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Category Based Subscriptions

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

It has come to our attention that people might be confused about the category based subscription. If you are subscribed to all posts on Gadget Wisdom, the feed is www.gadgetwisdom.com/feed and will display as Gadget Wisdom.

If you subscribed to one of the sections, ie Android.gadgetwisdom.com, you will only get Android themed posts. If this is your intention, please continue to subscribe in this manner. Otherwise, please change over. For convenience, ever page now shows an All Posts subscription option.

For a complete list of feeds, please visit: http://www.gadgetwisdom.com/subscribe/

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So You Want to Take Control of Your MicroBlogging

Sunday, June 27th, 2010
Image representing StatusNet as depicted in Cr...
Image via CrunchBase

If you haven’t heard of Twitter, you may have been living under a rock for the last few years. If you aren’t quite sure what it is, then you are not alone. People who have Twitter accounts aren’t quite sure what to do with them, and some people will disagree on the point of Twitter.

Twitter is the most popular example of microblogging, although Facebook, extremely popular, is mostly such a service. Twitter limits updates…or tweets to 140 characters. This limit has made URL shorteners popular. There are advantages to the brevity of microblogging, and inserting URL allows you to elaborate elsewhere. We use it not only to interact with those who share interests, but as a real-time substitute for RSS. RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is the standard for subscribing to blogs.

So, although some have agreed with us, it is important we don’t miss important information. Many Twitter clients only go back so far. And your Tweets are held closely by Twitter itself. Twitter can cancel your account at any time…they don’t need a reason. While you can appeal it, they owe you nothing. You aren’t paying for the service.

As Backupify, a service that backs up cloud services to its site for you, and provides them in downloadable form, stated, “Imagine if your phone company behaved in a similar fashion, disconnecting your phone number(s) because it didn’t care for the phone conversations you were having. Of course, that could never happen — and not (just) because of government regulation. You pay for your phone service, so the phone company has a certain financial incentive to care for your business. Facebook, Twitter, and most web apps are free. Zero dollars buys you zero service level guarantees. Never forget that you have access to Twitter and Facebook only so long as it is convenient and beneficial to them.

Now, we do have an account with them, but we chose a different route. Being open-source enthusiasts, we looked for an open-source solution. We came up with StatusNet. It is a microblogging server written in PHP that implements the OStatus standard. OStatus is an open standard that allows people on different social networks to follow each other. It supports PUSH notification.

Diaspora, if it gets off the ground, is a proposal to replace Facebook with an open distributed platform. Anyone could run the software, thus allowing them to control their user data locally. Their local software would interact with other people’s to form a decentralized social network. It would thus work like an email address. Anyone could host your email…but you could choose to contract with someone to do so, and thus ensure a greater responsibility on the part of the provider, or choose a free option. The idea sounds great, and we wish them luck…

Unfortunately, without interoperability with existing services, it will likely occupy the same space as Identi.ca, the most popular and the original Status.net service. There are a lot of people happily on Identi.ca, but it is not a mainstream product.

We already had an Identi.ca account, but now we are running our own Status.net server. And Status.net supports a Twitter Bridge. It allows you to automatically send your notices to Twitter, send local “@” replies to Twitter, subscribe to your Twitter friends on the service, and import your Friends Timeline. The last is not enabled for Identi.ca, but allows you to import your friend’s tweets into your timeline. So, the Status.net server imports the Twitter data, which means that you have it on a server controlled by you.

Now, running your own server somewhere may be a bit too much for you. So Status.net offers single user instances, as well as private community instances. It is extensible with plugins. So any functionality you want could be built on top of it, or interact with.

Using the open standards it supports out of the box, you can subscribe to people from your status.net account who are on Google Buzz, Tumblr, Posterous, WordPress.com, Livejournal…etc.  140 characters isn’t required. You can set your instance to support 140 characters(Twitter Standard), or more or less than that.

Interoperability will hopefully lead to longevity. Even famous Twitter account ShitMyDadSays, has migrated to a Status.net instance. Having accounts on every single service can be confusing. If you can have an account on one service…and link to people on other services, isn’t that better?

We tried to ask a few questions of the founder of Status.net, in regards to how people were using the Twitter integration specifically, but the question was a bit open-ended, and thus we did not quite get all the answers we’re still looking for. Either way, it’s fun to play with.

More on this to come. In the meantime, any questions?

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SouthEast Linux Fest is Over

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

This weekend, our Editor was down at the SouthEast Linux Fest in South Carolina. Three fun filled days of interacting, speakers, vendors, free stuff, and oddly enough, playing board games. The panels put a lot of interesting thoughts on the table, and over the coming weeks, we plan to discuss a few of them.

These sort of discussions always light a fire under us. Already, we’ve started hardening our servers in various ways, started looking at a new way to explain MythTV to the guys over at HTPCentric, got scared about IPV6, etc.

SELF’s speakers were all filmed, and the video will be available eventually. We’ll post links when available.

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An Android Slate – A gPad if you Will – Thoughts on Tablets

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Reports are that Google is exploring building a tablet of its own based on the Android OS. Google had been encouraging third-parties to build such items, but now they are exploring a model closer to the Nexus One, where they sell the device directly.

Details on the Neofonie WePad were released. It will run an Intel Atom N450 processor, with an 11.6″ 1366×768 touchscreen, and a running time of about 6 hours. It will support full HD playback. The 16GB version will cost 449 Euro(about $600). A 3G version with GPS and 32GB will be 569 Euro. It will be available this summer.

