Sunday, August 26, 2007

Remembering Babi

She was my grandmother. She was one of my best friends. She was a wonderful Christian woman who respected everyone and earned the respect of all who met her. She was "Babi".

As her two grandchildren, she taught Michael and I a great many things. She showed everyone how to be a better person and we would all do well to remember, refine and exemplify those lessons in our own lives.

It was two years ago today that Babi passed away. She has been missed by all. This world is a lesser place without her in it. She is with God and the angels, and even Heaven itself is enriched by her being there.

We miss you, Babi.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Google controls the weather

I love Google. I admit it and am not ashamed of it. However, today it got my hopes up and crushed them. Apparently Google cannot make it snow in 95 degree weather.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Bad-ass Bourne

First came Identity, then Supremacy, and now Ultimatum. One of the greatest action movie series ever created.

Steph and I joined Michael and Sarah this weekend to see the third installment in the Bourne series. It did not disappoint.

Let's get something straight. Bourne is NOT a Bond. Bourne doesn't have neat gadgetry, a sports car, a tuxedo, nor the want to charm anyone. Instead, he has a book, a newspaper, bare hands, and street clothes. I won't spoil anything for those of you that have yet to enjoy the latest in the series. You will [hopefully] notice that the end of Supremacy was actually well into Ultimatum. We learn just how Jason Bourne/David Webb came to be and why he is seriously, undoubtedly, pissed off. (The whole promised-one-thing, doing-another trick.)

Matt Damon is an action hero (ahem, the chase in Morocco). He doesn't need Ben Affleck getting in his way. Julia Stiles is back -- at first as eye candy, but you realize she's wrapped into the plot more than ever before. And, if there's not a fourth movie, a lot of people will always be asking questions.
See this movie, my friends -- only after you've seen Identity and Supremacy, of course. It rocks.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

RedBox and the Golden Arches


After seeing RedBox on Engadget and in my local McDonalds as well as the McDonalds near my work I just had to give it a try.
One dollar ($1) per night with no late fees. You just pay $1 for each night you have it past 7:00pm. If you visit RedBox.com you can get your first night free. Some McDonalds have these inside and some are in the drive-thru. And, you can return the movie to any RedBox location. You can rent online to reserve your movie for pickup at the vending location of your choice.
Why is this better than NetFlix? Simple -- little to no waste. Steph and I were on the $17.99 plan at NetFlix which was unlimited rentals with 3-at-a-time. Most months we watched 3-4 movies. That was $20 (with tax) for 4 rentals, or $5 each. So, we changed to $9.99 which was 1-at-a-time unlimited and we watched 3 movies in 2 months. That was $20 for 3 movies or just shy of $7 per rental. We were giving our earned cash away for nothing.
We have a Series 3 Tivo and can download through the Amazon Unbox service. This has the pros of never being out of stock and you can have the movie of your choice in 15-30 minutes download time. You also get 30 days to start watching it and once you start you get 24 hours to finish it. There's no driving and no return necessary. What it is not is DVD quality video and is only stereo sound (not Dolby 5.1 or DTS). And at $2.99 a pop it's only marginally better than NetFlix.
What I find with RedBox is that the 3-4 movies we watch cost us $3-4 in total, not each. If we don't have time to watch we don't pay anything. We have to pick up the discs and take them back but it's not like we aren't out and about daily (and often several times a day).
So, here's to you, Golden Arches, for partnering with one of my new favorites -- RedBox.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Google Labs, GrandCentral, OhDontForget, and Mozy

Friends, as a part of my job I research and explore new technologies and seek ways to put them to good use. Some fall into my "why in the world" category, some into my "that's cool" genre, and a select few I choose as "must have". Today, I share a few of the best finds with you and you may have heard of these before, but never reviewed with my intense wit and charm (see what I mean?).

Google Labs' GOOG411 and Reader
Call me biased but there's one company that doesn't often make a mistake with their product. If it needs "fixing" they do it and quickly. I wasn't impressed by the first version of Google Reader but in it's latest iteration I have found it incredible. I can subscribe to as many RSS feeds as I want and Google Reader will feed them to me however I want -- chronologically, random, alphabetical -- and know what I've read and what I haven't. I can see, at a glance, all the feed topics and after viewing those that catch my eye I can click "Mark All Read" and move on. Why use this over Outlook or IE's built in reader -- simple. I can use Google Reader on my laptop at home, desktop at work, my Motorola Q and the content is the same and always up-to-date.

Labs recently debuted GOOG-411, a voice-response system that is free to use to find business listings. You simply dial 1-800-GOOG-411 from any phone, tell it the city and state, and what you are looking for. GOOG411 presents you with the top listings and you can simply pick by number or ask for "more". Want GOOG411 to connet you, just stay on the line of say "Connect". You can also ask for "directions" or have it sent to you phone with "text message". An incredible alternative to cell providers charging you $1.49 per call to their own 411 service.

