Today I upgraded to
Comcast high-speed Internet. Wow, I guess I was a little slow to catch on to this service. The performance is so totally superior; I don’t even recognize the Internet at my house anymore. I am getting download speeds more than 10 times faster than DSL. I’m able to watch videos more easily, and downloading a 50 MB file is snappy. I’m online a lot, so I figure I just gained half an hour to an hour of productivity or more by making the switch. Oh and it costs less than my DSL service too. No contract.
I’m going cancel my DSL line, and with that my home phone line. The only reason I kept the landline phone was because of my DSL, and now I certainly don’t need that. I actually hate my landline phone from SBC. It costs a lot of money, and it doesn’t have free nights and weekends, and the charge me for “long-distance� calls which can be just the next town away. To avoid getting ripped off on toll calls, I subscribed to Sprint long-distance at an additional cost and they bill me an annoying service fee that just went up even if I don’t make any long distance calls in a month. Most of the calls or receive on my home phone are from solicitors anyway so it is pretty much a SPAM phone. I’m going cable modem and cell phone only, and I don’t see why I would ever want to go back.
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I am so done shopping at brick-and-mortar stores. The last few days I just had too many frustrating experiences. What a waste of time! I got a copy of the movie Sahara from
Peerflix, which is a pretty cool service by the way, but it wouldn't play and I really want to see the movie so I was a Target and checked to see if they had a copy in the video section. I would've bought it even at full price, which really doesn't make a lot of sense, but they were sold out. Then on my way home I stopped at a store called The Learning Center to pick up some addition flash cards for my son. Of course, they had every flash card imaginable, but were sold out of addition. Finally today, I needed a four foot card table, so I went Office Depot and, of course, they were sold out of four foot card tables. What a nightmare for them because instead of coming back later or buying something else, I'm just going to buy these items directly on the Internet and most likely from someone else with cheap or free delivery, no sales tax, and a lower price.
Recently, I've even been shopping for groceries on the Internet. I happen to have a computer in my kitchen and it's super convenient order food from Safeway.com right there in my kitchen where I can see exactly what I have and what I don't have. They also remember what you purchased before. And they don't charge by weight so if you want to order 10 heavy cases of water just go for it. Finally, last month, I signed up for Amazon Prime. This is the new service you pay Amazon like $80 a year and get free two-day shipping on everything you buy. At first I thought this didn't make a lot of sense. Actually now I think this is a great program, because I buy a lot of things on Amazon and I don't know about you, but I at least often fall into the trap of buying extra items to bring my shopping cart total over $25 to get the “free� shipping. A lot of these extra items I'd buy just get the “free� shipping I really don't need to buy at that time so it's a waste of money and then anyway the free shipping usually takes a week or more to get to me which is very frustrating.
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Filed under:
Video
Vidal —
over 4 years ago
I wanted to share something really incredible I found. If you’ve never visited the
Internet Archives it’s a site worth visiting. I found out about this a few weeks ago. In the future everyone will have a camera and this is already changing the way news is reported. The archives has a collection of publicly contributed audio and video files some of which are very remarkable.
Checkout the amazing home videos taken of tsunami. There are films that people took on their camcorders as it was happening! People didn’t even understand what was happening. I mean who’s ever experienced a tsunami, right? Check out this video of a restaurant flooding. There are other videos of people standing on the beach as the waves come in and then you see the person taking the film turn and try to run away when they realize the danger they are in. Click here to view video.
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Filed under:
Business
Vidal —
over 4 years ago
AOL Buys Weblogs to Boost Blog Presence - Yahoo! News
According to this article, AOL paid $25M all cash for Weblogs, Inc. This is pretty amazing, and shows how blogging is heating up. I happen to know that about half of their traffic comes from engadget.com, so figure that one site
engadget turns out to be worth about $12M.
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Filed under:
Events
Vidal —
over 4 years ago
The Internet boomlet is here! This week I’ve been attending
Web 2.0 in San Francisco. This conference is totally jampacked with sessions and people! There’s obviously a tremendous amount of interest all things Internet again. And there’s clearly a tremendous amount of possibility and creativity emerging. The
Web 2.0 conference covers a lot of ground, including Rich Internet Applications (RIA) using Ajax or Flash, new ideas in search, mash ups, open source, video games, online music, and online advertising, etc. A lot of really great demos are being shown. Some of the
speakers are real characters including Barry Diller, president of IACI, John Battle, journalist who is like the MC of the conference, Reed Hastings, the president of Netflix, and even Mickey Hart from the Grateful Dead! I recorded some of their talks and will post later.
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Last week I attended a special program from
Landmark Education called “
Living a Created Life.� This three hour special program focused on how much we are controlled by our bodies and lower brain functions, and how little we really are in control of our own lives. If we’re just reacting to our bodies needs for survival, hunger, and other physical stuff then who we think we are is really just mainly along for the ride. I read an article a few days ago about how when two people are attracted to each other so much of the attraction is based on physical and chemical interactions that we’re totally oblivious to. What we think when we are in love means nothing which is, of course, really not at all surprising to anyone who has been there. The psychological term for all these things we do without really understanding why is the “adaptive unconscious.�
In any event, if you haven’t attended any programs previously from
Landmark Education, I highly recommend them. Landmark offers a series of group personal development and communications courses, and seminars, and a bunch of other stuff too. What to learn about yourself might surprise you.
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To totally show off today, I am posting my first video blog entry. I took my handheld video camera to CTIA on Wednesday and recorded some clips. My first clip is a demo from my friend John Chaffee, President of
Splash Data. In this video, John demonstrates his product
SplashBlog which lets you instantly publish photos from your camera phone to an online photo blog to share with others. I thought this would be very appropriate for my first video blog. It's a great product, and I will let the video speak for itself.
Click here to view video.
How hard was this? Plenty. I attended a presentation last weekend at Webzine 2005 about video blogging which pointed me to the excellent tutorial site http://www.freevlog.org/.
What could possibly go wrong? I had immediate video compatiblity problems between the my PC and SC-X105L camera. I couldn't get either Quicktime Pro or Windows Movie Maker to edit the AVI videos created by the camera. I downloaded numerous codecs, and diagnostic tools. Interestingly, I could view my videos just fine in Windows Media Player 10 but editing them is a different matter. After a lot of messing around (read days), and downloading stuff, I was able to get this done using Ulead Video Studio 9 which also includes a plug-in to make PSP movies in MPEG4 format. The PSP verison of the video is very cool. I didn't get a chance yet to play with all the cool editing and mixing features of Ulead Video Studio 9.
Now, I am the media, and I can broadcast video.
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