System down

5 10 2008

For more than a week I have been without my computer. I turned on my computer one day and the screen changed into different colors. The screen changed to all green, then all black, then yellow, then red etc. The Dell technician came out and he made the computer worse than it was. I finally sent the computer to Dell to get it fix and am waiting patiently for the computer to come back in one piece with all my pictures, music and documents. We’ll see.



This was a very “moving” video.

26 06 2008

A new “moving” skyscraper will unveil in Dubai in 2010. You may ask, “What do you mean by “moving”? Well watch the video.



Life without DVR…

24 06 2008

 

dvr

will be WORTHLESS! I can NOT live without my dvr. Since I got the dvr box with my cable company, I havent turned back. When I am not home, I can record programs and never miss a beat.

When I move in with Andy, I will make sure he has a dvr box. I work irregular work hours and by the time I get home, there’s nothing to watch. However, with my dvr box I can be at work slaving away and come home watching all my favorite shows.

I know they have a device called TiVo that does the same thing but with a dvr through a cable company I dont pay for the box, just the monthly service. Whereas with TiVo, you have to pay for the box as well as pay the monthly service fees.



This is what happens when you buy electronics…

9 06 2008

when they first come out. When the first Apple IPhone came out, everyone slept outside the Apple store and AT&T they paid about $600 for the phone. After about like two weeks the price decreased to about $399. Now they are coming out with a faster (and maybe even better) Apple IPhone for only $199.

It’s all a marketing ploy. When electronics first come out, wait a few months til the price drops then buy. I went shopping with Andy because I will be moving in with him in August (yes this is a long story will tell you later) and we were looking at the prices for a Blu Ray dvd player. And the prices are ridiculous. A “decent” Blu Ray player will cost about $600.

Now I dont know about anyone else but I am waiting til the price drops in the next few months then buy. I am not going to be one of those fools that buy a Blu Ray player for $600 when it first comes out and then after 2-3 months the same player costs about $300. LOL! Next thing you know after a year or so they are going to come out with Yello Ray player. You just never know.

apple

 

Now going back to the Apple IPhone. Click on image to read more.

 



This is cool

22 05 2008

I was thinking between getting either an Xbox 360 or Wii. But the Wii is calling my name more now than ever. Here’s there new toy…

wii fit

wii

wii

Nintendo’s Wii home video-game console is no longer content only to play. Now it wants to tone your body too.

The Wii Fit exercise game arrives in stores nationwide Wednesday with more than 40 fitness activities ranging from yoga and aerobics to balance and strength training.

Ever since the little white Wii hit the market 18 months ago, fans haven’t been able to get enough of its physically interactive games, which get players up off the couch and make them simulate boxing, bowling and tennis.

Old-folks homes and hospitals followed suit, using the motion-sensitive controllers for what was quickly dubbed “Wiihabilitation.”

Now Nintendo is betting that the marriage of gaming and movement will ensure the success of Wii Fit — which, for $89.99, includes the “Balance Board” and the Wii Fit game disc — and make a stronger, leaner and generally healthier gamer.

• Click here to watch video of Wii Fit in action.

The Balance Board is actually a dual scale that measures both the player’s left and right sides for pressure and weight.

Developers got the idea from watching the weigh-ins for sumo wrestlers, who are so heavy they have to use two scales placed side by side.

Like a sumo wrestler, gamers will have to step up to the scale to discover their own weight. Depending on your own extra poundage, the experience can be just as depressing as middle-school gym class.

• Click here for more photos.

Using each player’s personal avatar, or Mii, users enter the world of the virtual — and hopefully actual — workout with a weigh-in that measures body mass index (BMI) based on height and weight.

Players are labeled “underweight,” “normal,” “overweight” or “obese”; the Wii then adds or subtracts the pounds to your hapless Mii, depending on what it finds.

The practice is already controversial, with one unnamed British father lamenting to London’s Daily Mail that his 10-year-old daughter, who stands 4-foot-9 and weighs about 90 pounds, was labeled “fat” — Wii Fit doesn’t actually use that word — despite her active lifestyle.

Nintendo’s British division quickly put out a press statement that calculations on children may not be indicative of their actual health.

• Click here to visit FOXNews.com’s Video Gaming Center.

If you’re an adult, though, tough luck; this is a game, albeit one that tries to motivate. If you have a tubby Mii, Wii Fit offers an opportunity to decide weight-loss goals, and even creates a schedule to achieve them.

(Don’t worry: Wii Fit knows that weight is personal, so it includes an option to password-protect the character so no one but you and your Wii have to know exactly how much you’ve let yourself go.)

Once the initial embarrassment is over, it’s time for the fun and the sweating to begin.

Wii Fit divides its workout program into four categories — yoga, strength training, aerobics and balance.

A trainer — players get a choice of male or female — leads the first two groups, while the latter two are filled with games that feel more like, well, games.

Unfortunately, Wii Fit doesn’t have a set exercise routine, so gamers will have to find the combination that works best for them.

For those who’ve never ventured into a real gym, demonstrations of each strength-training and yoga move give a good overview, with the trainer offering tips as the gamer tries to mirror him or her.

Novices, though, may find themselves more concerned with keeping their balance in the shaded yellow areas than with focusing on proper form.

