Archive for June 26th, 2008

I’ve been using the MSI Wind and for a tiny while now and have checked out a handful of things that our readers have asked about. I’ll have a full review of the notebook itself coming up soon but in the meantime, I’ve tested the following: Skype video recording and playback, HD video playback (WMVHD and […]

I’ve been using the MSI Wind and for a tiny while now and have checked out a handful of things that our readers have asked about. I’ll have a full review of the notebook itself coming up soon but in the meantime, I’ve tested the following:

Skype video recording and playback, HD video playback (WMVHD and AVCHD), Photoshop, Google Earth, StarCraft, Ubuntu 8.04, DVD playback with a mounted .iso image using DAEMON Tools, and more. Thanks for all the great questions, everyone…

Skype Video

Here’s the first in a series of tests that I’ll be running on the Wind, based on your comments. This is Skype Video, which I’m happy to report works quite well.

HD Video Playback

High-definition Windows Media Video files play back without any problems. Files in the AVCHD format, however, are nah-gah, nah-gah, not gonna work here.

Photoshop CS2

Unfortunately, Adobe’s taken the Photoshop CS3 trial down until July 1st so I had to make do with CS2. I used a 6-megapixel JPEG file, which opened in 27 seconds.

Google Earth OpenGL versus DirectX

Google Earth works okay on the Wind. It’s certainly useable but if you’re looking to use it a lot, you might need something more powerful. OpenGL mode works superior than DirectX mode, especially when zooming in.

StarCraft

I’m happy to report that StarCraft runs just fine. No problems there. It’s very smooth.

Ubuntu 8.04

Bad news on this front. I wasn’t able to get a standard installation of Ubuntu 8.04 to load up. That’s not to state that someone with more time and Linux know-how wouldn’t be able to get it going, though. It took a looooong time to load before throwing me to a prompt, even though one time it got all the way to loading up the Common Unix Printing System (cupsd) but it ended up just hanging there until I eventually shut down the personal. The Ubuntu Netbook Remix should work, though, as it’s designed for this type of device. I’m not savvy enough to figure it all out swiftly enough, unfortunately.

DVD Playback Test

I made an .iso file out of an old DVD and mounted it using DAEMON Tools. Everything worked perfectly. The Wind was running on battery power for this test, too, so it’d definitely make a good airplane companion.

Stress Test

The Atom processor is surprisingly tough. It shot up to around 95% with all of the following stuff happening at once:

- Firefox 3 with five tabs open, one playing a YouTube video

- Windows Media Player playing a WMA file

- Skype loaded but idle

- Webcam utility capturing video

- Big ZIP file being unzipped

- Opening Photoshop CS2

When everything was idle but the above programs were all still open, CPU usage hovered around 60% or so.

taskman

Geekbench 2

The Wind scored an 837 using Primate Labs’ Geekbench 2 benchmarking software. Here are some other systems with similar scores.

geekbench

Via [crunchgear]

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Alert! A rather amateur looking Web site is now selling region-free Blu-ray players. The site, Bluraymods.com, wants €499, or $785, for the Panasonic DMP-BD30. The regular price for the player is around $450-$500. That, or you can put that soldering iron to good use and mod the player yourself. The kit costs €89, or $140. via […]

hbr

Alert! A rather amateur looking Web site is now selling region-free Blu-ray players. The site, Bluraymods.com, wants €499, or $785, for the Panasonic DMP-BD30. The regular price for the player is around $450-$500.

That, or you can put that soldering iron to good use and mod the player yourself. The kit costs €89, or $140.

via Gizmodo

Via [crunchgear]

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China, the world’s most populous country, is a nation of 1.3 billion. Almost half, 592 million, use mobile phones according to Ministry of Information Industry figures. As mobile subscriptions have risen, land-line use has dropped. Mobile subscriptions in China are up 9% over last year’s numbers.

According to the Xinhua news agency, the main factor behind growth was a trend for mobile operators to cut fees in order to gain market share. Land-line providers lost 6.5% of their subscribers in the first five months of this year, falling to 358 million customers.