Supporting established standards and peripherals like USB and bluetooth are essential. These standards are there, why not use them? Then any device will work.

The truth is, we’d like to see the tablet combined with the netbook. Lenovo is set to release the IdeaPad U1 Hybrid, which is both tablet and netbook, is an example. The screen can be removed from the netbook assembly and turned into a slate running an embedded OS. But having two processors and a $1000 price tag is a bit much.

Many years ago, our editor spotted someone using a PDA with a Targus Stowaway Keyboard. After some deliberation, he rushed out and bought a Handspring Visor and its Stowaway Keyboard. In fact, several of the Gadget Wisdom team(long before it existed), did so. Not long after, Handspring ceased to exist, but that is another story. We picked the wrong horse to back there. But, the idea was sound. A portable device that could be used to do basic productivity events.

The Android phones we purchased have the same benefits for productivity as our old Handspring Visor…although built-in external keyboard support would be nice. The price for an iPad is $500. You can get a 10″ netbook for around $300.

The tablet/slate has yet to be proven successful. But a hybrid device that could serve multiple uses could be most useful. Someone just has to perfect it. We aren’t there yet.

In the meantime…anyone want to buy a Handspring Visor?

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Celebrate National Library Week – Enjoy the Tech

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

National Library Week is this week. We here at Gadget Wisdom love to read, be it on our mobile devices, or traditional books. But the library is not just about reading.

Libraries offer DVD and video games you can borrow. They have e-books and digital media borrowing online. They offer free wi-fi. We hope the book itself, a piece of technology(if older tech), never dies, but the libraries are moving with the times. They have to, or they will cease to be.

So, support your local library.

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Eee Keyboard May Finally Ship

Monday, April 12th, 2010

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leTCKDmnnSQ

Liliputing, premiere site for netbooks and other compact computers, reports that Asus is finally set to ship the Eee Keyboard this month. We reported on the Eee Keyboard when it was first demoed at CES a year and a half ago.

It features wireless HDMI, and a built in touchscreen that can act as a small informational display.

The Eee Keyboard would make a compelling HTPC. It reminds us of our old Commodore 64, which had the entire computer within the keyboard enclosure. Of course, it would also, minus the computer power, make a nice keyboard by itself. We’re not sure of how this will take off. But we’ll be watching.

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MythTV 0.23 Release Candidate 1 Released

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Watch Recordings Menu under Graphite theme

Today, the MythTV Development team released the first release candidate for MythTV version 0.23. Highlights include:

  • Beta of MythNetVision, which we previously reported on. MythNetVision is a an official Internet video plugin being developed for MythTV. It uses user contributed scripts scripts to parse information so that it can be extended to additional sites as time goes by. When possible, it will download the video to the drive. Otherwise it will launch a browser(MythBrowser or otherwise) to view it.
  • Rewritten Audio System
  • A New Event System to trigger user specified actions when certain events occur in MythTV.

Looks good so far. We’ve been waiting for MythNetVision, and a lot of the fixes set to come with future versions. The best news is the more rapid release cycle. The gap between 0.21 and 0.22 was much longer than anyone preferred. Hoping to see more.

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The iPad…You Can Do Better

Thursday, January 28th, 2010
SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 27:  Apple Inc. CEO St...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

If you’ve read this blog before, you know we have some very legitimate issues with Apple products, while accepting that they have some useful and popular designs.

The iPad is essentially a giant iPod Touch, with a 10 inch screen, and the ability to run iPhone applications. There are criticisms, many of which are legitimate, but like many things, many wlll accept it because they’ve drank the Apple koolaid and because it has those good features.

Some think it may challenge the Kindle, but while the Kindle certainly has its problems, the iPad uses a conventional LCD screen, which may create readability issues for some over high-contrast E-ink screen of a Kindle or any of its current challengers. As part of the launch, Apple will launch iBook, their own online book store. We look forward to seeing how this plays out.

Can the downsides, and Apple’s unwillingness to respond to public feature requests be overcome by the fact that it is a cool giant iPod Touch with a new E-book service? We’ll wait and see.

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An HDHomeRun with CableCard?

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

GeekTonic caught this one before us. We’re big fans of the SiliconDust HDHomerun Dual Tuner. SiliconDust has great support, and is well supported under Linux and Windows.

The HDHomerun streams video, once tuned, over the network to your device. Even without the SiliconDust, we think this is part of the future of video. If this device added a decryption device, it would decode the stream and then stream it unencrypted to the computer, allowing access to all channels.

Hopefully, there aren’t any more restrictions beyond that, and they aren’t forced to limit it to Windows only. We could imagine they’d have trouble convincing Cable Labs that Linux users would honor the broadcast flags, but if it does what we hope it does, we’d have one on pre-order the day they came out.

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XBMC Releases Version 9.11

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010
XBMC Media Center
Image via Wikipedia

On December 24th, XBMC Version 9.11 was released. It includes a variety of GUI improvements, and playback improvements, including support for RTMP video streams, which is the system that Flash Video players use.

Like Boxee, which is based on it, it doesn’t compile easily under Fedora(our primary operating system), easily, but has wonderful support under Fedora.

The most wonderful aspect of XBMC, which carried into Boxee are the plugins. A loyal community of scripters write plugins to pull in video and audio content from a variety of sites. The difference between XBMC and Boxee is that Boxee often gets cooperation from the content providers for their plugins…in fact, this is part of their goals.

So, give it a shot.

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