Archive for December, 2007

Dec
19

USB Flash storage and solid state

image Do you remember those days where you had 1.44mb diskettes, I still have them from like 6-8 years ago, then we got the USB sticks 10 mb, 1gb, 2gb showing  up in the last couple of years.

But now we are going to SSD (solid state drives) and USB Flash storage and it just blows my mind how much you can store on that. Its more then my home laptop which holds an 80GB drive, purchased 2 years ago.

Like this sweet USB stick…see below description from Engadget on it. And its only the size of a business card. Now its just waiting till prices drop right. I bet you any money in 2 years from now you can buy this stuff for less then 100 bucks and soon you will be able to have your whole digital photo, music and video library with you on not much more then this size of a credit card stick……and with the new OLED LCD technology you will be able to watch that stuff even at a reasonable display size to

Buffalo’s new SHD-UHRS series seems like it’s bringing the status quo up to 100GB. The USB 2.0 external drive uses two different types of flash memory to reach that capacity, yet it’s only about the size of a business card and weighs just two ounces. Those of you somehow entranced by the case design but lacking the ¥107,720 ($952) for the 100GB model needn’t worry, however: Buffalo is also shipping a 32GB version for a pretty competitive ¥35,400 ($312) and a 64GB model for ¥75,340 ($665).


Dec
18

Windows Live Writer

I finally started to use Windows Live Writer for my Blog. With the online WordPress editor, I had some problems to inline my Image right or left with the text wrapping around it. With Windows Live Writer this is just one click of a button.

image It also has several nice plugins available online at its Gallery web blog and plugin site. Check it out yourself.

In this way I can maintain both my  blog posts, pages offline for this blog and my Family blog or other future blogs.

I just added a plugin to Windows live Writer called Polaroid this creates a fancy polaroid picture in your post, below an example of the same image as above but then using this plugin, you can tilt the image and add a caption to it.


Dec
17

Crazy Dutch

IslandSometimes I believe we Dutch are too crazy. Now after the Palm shape Island and World in Dubai, we think we can build this kind of Islands also in our own Nord Sea.

Reuters Report

While a poll in October by research company TNS NIPO with the Red Cross showed the Dutch are more afraid of flooding than a terrorist attack, many have a strong faith in Dutch expertise and technology to protect them from the water.

The Dutch parliament has asked a commission on coastal development to look into the idea of building islands in the North Sea that could be used for housing, farming or a nature reserve, while at the same time helping to protect the coast.

“People live on top of each other in the Netherlands,” said Christian Democrat politician Joop Atsma, who sponsored a parliamentary motion on building in the North Sea. “We are hungry for land. A huge area is needed for building.”

Atsma says high land prices threaten the country’s position as the world’s third biggest exporter of agricultural products, and make a 100,000 hectare island potentially worth 10 billion euros ($14.69 billion) — enough of a return to fund the project.

A government body set up to promote innovation has drawn up proposals for an island about 50 km long, sparking fierce debate which inspired one blogger to joke that a cannabis leaf may be a more suitable shape than the tulip on the formal plans.

The Netherlands has a lot of know-how in terms of water. It exports this knowledge but it is missing out on innovation. More experiments are needed in the fields of alternative energy, tides and wind,” said Maria Henneman of Innovation Platform.

“Of course it is an expensive investment but with current technology a lot is possible.”

NO WET FEET

The Netherlands — literally the Low Countries — has a long history of pioneering technology to help it claw back land from the sea and fight recurrent flooding.

U.S. officials sought advice from Dutch experts on water management after floods devastated New Orleans in 2005, and Dutch firms have been central in major coastal developments worldwide.

Dutch firm Boskalis developed techniques during the Zuiderzee and Delta projects to become the world’s largest dredger, helping build the island for Hong Kong’s airport and now working on Oman’s “Wave” project — a huge resort added to the coast.

Dubai’s island, that juts into the shallow waters of the Gulf in the shape of a palm tree, was built by Dutch marine contractor Van Oord using more than 100 million cubic metres of sand.

“I live far below sea level and I have never had wet feet at home,” Atsma said. “So much can be done with water management.”

One of the world’s most densely populated countries with 16 million people living in an area about half the size of Scotland (or 485 people per square km), a quarter of the Netherlands is below sea-level and it lies on the flood plains of three big rivers.

The country’s earliest inhabitants built their homes and farmsteads on mounds to protect them from flooding. From around 1300, windmills were developed to pump water off low-lying land. Steam-driven pumps accelerated the process in the 19th century.

In 1932, work was completed on a mammoth 32-km dike that closed the Zuiderzee off from the North Sea and allowed 1,650 square km of land to be drained.

After devastating floods in 1953 killed more than 1,800 people, the Dutch launched one of the world’s largest construction schemes — the Delta project — to raise dikes, close sea estuaries and build a huge storm-surge barrier.

Scientists expect global warming to raise sea levels along the Dutch coast by up to 85 cms in the next century, and cause more severe storms that could make rivers more likely to flood.

NORTH SEA CHALLENGE

“Funny shapes like tulips, clogs and windmills are a good way to start a debate, but they should not be considered as realistic,” said Bert Groothuizen, spokesman for Van Oord, the builder of the Dubai palm island.

While Dubai’s Gulf rarely sees waves above two meters high, the North Sea is much stormier with waves of up to 10 meters.

