Friday, May 12, 2006

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Ars Technica likes Aperture 1.1.1

Ars didn't like Aperture 1.0. The reviewer thought it would get better - eventually - but that it was not suitable for use.

Now he's surprised by how much better it is:

Aperture 1.1 review : Page 8

Aperture 1.1 is everything that Apple should have released for 1.0 and at US$300, it's hard to say no now to this program.
Now if Apple would only process my iPod battery settlement credit correctly ...

dotMac (.Mac) has a blog

One entry describes: New easy iDisk Public folder web address

Now I can learn more and figure out if I want to try .Mac (awful name btw, can't search on it well. dotMac is what most of us write.) Smart blogs are the key to good value-added product marketing (to geeks anyway).

A LONG list of personal OS X software favorites

I love seeing lists of software that an expert user actually uses. It's worth more than a hundred 'software review' articles. It's how you find excellent software that's mature and changes little.

I know a lot of the products on this list: ReelSmart.com: My Favorite OS X Only Software but there are few new ones I'll check out. The ones I know of are excellent.

iWebSites: now I need to look at iWeb

This donationware utility (via Macintouch) reminds me that I iWeb came with my iLife 06 package. I'd sort of forgotten about it since it was so .Mac centric (which meant I had to decide whether I cared for .Mac, which could take me years at my current cycle capacity). Thanks to iWebSites I can assess iWeb on its own merits.
iWebSites Home

When Apple introduced its clever iLife web design software, iWeb, they left out one important feature: the ability to load and save multiple web sites. There isn’t even an “Open” menu item under the File Menu! You can create multiple “sites” that are somewhat independent of each other, but they still exist as one file (”Domains.sites”) and cannot be separately uploaded onto different web servers or into different .Mac accounts.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Gigapixel wars: how much information is really out there

A photo of Delft is over a gigapixel resolution. You can do quite a bit of cropping of such an image.

Pick any spot, then zoom in. Eventually you'll get to the image limit. It's easy to read the license plates of cars that are barely visible in the original view. Imagine being able to search a mountain for a lost person by taking a single image, then allowing thousands to search it by computer.

There must be tens of thousands of 'screens' in this image at the highest resolution. Delft is a quiet town, but somewhere in there one must be able to find something at least a little bit improper. Try picking a street, then walking it using your mouse. Let me know if you find anything!