Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Now I’m a Mac user, too

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

2009_apple_macbook_pro_closed

Tuesday 3 March may well become a life-changing day. To make for a smoother publishing workflow, we’ve all switched platforms to Macs in the office. Though it’s still early days, and some of us are still adjusting to the new (and better) ways of working the new hardware enforces, most would agree that the switch has proved successful.

Not just at work, either. Though I’d used the publishing fraternity’s favourite machines in my previous job, that was over seven years ago, and they didn’t like the network at all. Since then, I’ve been an exclusive PC user in the office and at home, but not any more. Goodbye slow operating system and blaring cooling fans and hello faster, prettier working and barely whispering aluminum unibody MacBook Pro.

2009_apple_macbook_pro

Living with someone who writes about Macs everyday, the switch was always just a matter of time. The machines’ arrival at work was inevitable and we knew they were coming, but I was unprepared for how fast I would want to ditch the Microsoft way of doing things (even though I did find it terribly frustrating). I’m now proud to be well and truly a Macophile, and can’t see me switching back to a humdrum and anonymous PC again.

This of course, does bring about its own set of problems. Like software programs that need new versions downloading and documents that need converting to work on the new platform. But, my old HP laptop has virtually been stripped of my stuff, and is almost ready to be mothballed. I’ve not missed it at all, and can’t wait to start using the neglected and slightly battered PowerBook G4 that has sat around in the study for ages.

It sounds silly, but an unexpected side effect is that I feel strangely happier and less stressed in my (almost) Windows-free world. And, although I’m still treating the new work machine way too much like a baby, welcome shiny new Mac world. It’s going to be fun.

Weathering the TV forecasting storm

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

It’s not only music that will be endearingly remembered from the 1980s. A late night discussion between the two of us this week concluded that most TV weather forecasts these days are nowhere near as good as the ones from over twenty years ago. It’s all about the graphics, you see.

While the BBC had a furore on its hands three years ago with its current map that sweeps under the forecaster’s arm when speaking about the weather for a particular UK region, the corporation’s slots have long been the best. On Wednesday night on the other hand, we decided that ITV‘s are still the worst. Why? Both national and regional broadcasts are not detailed enough. But, most displeasing of all, they use cheap-looking, and outdated symbols and graphics.

Modern-day broadcasts are a long way from the weather forecasts on the Beeb from the late Seventies and early Eighties. There were no green or blue screen maps and no digital imagery back then, and the few-minute slots were all the better for it. Yes, they seem antiquated and outdated now, but will there ever be weather symbols more iconic than those of BBC Weather from thirty years ago?

Simple, stylish cloud-like outlines, with clear graphics attached to denote hail, rain, snow, or sun, the forecasters stuck the magnetic symbols onto the forecasting chart behind them, moving the pictures where necessary from one part of the country to another, to show changing conditions. Of course, as technology advanced, the boards were gradually disposed of, but even when computer graphics were first used, the symbols stayed.

In the older forecasts, the BBC’s presenters used to walk around the studio, too, from one board to the next, and the satellite pictures were no more than photocopy-looking grey and grainy scans. The blue outlined map on them looked like it was drawn with a felt-tipped pen, and with the absence of a hand-held clicker to change the picture, symbols and areas of the country were pointed at by big sticks and pencils.

All endearingly low-tech, and the like of which we’ll never see again. No doubt there’ll be many more  innovations and high-tech solutions to help the forecasters inform us of our changing weather patterns, but they’ll no doubt be cloudy and foggy compared to those bright and sunny forecasts of yesteryear.

Firefox 3.0

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Firefox Download Day 2008 

One thing that makes my internet surfing a much better experience, is Firefox, the open-source browser launched by the Mozilla Foundation in 2004. I’ve not been a fan of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer for a long time now, and even though it’s still the most widely used browser in the world by some margin, Firefox does just about everything better.

Whether surfing and reading pages, downloading media files, or buying online, the programme that uses the fox wrapped around the world as its logo makes the internet simplicity itself. Others agree; most of my friends use it, and 15% of worldwide online users are Firefoxers, too. And with plentiful plug-ins, smooth running on both PCs and Macs, and customisable looks, it’s easy to see why.

And so it’s with great anticipation that the latest version, Firefox 3.0, is launched today. Mozilla senses that anticipation, too, and so aims to set a record for the most software downloaded in 24 hours. It’s not even just any record either; it’s aiming for a Guinness World Record.

‘It’s a global effort to make history,’ the developer says. Is it aiming too high? Who knows, but with over 1.6 million downloads of version 2.0 in 2006, it might just do it. A reported 1.3 million users have already pledged to download the new version (myself included) when it goes live at 18.00 BST.

Tech-savvy users love Firefox, and the update promises many new features. Automatic warnings when users stray onto web pages booby-trapped with malicious code is one, and the ‘Smart Location Bar’ is another. This lets users return to sites they have visited before, but not necessarily bookmarked, also helping those who cannot remember the name of a site that they really liked. Improved security and faster browsing are but bonuses.

There’s no actual record for software downloaded in 24 hours, but ‘Download Day 2008’ aims to get 5 million copies of the programme onto existing users’ machines. Around 2 million users currently use the ‘fox, so Mozilla are obviously counting on word of mouth and promotional internet campaigns. Click the banner below to get your copy of Firefox 3.0, and help challenge Internet Explorer’s dominance.

Firefox Download Day 2008 Banner

Birdsong

Monday, February 4th, 2008

With the replacement Pure micro system finally here, the DAB wonders of 18 digital radio stations now fill the front room in the flat. The timer is set up to record numerous BBC Radio 4 programmes to the SD card, and I wonder how I ever managed without it.