GrandCentral.com
Originally a start-up GrandCentral is now owned by Google. GrandCentral provides you with a single phone number that you provide to everyone instead of giving them your home, cell, and office numbers. They call one number and all of your phones ring, or only certain phones -- it's all up to you. Every call is logged and can be screened, sent to voicemail, recorded (which notifies the caller of the recording) and you can see it all online, mobile, anytime. You classify your frequent callers into Family, Friends, Work or Other and can choose which of those groups call which phones. And possibly my favorite part is that you only have one voicemail to check. GrandCentral is currently by invitation only and if you ask nicely I may help you out (cash bribes accepted).

OhDontForget.com
Simple service but very handy. You "add" your number to the service and then you can schedule text messages to your or your spouses phone at any time using a very simple interface. Very handy for quick reminders.

Mozy.com
Love this one. Most people have data they want to backup, but to where and how? You could have an external hard drive with one of those free softwares that copies data to that drive on a schedule. Great. Now you have it in two places hooked to the same computer that can be struck by the same lightning. We need to one-up this. Network Attached Storage (NAS) technology is essentially a hard drive on a stick. You hook the drive to your home network and your computer can backup data to this drive and you may not lose them both at the same time -- or will you? What if you were one of those affected by the April 7th tornado or Katrina and lost your house and along with it all of your precious digital data? Tax records, family photos, important documents all good in an instant.

For a while there have been services available such as Carbonite and XDrive that will backup your data over the Internet to a private storage facility. Enter Mozy. Carbonite has issues -- you need a client program to access/restore your data, you must transfer the entire file when changes are made, and multiple versions are not kept. XDrive, from AOL, also has the lack of delta transfer technology, but also cannot backup open/locked files. Mozy is incredibly easy to setup and 2GB of space is yours free. Have a lot of photos and other data? Need 50GB? No problem. XDrive will give you that for $120 a year. Mozy will do it for half that. Need 100, 200, or 500GB? XDrive will laugh at you. Mozy will answer the call and for not a penny more.

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Bruce is back

Having seen the first three Die Hard movies (numerous times) it is essentially impossible to ignore the latest movie -- "Live Free or Die Hard". I won't spoil anything for anyone, you can read the plot online if you want, but the movie is undoubtedly 'Die Hard' in nature. Things explode, a couple of bullets are distributed, cars are wrecked, and the body of a man endures impacts, blows, and injury beyond imagination. Sure, there are a couple that-would-never-happen scenes but overall it is one great action movie. Yes, fellas, take your wife. Steph liked it, too!

Friday, June 29, 2007

Joost takes me back

The university I work for recently partnered with Joost, a provider of Internet-based TV. Being a connoisseur of new technologies, gadgets, and steak, I wanted to give Joost a shot. Streamed video, no glitches, no synch problems, and a couple dozens channels to choose from left a great impression. However, it was when I saw the featured channel of the month -- the original Transformers cartoon -- that a twinkle came to my eye and I was reunited with, as Scott Brown wrote for Wired and so eloquently put it, the Almighty Rig. Watching Prime whip Megatron's ass again took me back to a time (circa 1985-87) when Michael and I had the plastic-embodied versions of Prime, his Autobot buddies, and Decepticon foes (and let me tell you -- they suffered battle damage and lots of it). Thank you, Joost!

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Seadragon + Photosynth = Uber Cool

I recently shared the following video with a colleague and we both agree it ROCKS. The video, from TED in March 2007, demonstrates Seadragon technology. Seadragon centers around a concept that you only need to render on screen at the screen's resolution. In doing so you can view photos at hundreds of megapixels and continuously zoom in to an almost infinite level. Imagine this -- being able to open your newspaper and the period at the end of a sentence contains the complete text of a book you want to read and the first letter on the first page of that book can be zoomed to reveal hidden secrets about the story. Yeah. You'll then see Photosynth which contains Seadragon technology. Photosynth lets you view a 3D environment from almost any angle, made from 2D images -- such as all public images from Flickr tagged with "Times Square". Very, very cool. Enjoy...

Friday, June 15, 2007

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Where have you been?

Courtesy of a recent online find, Visited States...

Saturday, May 26, 2007

POTC: At World's End

Sorry for the blogging hiatus -- work's been extremely busy lately. Steph and I saw Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End today at the new NCG theater in Gallatin. The new theater's DLP setup and digital sound made Keira Pirates look outstanding on the big screen.

Not the best in the trilogy I don't think, but still quite good. The spoilerless plot summary is that Elizabeth (Keira Knightley -- yeah), William and Barbosa want to rescue Jack from "Davy's Locker" (death) but all of them for a different reason (Barbosa owes a debt, William wants to rescue his father, and Elizabeth... well, watch it). Standing in their way, of course, is Lord Bennett & the East Indies Trading Co. Johnny's as great as ever, and "Jack" The Monkey is at his best yet, but more of this installment centers around Elizabeth [and why shouldn't it] and William. So, what did you think of this one?