The best activities are the aerobic and balance games. Hula Hoop lets one gyrate like Dita Von Teese on Pixy Stix, while the winter sports that hone balance — ski slalom, ski jump and snowboard slalom — are surprisingly addictive approximations of the real events.

Kids are likely to love soccer heading and the penguin slide, which turns the Mii into a penguin on the hunt for dinner while sliding around on an iceberg.

Other activities, such as basic step, fall short. That program moves at a snail’s pace and the “Dance Dance Revolution”-style footprint system is likely to confuse users unfamiliar with the format.

Wii Fit does its best to motivate users, but it’s pretty easy to cheat.

On aerobic activities such as the Basic Run — which doesn’t require the balance board, only the Wii remote — just moving your arms back and forth will make the Mii jog through the course.

With strength-training jackknifes, Wii Fit records your progress by the time your feet touch the board. That makes it easy for a tired user to just lie on the floor and tap his or her feet to the proper time, outsmarting the system.

To counteract cheaters, Wii Fit works on a rewards system. The more Wii Fit is used, the more varied the activities.

For every minute of activity, a Fit Credit will be placed in the Mii’s piggy bank. As the credits add up, Wii Fit unlocks more advanced activities for users to tackle.

Wii Fit is what you make it. Users who want to work up a sweat will. And they’ll do so through all that Wii Guilt that starts at the initial weigh-in.

Will Wii Fit help a chubby gamer lose 50 pounds? Probably not. But it could be the gateway game that gets him up on the balance board to better health.

Source of article: Fox News.com



Might as well delete all my files

13 08 2007

 New “Ransomware”. Click image to read more about this foolishness.

ransomware



A desktop computer for $99…Oh My!

12 08 2007

In a WSJ article headlined, “A $99 Desktop Comes With Software, Backup and Too Many Catches”, it reads that for just $99 someone can own a desktop computer preloaded with full versions of 20 popular types of software. And when I read that, I thought to myself, “Oh, maybe $99 is some type of a hard drive and not an actual computer”. Then I kept reading.

This new PC, called Zonbu, from a new company of the same name, automatically recieves free updates of its software when new versions come out. It doesn’t require antivirus or other securtiy programs because it runs on the Linux operating system, which has attracted very few viruses or spyware programs. And it takes up almost no room-it’s a tiny little box.

Now heres the “tiny little box”…

zonbu

So does this mean I have to buy a monitor? If so then it’s not a “complete” desktop. But for what I get it’s not bad for the price. Zonbu, the company that makes this very inexpensive desktop, says that there “overall goal is to vastly simplify the process of buying and using a computer. The idea is to make it not only more affordable, but also much less of a hassle and much more energy efficient.”

Now did someone say something about a “catch”? In the WSJ article it mentions…

The biggest catch is that the Zonbu computer doesn’t include a hard disk for storing files (that’s one reason it uses so little energy). Instead, all of your files are stored online on the company’s servers.  That offers several advantages, such as the fact that the files are automatically backed up. But you have to pay for online storage.

And there’s more…

In fact, to get the $99 price for the Zonbu computer, you have to commit to a two-year contract at prices ranging from $12.95 a month for a relatively small 25 gigabytes of storage to $19.95 a month for 100 gigabytes. If you opt to pay month to month instead of two years in advance, the Zonbu will cost you $249. 

I knew it was too good to be true. I thought I could buy a $99 desktop, not a $249 hard drive.

By comparison, you can get a Dell Inspiron 531s for just $529, after rebate. It has twice the memory, a DVD drive and a much better processor than the Zonbu. And it comes with a screen keyboard, speakers and mouse-oh and a 160-gigabyte hard disk that requires no monthly fee.

After reading the article, Zonbu may have some some pluses over the traditional desktop but I’m not easily swayed to jump on the Zonbu bandwagon. If you would like to read more about this $99 hard drive computer please click on the image.



“Waste” of money

6 07 2007

Nasa has agreed to pay $19 million dollars for a Russian-built toilet. The National Aeronautics Space Administration officials said that the price may sound astronomical, but its cheaper than if they were to built their own.

****Not actual toilet****

This new system, although similar to what U.S. astronauts use in the space station, converts urine to drinking water. Ugh!!! 

Let me think, what better way can we spend $19 million? Oh, I know! Maybe we can end world hunger. Rather than spending $19 million on a toilet, we can spend $5 on five water bottles and a filter.
 



Happy 4th

5 07 2007

After spending some time at my mom’s house for a fantabulous 4th of July, Andy and I went to the movies to see Transformers. Honestly, I thought the movie was going to suck, but it was really, really, really good. I enjoyed it. I loved Shia LeBeouf since Even Stevens. I was surprised that they [producers, directors, and writers] kept to the original story line. Truly impressive. You know they are going to come out with a Transformers II.

transformers

[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZp75fWe-ss[/video]

Something Funny

[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWYOQoui6Ks[/video]

Something Classic

[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fB0_vJUc3o4[/video]



Finally!!!

29 06 2007

I waited in line all week and I finally got my Apple IPhone. I bought the phone from a guy in an alley in NYC. I paid $1000. I know its rather steep, but at least I’m the first to get my hands on one. However, I’m a bit confused…

It looks different from what Steve Jobs advertised. Damn you Apple for false advertising…damn you!