Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Holiday Playlist

Before a wrap up of the songs that I've enjoyed most in 2009 I present the songs I've enjoyed most in December:

Swedish rapper Henok Achido singing high on life (when the drugs don't work).



And...A track I heard in the Morgan Freeman movie 10 Items or Less by Kemo The Blaxican named La Raceta.


It may only be two but I have a feeling that they will be songs that continue to be played throughout 2010.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

The internet that Australia is missing out on

Australians who have experienced the rest of the world's broadband can often be heard complaining about the slow speeds and low data caps available to us. Whilst I sit here in Sweden with my (girlfriend's) 100mbit connection my friends at home max out an an effective 7mbit. There are numerous technical, environmental and commercial reasons why the speed of our internet has lagged behind but here I would like to examine some of the services that Australia misses out on either partly or entirely due to the speed of our internet.

  • Spotify: This is a music service that streams songs, entire albums and playlists written by you or friends on demand. Simply search for a song or artist, play the songs you want and now and then an advertisement will play. If you don't want to hear the ads then pay to subscribe and they're gone. There isn't anything else available in Aus that compares to the functionality and simplicity available with this service. Now why wouldn't it work in Australia: 5 hours of listening to medium quality songs (160kbs) would equal 2.8GBytes of data. That's 10% of my cap at home in less than 1 day of listening to music!!
  • BBC/4OD: Both the BBC and Channel 4 in the UK stream all of their programs to UK residents. As with broadcast TV the streams have adds at the start and sometimes during the show, but unlike broadcast TV you can watch what you want, whenever you want.
  • Streaming Movies & TV (and some more) in the US. To download a 2 hour movie at the lowest quality (500kbs) would chew through 3.5GBytes of limit and for most people cut a third out of their bandwidth. Leaving anyone who wasn't watching the movie with genuine 2002 speeds.
  • And MOG: a music streaming service that is not quite as good as spotify but still worth looking at.

Of course the federal government is attempting to build the National Broadband Network and they are doing their best to convince the public it's what they want but the spruking is in the hands of one of the least respected members of the government so I don't hold much hope.

All I've heard so far is stories of rural tourism firms that want to upload movies and high res pictures. Who is that convincing? The tiny number of people in the country who want fast internet? Innovators should be hearing about the amazing opportunities for new entrepreneurs (Spotify), the large media corporations should be hearing about the way to win back lost viewers (on-demand TV streaming) and the rest of the public should be hearing about the way in which entertainment will once again be enhanced with the new technology.

The problem is listing the services available to others doesn't really help. It's like telling someone the wine they're drinking is horrible, if it's all they've ever had they would have to have great faith in your judgment to change. Just telling people about the services available won't convince them that its necessary, that comes through experiencing the difference.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

I have a dream: Great Bike GPS

And someone made it:









 
Garmin Edge 705

I've been reading reviews and it seems to do almost everything that my ideal bike computer would do:
  • GPS, elevation, temperature;
  • heartrate;
  • ghosts of trails or a 'training partner' to compete against;
  • inter-device connectivity for sharing data with fellow users; and
  • online community to share data with.
It's bloody expensive at ~$500US (I think $300 would be a more appropriate pricepoint, but whilst no competitors exist I guess they can charge what they want) but most reviews are very positive about the quality and feature set.

I really want to know more about their 'training partner' as I've always thought that ghost partner to race against was a great idea in a bike computer. I would love (hate actually) to be able to see myself from last weekend gaining on me as I rode up a hill, knowing that I must beat him.

This does bring up a problem though: what if you don't want to race? Once I started timing my 5km runs I also started to skip runs when I wasn't feeling 100%. My logic was why run when I knew I wasn't going to beat my time? Of course this had a double negative effect. If I skipped a run I was inevitably slower next time, even more demoralising as I actually felt good and then didn't perform.

Would this happen if I had a 705? Would I even care about that if I had $500 to spend on a bike accessory? (I don't have that to spend on a bike!). Could I make a better bike GPS? These are today's important questions.

Friday, December 4, 2009

James Bond

I loved Casino Royale.

I didn't even mind the non-stop, no-story action of Quantum of Solace the first time I saw it. I thought Daniel Craig was an interesting Bond, he'd obviously decided he wasn't going to ham it up; just play it straight and tough and I appreciate that in a secret agent.


However, I've been reading Thunderball, the James Bond story that introduces his nemesis Blofeld and all I can say is that the book Bond is an infinitely more interesting and likeable character. He's unashamedly smart, witty, not quite as self assured as movie Bond, and is a much more believable lady killer. I think that I shall research the Bonds of the past and report back on the blog on whom I think is the best match to the book - and then who I like the most.