Archive for May 19th, 2008

Mobile Data Connectivity Options

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Computer World Mobile Wireless Logo Brian Nadel recently wrote a nice article comparing broadband service from the big three wireless carriers, AT&T, Verizon and Nextel. Normally I have good connectivity within my house through my local cable carrier and don’t mind paying for airport WiFi once in a while. I’ll be traveling to the Northern Virginia area in the next month and want to have a broadband connect card as an option for connecting wirelessly. The $300/night hotel I’m staying in doesn’t offer free WiFi, instead it’s a $10/day T-Mobile hotspot. Add that together with the fees from the airport (Boingo) it comes up to a hefty $80 for internet service while away from home for a single week!

AT&T Fail Logo In Brian’s article he mentioned that AT&T had an $80 option for those adverse to a 1 or 2 year commitment. Intrigued I stopped by my local AT&T store and was given a bunch of misinformation that differed even from the information I was able to read on the AT&T site. 2 calls to AT&T later I was still unable to get the $80/month plan mentioned. I asked my sales consultant if there was an option to add it onto an existing line of service which could be upgraded and downgraded as needed based on my travel patterns and still no luck. At least a 1 year commitment is required. I was able to get an offer of a month to month with no discount on the card plan (which is to be expected) for $29.95/month with a 10Mb data allowance. Unfortunately the overage charges are outrageous ($0.06/kb). A single webpage might end up costing $2 to $3 to view!

There are companies that are catering to my more specific needs - a short term “rental” but they’re making a hefty profit on the service. I found two services, one which I wouldn’t even think about giving my credit card information to. The other, Rovair, seems to have a nice product offering, comparable with purchasing WiFi cost wise - but of course with the added convenience of your own dedicated connection.

Carrier 7 days 14 days 21 days 28 days
Rovair $12.93 $10.33 $7.80 $6.27
Cellhire $14.99/day $12.50/day

Verizon and Nextel only offer plans with contracts as well. Verizon does have a 1 year options and Nextel locks you in for 2. So now I’m back to considering my options with pay as you go WiFi and spotty EDGE connectivity through my paired Blackberry and probably the most economical - going without <shudder />.

Homer Simpson in CSS

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Saw this posted on Digg and found the idea facinating for 2 reasons. First, that cartoon characters can obviously be rendered by colors and letters. The second is the number of technology hours spent creating content based on the Simpsons!

Erik as a Simpson\'s Caracter Fox did a great job with the Avatar creator which they launched with the movie last summer and since then I’ve seen Simpson’s avatars everywhere online. A version of me is right.

See the original animated CSS version (mine is just a screenshot) so you can see the composition take shape or the original author, Roman Cortes’ work.

Where is Photosynth Now? Silverlight

Monday, May 19th, 2008

I was very impressed with the Photosynth technology when I first saw the TED video online late last year and recently was discussing this with some folks who hadn’t seen it. I wanted to capture this and to see where the technology has progressed to now that it’s owned by Microsoft.

One thing I noticed was the similarity of the image effects engine in Silverlight and Photosynth. The Hard Rock Cafe demoed their implementation of a massive graphic presentation during Mixx (I think) and launched their own 257 image memorabilia exploration tool tool which looks VERY MUCH like the Photosynth tool demoed at TED. I’ve found the performance of the application to be sluggish even over broadband, but it is a nice way to explore such a large dataset.

Microsoft’s Labs site has the Photosynth demo online for XP/Vista users only. I am really more interested in seeing the impact of the 3D modeling software that was demoed in the second half of the video. Unfortunately my 1st generation MacBook Pro and Vista install wouldn’t cooperate and run the demo.

Silverlight is fully supported on the Mac (even using Safari). For now I’ll have to be patient and hopeful. The visual effects engine and massive image set pieces have been integrated with Silverlight. Perhaps Silverlight 3 or some other future version will bring in the 3D visualization components.

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