Archive for June, 2006

Entertainment

I don’t have a TV at the moment and I’ve run out of books to read. So, I’ve been spending my time honing a quiet, cheap HTPC/PVR parts list. Just in case anyone is interested, I’m posting it here.


Part Model Price
CPU Sempron 2800 44.34
Motherboard Gigabyte GA M55Plus-S3G 58.87
Memory 2 * Corsair DDR2 512Mb 56.40
Enclosure Antec P150 (inc PSU) 79.84
HDD 250Gb Samsung SP2504C 52.28
DVD LiteOn SHM-165P6S-02C 23.20
GPU 128Mb Gigabyte FX5200 (passive) 24.66
Monitor 20-inch Viewsonic VX2025wm 293.46
TV Cards 2 * Compro VideoMate DVB-T200 68.16
Total 701.21

Its a pretty sweet system – the components are mainly noise and/or power friendly (apart from the DVD drive which shouldn’t be on all the time). The Antec P150 has HDD suspension built-in and, according to Silent PC Review, its pretty good in terms of thermals and acoustics, too.

Update: 2006-08-12

Correction to the above – don’t get the FX5200 as its an AGP card and that motherboard doesn’t have one. D’oh! I’ve been building computers long enough that I should have spotted that one :-( Instead, I got a Gigabyte geForce 7300, which is also passively cooled, and about the same price.

June 24th, 2006

Tactile Tech

While I was testing my new internet connection, I came across this interesting design project called Allmyfriends by Jack Godfrey Wood. The project, with Nokia, was to design future mobile phones and this particular entry does away with the usual “buttons and screen” view of the mobile phone. Instead, contacts are represented by tactile “beads” which are squeezed to call that person. To give someone your contact details you just give them a bead, allowing them to associate a physical object with you.

This is a neat twist on the idea of a contact. Currently we have numbers, which is good for writing down, storing in computers, sending to other people, but mobile manufacturers have to dress this up by allowing you to also store names, pictures and caller-dependent ringtones. Hiding the contact info inside a simple physical token allows the human brain, which is very good at recognising and interacting with real objects, to catalogue the information itself. Allowing people to generate, customise and distribute the physical tokens themselves makes the process of exchanging contact details a more human social interaction – the tradition of gift exchanging is extremely old.

This is a similar idea to the Personal Area Network, which could allow people to exchange business cards simply by shaking hands, in that it attempts to hide the exchange of computer-readable data behind a human social interaction.

Unfortunately, allmyfriends suffers from two major drawbacks: the creation of the physical tokens and the ability to forward contact details without the physical object. Firstly, the physical tokens must be unique (or very nearly unique) so that they can be associated with a single individual, but this is incompatible with methods of mass-production. Possibly, the tokens could be sold in a few basic forms and customised. The second problem is for when you don’t want to give a token, either because you’re giving your contact details to someone you want no social interaction with (e.g: a company) or someone who is not physically present (e.g: over e-mail). For this, I guess we could keep the current system of identifying numbers.

I guess these problems are not insurmountable and I wish Jack Godfrey luck if he chooses to further develop these very cool ideas.

June 14th, 2006

Blackout

So I did find a flat, just in time! It was a bit hectic moving in, but I had some good help and we managed to get it all done in a single day. Then, of course, comes all the paperwork. I think I’m up-to-date now with everyone that should be sending me stuff, but it took a while for BT and/or my ISP to move over my broadband, so I’ve been in a blackout for two weeks.

Its pretty interesting, living as my ancestors did: without internet or TV! ;-)

Basically, there’s not much to do but read, hack and go out with friends… So its actually a pretty good life and I’m in the process of deciding if I actually want to get a TV at all. (Well, possibly a computer with a TV card and MythTV). This is precisely what steve has been saying for quite a long time and I’m beginning to think that he’s right.

1 comment June 14th, 2006


Calendar

June 2006
M T W T F S S
« May   Aug »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category