Archive for December, 2009


So last night I needed to create an audio CD from some Youtube videos. The first idea was to use a sound recorder tool while playing the video. Then I said to my self maybe I should just convert the files online and then download them after they are converted. It was easy to convert some of the files, but some of them I had to wait for a long time. Then I realized that the files that worked easy have been already requested by other and they are cached. It would make sense why the other ones did not work. I also concluded that the services might be overcrowded.

I actually had a few downloaded FLVs from YouTube and I wanted to open them in and a FLV player that was laying around on my computer. When I found the FLV files on my USB key they all had the Real One player icon attached. Then I realized that if that is so, then Real One Player can play the files and it did. But I also knew that it can burn CDs, then I thought to myself, wouldn’t it be cool if it could just convert and burn the FLVs on an audio CD? Tried it, and it worked. I don’t even know why I had Real Player installed, but I do know that I only needed it once. Now I know that real player can burn audio CDs from FLVs, real nifty tool to have there.

To get the FLVs from YouTube just get them from the Temporary Internet Files folder under Internet Explorer, after you have viewed them. To get there go to Tools –> then Internet Options and in the new dialog box should be in the middle the Temporary Internet Files. Arrange the files by size because they would be among the largest size.

Now I see a better use of Real Player which until last night had no “Real” use to me. Funny right? Real! :)

Carry on daily devices

It was a long time ago when I had my first carry on music device. At first I was very excited about it, and 3 days later I forgot of its existence and its use. It became a chore to remember to take it with me and carry it around.

Nowadays we have all kinds of digital music players and they can hold thousands of songs. I did the IPod thing with one of those mini ones with a B/W screen. It lasted for a little time and then I got bored with it, it became a hassle too.

I had to remember to carry it and recharge it, and renew the music in there because I did not want to have all the crap in there. By the way, how do all of you manage 15 thousand songs in there? In addition when do you have time to listen to all the music? And if you’re telling me that you listen to music while you’re studying, no wonder your GPA sucks. I’ve seen the movie myth where they show the main character doing some homework while listening to music. That never works not on math, and not when memorization is required.

Anyway I can’t just get used to the carry on music device. Just today I saw someone in the train with three bags and the eternal Ipod. And it wasn’t enough that she could barely manage the 3 bags, but the moment she sat down she took out her Ipod and started untangling the ear buds to listen to some music. Kudos to her because she could manage all these at once. But given today’s age we already are carrying at least two devices with us. One cell phone and one music device. That is only in happy cases. But there are people out here that carry more. Well done to all of them for being the perfect consumers. So how many gadgets can one person carry at once? I would say a portable gaming device, a phone, at one time there even were portable DVD players and some people actually were sitting in the train using those things.  But the DVD player conflicts with the gaming device so it would be one or the either. So we have a Cell phone, a gaming device/ DVD viewer, music device, reading device -the Amazon kindle, and who knows what else people are carrying these days. But I can guarantee that soon enough we all will be carrying Batman belts for all the junk we carry with us every day. I wouldn’t be surprising if we’ll see belts already that have all these features. Maybe I should sell my own. Regardless of that, the people at Apple had a great idea unifying all those gadgets into one. Because these iphones can do almost all the other individual gadgets can.

One thing is really, really expected, and that is an iphone that can easily be unified with an exchange server without lots of hassles and then no one would be able to take Apple for cell phone domination, business, and consumer. The main problem that they have to face right now is the reliability of the technologies that would make the iphone compatible with Exchange (the e-mail server).

Good luck to all of you gadgeteers outhere, but remember that sometime you just need to have your mind empty, completely if possible, and there is a very rewarding experience.

http://www.engadget.com/2009/12/08/wireworlds-platinum-starlight-hdmi-cable-is-only-1-000-better/

It is interesting when the blogger on engadget actually sais “You probably think you’re getting the whole 1080p, don’t you! Boy, you couldn’t be more wrong”

I have to disagree on that one. And Yes I am getting my whole 1080p with a cheap $5 HDMI cable.

They say here that this cable is supposed to be better than the whole monster cables which were supposed to be amazing. Anyway I have to disagree with all the cables, unless the HDMI is analogic.

I know that whenever a signal is digital, error correction can be done on it, therefore even if let’s assume 10% of the information is lost, we get full quality picture. That is the theory on all digital devices. Have you ever had a CD that had some severe scratches and it still played fine? Well that is because of the error correction. Furthermore the buffer under run protection in CD/DVD writers is based on that. If the buffer gets depleted, the writing stops and it’s resumed when enough data is accumulated into the buffer to continue writing. If that would be an audio CD we should hear the gap of the error, right? Well, no. Because the information is digital and error correction can be done on it, therefore the continuous play of the CD.

The same with the HDMI. HDMI means: HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) is a compact audio/video interface for transmitting uncompressed digital data. The keyword is digital here. If the signal is digital then doesn’t matter what type of cable we have because as long as enough signal gets to the TV where error correction can be done successfully then we get the entire picture without any loss of quality.

To me it is a myth when they say that this cable is gold plated or silver or platinum plated and the quality is better. Total BS, because all that I have studied says the contrary. If the signal is digital and enough to get error corrected, then the quality should be identical with any cable.
For example, the Dish systems claim that if the signal strength is above certain percentage the image should be crystal clear, and only when it drops below that we get to see problems. Most of you out there must have experienced the satellite dish glitches, the images get pixelated. Based on this premise, has any of you seen (the low signal dish effect) with a low quality HDMI cable? Cuz I have a piece of S..T HDMI cable and I never seen the similar effect on my TV.

Since I haven’t done any research on this at all, in the sense of testing cables with special measurement instruments (like vectorscopes and alike), I can’t guarantee that I am totally right, but mathematically speaking any cable should get the same job done. Because there are no images transmitted through the cable, there are only binary code (ones and zeroes) that get processed by the TV. Therefore the image should be flawless unless the cable is defective or the HDMI standard is not really digital.

To me HDMI is a hoax to scalp or speculate the market for more money, because I have heard a rumor that HDMI capacity has been exceeded by the technological demands of today, so they will have to refit all TV’s with Dual DVI again which allows for a lot more data transfer than HDMI therefore better image quality. So then all of us will have to buy new TV’s because the DVI isn’t there in the latest TV sets.

Perhaps the MythBusters can actually do a test and solve our problem. But for the record, given all the premises I gave you, you could ask and computer scientist and they should say the same thing. If the signal is digital, then the cable just has to be functional. No gold silver or diamond plated BS. And why in the hell I would buy a Cable that is more expensive than my whole TV?

Sources: Engadget and Wikipedia.

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