Archive for September, 2006

My Impressions of the Sony Reader

Posted in Reviews on September 26th, 2006

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I had the opportunity to travel to Sony a few weeks ago and preview the new Sony Reader hands on and meet with the product manager. Overall, I enjoyed the . I love reading books so this is something that naturally appeals to me. It’s clear that Sony has done a lot of work on this and has been working on it for a long, long time. At my previous company, we worked with Franklin Electronics on their eBookman product, so I understand how hard it is to build a complete system like what Sony is trying to make.

I was really impressed with the screen on the device. It uses a 2nd generation ePaper from a company called eInk . The lack of good resolution, high contrast screens is something that has held back reading documents electronically for me. It just tires the eyes too much to read anything more than a few pages on a computer screen. And while I did often carry ebooks on my Palm device in the past, the screen was just too small. Well, that doesn’t seem to be a problem anymore. I was also really impressed by the weight and thinness of the unit and the fact that the battery is good for 7500 page views.

Here is a video I took of flipping through some pages on the Reader, and I uploaded some pictures as well.

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My Impressions of the Sony Mylo

Posted in Reviews on September 25th, 2006

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Everyone knows I love Sony gadgets. Last week, I got my Sony Mylo device. I finally got it connected last night, so now I can write about it. “Mylo� stands for My Life Online. is the new WiFi communicator from Sony. Here are some pictures of what you get out of the box for $349.

First of all, the hardware is impressively small and sexy. The industrial design is very appealing and they pack a lot of stuff into a tiny package. Sony hardware engineers did an impressive job. The Mylo can play videos and MP3s, show pictures, and includes Opera web browser, Skype, Google Talk, Yahoo Messenger, and more. It is an 802.11b device. The Mylo is multi-tasking so you can listen to music while you do other things, and you can keep all the communications apps running simultaneously. I found the device quite responsive.

The controls except the keyboard are well designed, and the device is fairly intuitive to use for a proprietary device. The battery life seems good. The device is lightweight, and the rechargeable battery is removable like most cellphones so you can carry a spare. It comes with some nice headphones. The device has 1GB of internal RAM plus expansion which is pretty good. You can buy it in black or white which is nice.

While the Mylo definately is a cool device, I thought some things could use improvement.

Even though I have relatively small hands, I found the keyboard a little too small and the repeat rate on the keys is not good. It doesn’t have a good feel. Worse however, is that the keyboard is not backlit so I cannot use the device without good lighting. That is a pity because the screen is otherwise quite bright.

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How to start a software company with (almost) no money, or the Software Junkyard Wars

Posted in Business on September 25th, 2006

A friend of mine asked me to write about how I am starting my new software company with (almost) no money. The answer is very carefully, remotely and with some open source. Here are some resources I am using on almost a daily basis: craigslist, rentacoder, and elance. I am not saying these sites are full of great programmers. In fact, I have had plenty of horror stories in the past with off shore resources I found on those places. But when you have little money, you don’t have much choice but to try. And I have a few friends who claim to have had success finding resources on these sites. I would love to hear any success stories people have had and best practices on these sites. This process reminds me of the show “Junkyard Wars.” I did manage to connect with one really good logo designer recently on eLance, so if you need a good logo I have just the place for you.

Sears - Please try again…

Posted in Personal on September 25th, 2006

Another one of my bad consumer experience stories. I have just tried for about 1 hour to get through to Sears home delivery, Hillsdale Mall store, for a friend of mine. It is impossible to reach a live person. There are no humans to answer the line, and neither is there voice mail to leave a message. When I asked to speak with a manager at the store, I was transfered to someone in the shoe department. They told me there are no managers around. So basically the store is being run out of the shoe department. Finally, I tried to contact them via their website and leave a complaint. Well, they will not have any of that. Eventhough I filled in all the info, I got, “In order for your request to be processed, please enter your name, a telephone number, an email address, as well as your comment or concern.” Of course, there no customer service email address. Sears cannot be long for this world….

How I Made My First YouTube Video

Posted in Events on September 22nd, 2006

Here is my first YouTube video. Which actually turns out to be two videos as you will learn in a moment. The specific content of this video may not be interesting to you unless your kids also go to the same school as mine. I took this video at the dedication ceremony for my children’s new school DIscovery Charter School. What I found interesting is how difficult and how time-consuming it is to upload something like this to the Internet. There were no completely free tools to do this acceptably either that I could find.

I started by taking this video using my Samsung Digital camcorder which has the great advantage of capturing video directly to AVI files. The dedication ceremony was 18 minutes long and at highest quality that resulted in an 872MB file. My first problem was to reduce this to a manageable size. I attempted to load the video into Apple QuickTime Professional but it would not accept the large original file and just died. I could watch the video in Windows movie maker but they were reading the options that I found useful to export it to a better format. I often go to YouTube, a popular video sharing site, so I decided to try to upload the file there. You cannot upload files that are larger than 100 MB or longer than 10 minutes. YouTube also prefers 320×240 videos in MPG format. My video was very different so knew I had some serious work to do.

I searched and downloaded a variety of video conversion tools attending to find one that would resample the video into something manageable. After much searching I settled on Ulead Video Studio 10. First I had the video converted to iPod format but this was still too large. So after some tweaking using the custom save as option I was able to get the right format file and make the entire video under 100 MB. Unfortunate still too long for YouTube, so I had to cut the video into two pieces. For me, Apple QuickTime professional was the quickest way. These conversions all took a long time, and I have a very fast PC with a lot of RAM. Finally it took over half an hour to upload the pieces on to YouTube site.

Part one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlOLlWMTlOc

Part two: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXxyCZ-w_XY

How to Hard Reset an LG-2000 Cellphone

Posted in Personal on September 21st, 2006

If anyone knows how to hard reset an LG-2000 cell phone, let me know. My daughter has forgotten the PIN code to this phone. There doesn’t appear to be anyway to reset this phone back to factory settings to clear this. We even went to the Cingular store and got no where. They told me to throw the phone away. Basically, the phone is now a $169 paperweight. Incredible. Thanks, LG.

Update: 9/25. It turns out that I got bad advice from the Cingular store that I went to, and LG is not to blame. I went to another store and they were easily able to unlock the SIM card. Again, incredibly, the first Cingular store I went to told me to throw the phone away. Wow, how incredbly knowledgeable these reps are….

Next Week in LA

Posted in Events on September 6th, 2006

I will be at the Handango Partner Summitt and CTIA in Los Angeles next week if anyone would like to meet and catch up. And while I am there, I might have to stop by the Commerce Casino.

Fundraising

Posted in Business on September 6th, 2006

As of yesterday, I have started fundraising for my new startup. It’s interesting so far the conversations I have had with people since just putting this word out, and what I am learning. A really freaky coincidence happened to me today too which maybe is some sort of omen or just randomness. A client of mine needed me to deliver something urgently to them at a top VC firm on Sand Hill Road where they were making a pitch. If I wrote the name of the firm, and if you follow Silicon Valley news, you would probably recognize it. I don’t get asked often to come to these places, so I spent some time in the lobby of the firm looking at the memoribilia they displayed of their successful investments and it was cool.