Searching through the station list on Sunday morning was surprising, though. A station named Birdsong appeared in the channel choices, (unsurprisingly) playing nothing but birdsong. Just like Big Brother does when its housemates talk about anything remotely contentious, or exercise their foul and uncouth mouths. First recorded in 1992, the audio track was last broadcast three years ago.

Birdsong on DAB
Birdsong is broadcast daily from 06h00 to midnight

It turns out it now occupies digital speech station Oneword Radio’s frequency, before it stopped broadcasting on 12 January, along with another popular DAB channel, Core. The only national commercial radio station offering spoken word entertainment, Oneword Radio first hit the airwaves in 2000, won many awards, and was the commercial riposte to the BBC’s Radio 4.

As well as birdsong, a ‘rural soundtrack’ will be played in place of the station’s programmes for the time being. And although not music, it was strangely (and surprisingly) soothing on a Sunday morning, and seemed to bring the outside indoors. What other aural delights make up a ‘rural soundtrack’, though?

Cows moo-ing? Lambs baa-ing? Cockerels crowing? The Archers already does those sounds more than well enough. That programme’s listeners would no doubt already be listening to other similar programmes on Radio 4.

And therein lays the probable answer to Oneword’s demise. The BBC has been offering a broad mix of spoken word programmes for years.

BBC iPlayer

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

With the ever-busy lives of their viewers getting busier all the time, major UK TV broadcasters must ignore on-demand TV at their peril. The BBC has been slow on the uptake, but has finally pushed the BBC iPlayer into the virtual world, to try and seize the time back for viewers who simply don’t have time for ‘live’ TV anymore, and to jump on the competition, including Channel 4′s 4oD.

BBC iPlayer
BBC iPlayer homepage

Having tried and been impressed with 4oD a few months back, I thought it was about time I gave the Apple-sounding iPlayer a go. Good reports about the newcomer were widespread over the Christmas period, with quality and ease of use being the major attractions. I’d missed the first episode of the BBC’s new frothy and dark drama, ‘Mistresses‘, and so settled down to watch it while I worked last night.

One of the main differences between the BBC and Channel 4 services is that the BBC’s service is totally cost-free, and programmes can be streamed online, meaning no downloads and no third party software. Selected programmes on 4oD are available at minimal cost (usually 99p), whereas content on the BBC version doesn’t cost you a penny.

The only catch is that the programme selection is only from the last seven days. However, programmes can be watched online by streaming, or they can be downloaded to your computer where a 30-day watchable window is exercised.

It certainly hasn’t put people off. The BBC reports that over one million viewers have used the service since the Christmas Day launch, and states that over 3.5 million programmes have been streamed or downloaded, averaging 250,000 programmes a day. Impressive figures. Is the service as good, though?

I’ll admit that I haven’t tried to download any programmes to my system yet, so can’t directly compare the iPlayer and 4oD’s similar service, but the streaming content is certainly up to the job if you have a fast computer.

The programme was easy to find through the homepage, and could be searched by the day of broadcast, category, or by its title in an A to Z index. Pressing ‘Click to Play’ started it straight away, with minimal buffering. The screen can be default size of the viewer itself, or can made full screen, for the ultimate TV-like viewing experience.

Like 4oD, the picture was very clear, the sound sharp, and enjoyed very little interruptions, even when buffering was needed again when returning to viewing from a pause. A wholly enjoyable experience then, and I would have no hesitation in using it again, especially as most of my TV-watching habits tend to favour Auntie’s (or Channel 4) programmes.

BBC iPlayer ‘Mistresses’
Fuss-free streaming playback with the BBC iPlayer

Are there any bad points?

If comments from users using the Beta version are to be believed, then yes. Rather mistakenly, the BBC iPlayer can only download programmes to a PC running Windows XP or Vista, due to the digital rights management issues and software, but it is ‘aware of demand to expand this to other operating systems’. It was a foolhardy and shortsighted decision to leave out Macintosh support, although Apple disciples can watch content if they stream it.

In reply to the decision, the BBC states that it hopes that by providing high quality programmes over the internet legally, easily, and at no cost, it will discourage illegal downloading. It says that it ‘uses streaming and DRM software to prevent illegal copying and distribution of BBC programmes to protect the rights of the people who make and appear in them’. That’s all very well, but it can’t monitor every download on every computer.

The Download Manager application has to be downloaded to your computer through Internet Explorer, too, due to Active X controls. But again, the BBC is ‘working on ways of making the Download Manager available on other browsers’.

I only hope that I don’t experience the same sorts of duplicate registering and slow download issues which affected many Beta users, and gave the long-awaited iPlayer a bad reputation among users before it was even launched on a patient and hungry public.

Not one to rest on its laurels, the BBC plans to develop the service further, extending the format choice, and bringing its radio programmes available on the BBC Radio Player into the iPlayer format, so that all the content is in one place.

And, if you don’t fancy sitting at a computer screen connected to the internet and have an old-fashioned TV, then the iPlayer will come to a cable platform near you soon. Just make sure Virgin is your provider, though, as it’s touching down on that first.

Finally, listen up international users. You will also get the full iPlayer experience as soon as possible. BBC Worldwide is fighting for your rights and is working on an international iPlayer so that you can enjoy the programmes which are currently only available to users in the UK.

Then, and only then, will the clever ‘Making the unmissable, unmissable’ campaign message be truly meaningful. But, overall, an impressive first, if a little late, effort.

(The first of ‘Mistresses’ was very good by the way, the lives of the four women developing darkly and nicely, with plenty of potential for drama. A welcome frothy addition to Tuesday nights.)