To help bolster declining land-line companies, China announced last month that it will restructure the telecommunications industry. Three giant companies will be created in the hope to bring back balance between land-line and mobile service providers.

Via Mobilecrunch

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Beat Boxing with Inspector Gadget Theme.



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The mobile game publishing company Glu will extend its exclusive, worldwide partnership with Activision to bring Call of Duty: World at War to mobile platforms. It shouldn’t be long before thumb thumpers around the globe enlist to fight Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany.

“We’re excited to extend our partnership with Activision and bring Call of Duty: World at War to mobile gamers worldwide,” said Jill Braff, senior vice president of global publishing, Glu. “The Call of Duty franchise has been a great addition to Glu’s portfolio of award-winning games, and we look forward to the continued success it will bring to the action category.”

Mobile phones will join other platforms such as Personal computers, Playstation 3, Wii and the Xbox 360 to bring intense battle to the palm of your hand. Glu will develop and publish the mobile version of Call of Duty: World at War for major wireless carriers around the world. The axis forces don’t have a chance to beat the warriors Glu will muster against them.

Glu

Via Mobilecrunch

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rokrsm

The cellphone companies (other than Apple; it’s perfect in every way imaginable) are still trying their hardest to make a decent MP3-playing cellphone. T-Mobile latest attempt is the Motorola Rokr E8, which will be available on July 7, the same date that Real Madrid want to announce the signing of Cristiano Ronaldo.

The phone, which debuted at January’s CES, appears to be more evolutionary than revolutionary—2GB storage, built-in FM radio, 2-inch QVGA display, etc. Thankfully, the phone has a “normal” 3.5-inch headphone jack; many such music phones had a 2.5-inch jack.

There’s also something called ClearTalk, which supposedly improves call quality. That’s helpful, since, in my experience, T-Mobile sounds a lot worse than Verizon Wireless in New York City. Really, the difference was startling.

bigrokr

Oh, and it’s EDGE not 3G. Ouch.

Via Mobilecrunch

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ucsandiegoco.jpgIf robots are ever going to get to the point where they have the ability to interact with people, they’re going to have to figure out how to read someone’s face. If a robot can’t decode my expression, it completely won’t pick up on my biting sarcasm and will take everything I state at face value, and I don’t think I need to tell you what kind of hilarious misunderstandings can spring from that.

Jacob Whitehill, a computer science Ph.D. student from UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering, has created a program that allows him to control the speed of a video via his facial expressions, the first step towards controlling robots via faces.

In the pilot study, the facial movements people made when they perceived the lecture to be difficult varied widely from person to person. Most of the 8 test subjects, however, blinked less frequently during difficult parts of the lecture than during easier portions of the lecture, which is supported by findings in psychology.

One of the next steps for this project is to determine what facial movements one person naturally makes when they are exposed to difficult or easy lecture material. From here, Whitehill could then train a user specific model that predicts when a lecture should be sped up or slowed down based on the spontaneous facial expressions a person makes, explained Whitehill.

Bring on the robotic professors! [Physorg via KurzweilAI.net]


Via [Gizmodo]

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Because of its use of stem cells, a skin regenerating gun would certainly cause a stir among conservative types—but if you were caught out on a battlefield with a gaping wound, you would be begging for technology like this. That’s why the Armed Forces Institute for Regenerative Medicine invested $250 million in a project focused on therapies like the famous “Pixie Dust” that can help heal soldiers on the front lines in Iraq. As for the the “skin gun,” it could spray skin-healing stem cells over a wound—helping it heal in a matter of hours.

Given the relatively small amount of funding and the potential ethical roadblocks the military would run into trying to develop a skin gun, my guess is that we probably won’t see a device like this in our local pharmacy anytime soon. But it is interesting to think that it could be possible somewhere down the line. [Pop Sci via io9 via DVICE]


Via [Gizmodo]

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