2010 Best New Stuff

2010

Since I already shared what tech I enjoyed using the most in 2010, I thought I would also share what I think the best new tech was in 2010. (Heah, better late than never, right?) Commenters: What did I miss?

  1. Amazon Kindle 3 – Amazon did better than designing a better mousetrap.  They designed a better book.
  2. Apple iPad – Your grandmother never even knew a tablet computer existed.  Now, she wants one (and so do your kids).
  3. Netflix streaming – a beautiful new way to waste time, now with movies from Paramount, Lionsgate and MGM (as of 2010)
  4. Nexus S – Pure Googley goodness.
  5. Apple MacBook Air – Reborn as a netbook (despite Apple’s disclaimer), the Air is rarefied and heavenly.
  6. Android Voice to Text | Dragon Dictation – Keyboard?  I don’t need no stinkin’ keyboard.
  7. Samsung Galaxy Tab – Android’s flag planted in the tablet space
  8. Angry Birds – Happy gamers
  9. Microsoft Kinect – not only is big brother watching you, he wants to play
  10. Windows Phone 7 – Raising the question of whether Microsoft actually can make a comeback as a dominant smartphone OS
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Android Evolves

Go to Apple site

Great.  Verizon finally gets the iPhone and it’s too late for me.  Android has its hooks into me big time.  I love just talking into my phone to perform a search or start navigating to a destination (Google Voice Actions). Today they announced their update to the Google Translate app. That’s the app ripped out of the space ship Enterprise. You speak into it in English and it speaks out in Spanish (or vice versa).

Go to Apple site

I’m into music and looking forward to trying the new Android Vevo app, but Google announced today that Vevo will also be incorporated into their already impressive YouTube app. I’m not excited about the midroll ads, but I am looking forward to keeping the music going while checking out the available info on the artist.

Not that there is anything wrong with the Verizon iPhone. I loved my iPhone and appreciate iOS. I’m just having too much fun with my Android phone to give it up.

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CES 2011 Non-News

Well, here’s what I haven’t heard so far.  There are a bunch of new phones with 4G.  Someone seems to have decided that 4.3″ is the best size for a premium phone.  I disagree.  It’s 4″.  There is no news I have heard of a 4″, 4G, dual-core, Corning Gorilla Glass, S-AMOLED, Google Voice Video Chat-enabled, Google labeled phone.  There is no news of a Google Nexus-like tablet demonstrating the pure tablety goodness of Honeycomb (Android 3.0).  I want my manufacturer-carrier goodies to be opt-in not crammed down my throat.   There is no announcement of Netflix on the new Boxee Box.  What CES news have you heard, that has you excited?

On the other hand, rumors are churning that Apple has something brewing for the end of this month.  Given the lack of Android good news (i.e. no tablet with unadulterated Honeycomb), I’m hoping for the iPad 2.  I’m also in the market for a new MacBook Pro.  Could that be what’s coming?  Hopefully, Cupertino will be less of a non-story than Las Vegas.

