorescent bulb that is also dimmable with standard incandescent dimmers. Most are not compatible with dimmers and thus ones that do are expensive.

I only ordered four to start with for the studio. The bulbs are rated at 23 watts, each replacing a 85 watt flood. The new bulbs save 248 watts of energy and put off more light (equivalent to 400 total watts of light). The four pack of bulbs from the Amazon vendor ended up costing $5.87/ea including shipping. Buying more brings the cost down.

An unfortunate side effect of these is that the X10 dimmer doesn't seem to function with these in place. The X10 signal is being sent but must be getting absorbed into the ballast in the bulb because I couldn't make them dim. I'll be replacing the X10 dimmer with a standard dimmer. I'm worried they'll buzz when dimmed so I'll be holding the final verdict until I can test.

Link.

HandBrake forked to MediaFork

The great thing about open source is where one person leaves, someone else can pick up and continue. It's been over a year since we've seen an update to the venerable Handbrake, despite the fact the author plead his case for people to contribute money so he could purchase an Intel Mac and continue updating it. Some one else has taken the torch and forked the project, now called MediaFork. I look forward to the changes and hopefully some bug fixes along the way.

Link.

Making Snow at Home

While asking myself “how do ski resorts 'make' their own snow?” and after Googling the question, I came across a company that sells the tool to do just that, but on a smaller, more home owner-sized scale. Meet SNOWatHOME.com, a snow making stand that will set you back anywhere between $400-800 depending on size. This doesn't include the cost of an air compressor or pressure sprayer. Something tells me this is all just waste; wasting water, gasoline for the pressure sprayer and electricity for the air compressor. But still, I'd give it a try once (all in the name of science, of course).

Link.

YouTube Dump

An interesting way to complete multiplication by drawing lines. Link

A guy shows off just how flexible he really is. There's no such thing as double jointed, is there? Link.

Rep. Ackerman (D) of New York with some interesting comments on gays in the military. (You might be surprised!) Link.

YouTube Travels

WTTW gets pwned by Max Headroom. Link. Via BoingBoing.

CBS News report following the WTTW pirate video incident. Link.

Oh Gnoes!~!1 You can't drive a stick! Link. Thanks, Jnova!

Kid + big rubber band + ATV = severe neck injury. Link.

I admit, sometimes I forget which side the gas tank is on too. Link.

I racks my brains when I think about the Leader. Link. Thanks, Ben!

When Caller ID Isn’t Enough

We got a phone call today from an 800 number but the name was UNKOWN. We normally will not answer the phone unless we recognize the number or the caller abusively calls many times. I Googled the number and found a site called www.whocalled.us which allows folks to collaborate on unknown phone numbers and try and identify them. I discovered it was Sears calling me. They didn't leave a message on the machine, idiots.

Link.