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Car Care Questions Answered

Now that spring has come and most of the pollen is gone it's easier to keep a car clean. I've been asked several times lately what I use to clean the Acura TL with -- and what I use to attempt to keep it clean. So, I thought what better forum to answer those questions but on my blog.

Q: Do you hand wash your car?
A: I'd love to, and when I can, I do. However, I typically visit my local Super SpeedWash and get their Wheel Deal. Though automated, it does an exceptional job washing the car and shining the tires. However, once I drive around the vacuums, I always hand-dry the car with diaper cloth and take it home for the fine details.

Q: What products do you use?
A: I use a multitude of products. Specifically:

Q: Micro-fiber cloth instead of towels?
A: You bet. Towels leave lint. Towels are wasteful. A good micro-fiber cloth cleans incredibly well without any solvent/solution most of the time. I personally use VROOM micro-fiber automotive cloths from Target, but most any will do.

Have more questions? Just ask!

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Broadband with more cowbell

Just rebooted the cable modem after Comcast said "SpeedBoost" had been enabled in my area. Tests are not bad at allllllll...

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Livestrong Day 2007

This May 16th is Livestrong Day 2007. Wear yellow. Spread the word. Write your representatives in Congress. Demand government support.
  • There are more than 10 million individuals in the United States today who are living with cancer.
  • Nearly 40 percent of people living with cancer are under the age of 65.
  • 64 percent of adults diagnosed with cancer today will be living 5 years from now.
  • In 1960, 4 percent of children with cancer survived more than 5 years.
  • Nearly 80 percent of children (age 0 through 14) diagnosed with cancer today will be living five years from now.
  • The five year survivorship rates for young adults (age 20 through 40) with cancer has remained unchanged for the past 30 years.
  • Three out of every four American families will have at least one family member diagnosed with cancer.
  • 24 percent of adults with cancer are parents who have a child 18 years or younger.
  • One of every four deaths in the United States is from cancer.
  • In 2005, 570,280 Americans will die of cancer - more than 1,500 people a day. That's 9/11 every two days.
  • The annual cost of cancer in the United States is $189,800,000,000 in direct and indirect costs.
  • Government spending on cancer research was lowered for the first time in 30 years.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Prayers for Virginia Tech


Please send up your prayers for the families of those who lost their lives at Virginia Tech on April 16, 2007.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Destination Asheville

Stephanie and I spent April 11-13, 2007, in Asheville, North Carolina for a small spring vacation. We were fortunate to visit the Biltmore Estate during their Festival of Flowers with literally thousands of tulips in full bloom. We've placed 232 photos on Flickr for everyone to enjoy. Biltmore does not allow photography (videography, sketching, etc.) inside the house, but we certainly used some memory cards outside. HA! If you ever get the chance, North Carolina is truly gorgeous near the mountains surrounding Asheville and the Biltmore is something beautiful in photos and breath-taking in person.

Monday, April 09, 2007

TL: 3575 pounds and 183 inches of goodness

Yes, though I traded cars, I remain "TLdrvr". :) On Friday, April 6th, Stephanie and I became the proud owners of a 2005 Acura TL. It weighs 3575 pounds and is 183 inches long and in perfect health.

This TL sports a 3.2L SOHC V6 with VTEC good for 270HP, bi-xenon HID, XM, 7.1 DTS surround sound, Bluetooth HandsFreeLink, and LED lighting all around. Check out our pics on Flickr by clicking the image below of our beautiful TL and gorgeous model.


Friday, March 30, 2007

Web 2.0

A term has been tossed around for a while now -- "Web 2.0" -- and many people do not fully grasp what this means. I've been asked several times to explain Web 2.0 and recently came across this video that does an excellent job at demonstrating the mash-up process that has brought us to the living internet.

Monday, March 26, 2007

30th Mercy Heartwalk, Cincinnati, OH

This weekend the Hutzel family walked in the memory of Jameson Hutzel who survived 18 months with a congenital heart defect. This was the 30th annual heartwalk in Cincinnati. You can see from the image below -- we definitely were not there alone. Everyone you see was or still is affected by diseases that need cures. Click the pic for more information (and a closer view of the sea of thousands of supporters).

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Planet Earth

About 24 million households in America have an HDTV these days. Unfortunately, only about half actually pay to receive a true HD signal. Most people have had the experience of being mesmerized watching HDTV on a "Full 1080"-capable display. The human eye best perceives HDTV at 1080i/p (read: 1080 horizontal lines within the image) from about three times the height of the display. So, a 46" HDTV "looks best" to the human eye at about nine feet away.

Some media is "filmed" in HD and some HD content is converted from the original cinematic film. The Discovery Channel is premiering "Planet Earth" on March 25th with 11 episodes in total throughout April and May. I had the privlege of watching the first episode back in December when it was shown as a one-time teaser on Discovery HD Theater. In a word: amazing.

Shot in 200+ locations over 5 years in all high-definition. When they say "prepare to see it again as never before" they mean it.

Watch it, and not on any TV -- watch in HD. You'll thank me.