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Tom's Top 10(ish) Tech List

I hope my life has higher priorities than just wallowing in the pleasure of technologies.  But I do love technology and it has made my life richer and more fun.  The gang over at Unplggd inspired me with their bloggers lists of favorite tech.  This isn’t a list of stuff new for 2010, but stuff old and new that I enjoyed most in 2010.  So, without further ado, here is my Top Ten Tech of 2010:
Asus eee PC 1000He
1. Asus EeePC 1001HE netbook:  I’ve lost track of how old this netbook is.  Probably about two.  But I’ve used it so much that the shift-key spring has grown tired and droops.  Not only do I use it for road trips, it pretty much just stays in my gear bag to be conveniently pulled out whenever I need to do some fact-checking, web browsing, or checking email and my social network.  I don’t understand how people watch TV without something like this on their laps.  Would I rather have a MacBook Air?  Yes, but for the same price one could buy three of these.
Ovation Guitar
It isn’t just the tech that makes me love this work of art.  She sounds sweet unplugged.  But amp’er up and the result is breathtaking.  The same technology was used by the Ovation guitar played by Glen Campbell back in the day.  Frankly, there is no other guitar I would rather own.
HTC Droid Incredible
3. HTC Droid Incredible  Android smartphone.  Of course it’s a phone and I make phone calls with it.  That is why I gave up my otherwise sweet iPhone.  I wanted to make calls with it.  What surprises me is that I enjoy the Android OS as much as I did iOS.  I use my phone for viewing TWIT.tv, listening to sermons, and, primarily, as my music player.  Angry Birds and NFS are just bonuses.  90%  of the surfing/playing I used to do on my netbook, I now do on my phone.  I’d rather have the Nexus S, but I’m content to wait for the dual core 1.2 GHz Google phone that will be out by the time my contract is up.  I worry about repeating my iPhone mistake of choosing a phone despite the carrier, but all other things being equal I would love to have a phone that was all Google and not boogered up by HTC or Verizon.  Still, I give my Incredible a 9 out of 10 ranking.  New for 2010.
Kindle 3
There is simply no better way to read.  Before bed, Sunday morning, stolen quiet moments.  A library of choices in a slimmer-than-a-book, non-glare, easy to read format.  Coupled with Calibre, I can read almost anything on my Kindle.  I would rather read on my Kindle than on paper, even if I wasn’t a tree hugger.  New for 2010.
There are many better photographers in my family and there are many better cameras on the market.  But, for me, this is the camera.  Portable as in fits in a jeans pocket.  Not a hassle to carry when we disembark the cruise ship or we’re hangin’ at the lake.  Yet, it has geo-location, 10.2MP resolution, 10X optical zoom, and shoots 1080p video.  New for 2010.  The picture quality is excellent.  If it had an external mic jack, light shoe, and remote trigger it would be the perfect camera.  As it is, it is the perfect camera for travelers and bloggers.
Rip Curl Tide Watch
It doesn’t tell me if the prevailing wind is off shore, but I know when the tide is coming in and when it is time to quit playing and head back to work.  I’m not surfing before work like I did on the west coast, but I still have the watch that was part of the fun back when.
Surfboard
The old ding collector just hangs on the garage wall pretty much these days, but every time I pull my car in, I’m reminded of days of glory.  You know memory can be selective.  Forget eatin’ it, the stingray sting, and being too tired to paddle out for another wave.  Just remember that glorious moment on top of the wave.  This board was under my bare feet when it happened.  Like all the best technology, my board is an indescribable, undefinable melding of technology, art, and soul.
No more muckin’ around with coffee grounds.  No more throwing out half a pot of coffee.  A newcomer to the best of list for 2010 is my Keurig brewer.  A quick cup when I want it.  Just throw in the Lipton’s tea bag, and “boom”, a cup of hot or glass of iced tea.  Then the next person makes a cup of something else.  Maybe not the greenest appliance, but it has reduced waste in our house.
Yes, it is low tech but excellent.  The rubber grip that just feels right.  More eraser at the twist of the grip.  The positive feedback of lead on paper.  Of all the CAD software, digitizers, etc. I have used, this is still the engineer’s best friend.
Record two tracks independently on the keyboard.  Pick any voice including rhythm instruments.  Transfer them to your computer as MIDI files.  Put’em together for mixing with other instruments or vocals in Audacity.  Even for wannabe’s like me it is hard to have more fun than this.
BONUS 11th!!!
Smart Cabriolet
11. 2008 smart cabriolet
This little car gets better fuel economy than any non-hybrid automatic in the country – three years after it came out!  The interior is a work of art-decoesque art.  Sensible and nothin’ but fun.  It took a few years, but I finally found a car I like better than the old Triumph TR3.
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Internet Regulation?

Many news sources have reported that in polls Americans are against “internet regulation”.  My question is, what was the wording of the question in the poll?  The Rasmussen Poll used wording that was quite ambiguous about what was entailed in those regulations.  Furthermore, the third question asked whether the responder preferred “more government regulation or more free market competition?”  Currently, we do not have any free market competition.  If your phone works on Verizon it does not work on AT&T.  If you are in a Comcast area, you cannot get your cable from Time-Warner Cable.  Your provider monopolizes your access to content.

Rasmussen asked “If the Federal Communications Commission is given the authority to regulate the Internet, will they use that power in an unbiased manner or will they use it to promote a political agenda?”  What they should have asked is “Given that broadband providers have a monopoly on the content they provide to you, who do you trust more to use that power in an unbiased manner, corporations that will profit from biasing access in favor of their content or the federal government which may choose to promote a political agenda?”  The free market is not currently an option.

The widely quoted Rasmussen poll is inherently flawed and reflective of their own bias.   They did not ask whether consumers wanted the government to protect net neutrality, the consumer’s free access to internet content.  Their results can only be responsibly referenced as 21% of those responding to a false choice between free market and government regulation, favored the choice to which the biased questions of the Rasmussen poll pointed.  Journalists need to move away from parroting sensationalist headlines and do the minimal digging required to determine that this poll was biased, flawed, and propaganda.  Maybe it won’t sell more papers (but then again maybe it will).   But if journalism is ever to regain the public trust, journalists are going to have to do the work to earn that trust.

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