“The seaward protection must be stronger than in the Arabian Gulf which means that construction costs are greater,” he said, adding it might be more realistic to extend current Dutch beaches into the sea or move the main airport onto a new island.

That idea was already floated after a plane crashed into an apartment block in Amsterdam in 1992, but it was was shelved due to cost and environmental concerns. Nature-lovers have also scuppered plans to drain more land onshore.

Independent environmental group the North Sea Foundation notes that an artificial island could disrupt shipping, fishing and migrating birds.

“The North Sea is not a wasteland where you can do whatever you want. Especially the coastal zone is one of the most fertile seas in the world. An island would do a lot of damage to the animal life,” said the foundation’s Lisa van der Veen.

Given rising sea levels, Van der Veen said it made more sense to protect existing land than build a new island:

“If you build houses on it you would have to build it really high to protect it from storms and waves. Building an island is a huge investment and you could much easier fortify the dikes.”


Dec
17

Hulu streaming TV

I almost forgot I signed up for this but today I received an invitation to the beta version of Hulu, the online streaming TV shows library fron Newscorps NBC and FOX. I have been watching lately NBC’s and ABC’s website for mist episodes and really liked that. Hulu goes a step further by offering some old days shows like the A-Team, battlestar Galatica.

The quality with my Comcast internet is excellent, almost no interruptions in the stream and also the ads are only between 5 to maximum 30 seconds, so you barely notice any waiting time.

I hope they keep up with adding recent episodes on weekly basis. If you do want to testdrive Hulu sign up at hulu.
Here is a snapshot of one of the funniest Office Episodes - Paper Watermark


Dec
05

Sinterklaas (Santa Claus)

SinterklaasZwarte Piet
Yes, today is the 5th of December and yes this is traditional our “Sinterklaas Feest”. A Dutch childrens party where gifts and rhymes are exchanged. I understand this year Sinterklaas sales still topped over Christmas in the Netherlands, hard to explain to the folks over here in the US.I can give a great explanation to all of you about Sinterklaas but the best thing is to read this article on Wikipedia about it, which actually hold some new info I did not know about. The only thing is that your Santa Claus originates from the Dutch Sinterklaas feest…so again something Dutch has influenced a big cultural celebration in the USA!


Dec
04

Dutch Soccer News: Coaches van Basten and van ‘t Schip quit after European Championship 2008

Yes some great news, although they have an excellent track record with the Dutch team in the past 2 qualification rounds for World Cup and EC, the Dutch team has not impressed the home front with exciting soccer as well as high results. The German World Cup defeat in 2nd round was received disappointing. Although Van Basten always claimed his goal was focusing on World Cup 2010 in South Africa this sudden announcement is not surprisingly for most dutch folks as well as criticasters. I truly believe both have either an offer from a big European Club Team in the pocket where they will substantial earn more then just the salary they receive from the Dutch Soccer association KNVB. Or they might take a step across the Ocean and get a team in the United States like Ruud Gullit recently has done with LA Galaxy Manager assignment.

van Basten - van ‘t Schip

Nevertheless, not impressed and most Dutch folks are glad they leave, some probably want them to go before Euro 2008 in Austria/Switzerland next year so a new fresh head coach can start working already on a good result as well as team build up for World Cup 2010 in South Africa. My personal list of coaches:

1. Guus Hiddink (Has proven to make average or underdog teams towards World Cup success, South Korea, Australia and now Russia are great examples.
2. Dick Advocaat (always good results with team countries, mostly I would just pick him for the tournament itself)
3. Leo Beenhakker (although poor results with Dutch team in 1992 world cup this was mainly not his fault as he was forced by former coach Rinus Michels to go in favor of Johan Cruyff, and no team player wanted him as coach).
4. Foppe de Haan (good for young team, might be good for 2010 or afterwards when his youth players make the national team selection)

I am going to follow closely from here the developments on this and let you know.


Dec
03

Tivo now integrating Picassa

On my wish list to buy very soon is the Tivo HD DVR. Today I heard the following news about them.


Tivo

Tivo owners with Picasa or Photobucket accounts just got another way to view their photos on their TVs — everyone’s favorite DVR company announced deals with both services today that will allow users to access their photos from any Tivo device. Photos will be pulled down at the highest resolution your Tivo supports, so Series3 and Tivo HD owners will get HD-res images displayed, and what’s more, users can also access friends’ photo albums. The feature should be rolling out starting today


Dec
03

Lime Survey or Survey Monkey

So the other day my wife needed to setup a survey for her work. After some investigation I found this open software tool lime survey. Installation took about 30 minutes using php and a mysql database. After that its quite easy to setup your own survey. This software comes with preloaded templates and you can change the colors using style sheets. Further many different question types are possible as well as upload functionality for questions and users. Token support for secure access to the survey as well as automated email and reminder system is possible.The only thing I was not impressed about was the export of the data from standard reports, but if you are a bit handy in PhPmySqL accessing the tables you can pull out the information how you want it.

LimeSurvey

Another solution I looked at is the hosted solution from SurveyMonkey.com. Its basic setup is free and within no-time you have your survey setup. I liked it as it was very easy to use but the basic free version lacks quite a few features like token validation per user base, and some more complex questions setups. I would recommend companies who have fairly short surveys with limited number of questions to use SurveyMonkey. Larger more complex surveys which require a great level of security should look at Lime Survey.

Survey Monkey

If you use any other open source or free survey tools you like, let me know so I can test them and pass them to my wife for her companies survey usage.