My 6 Most Useful High-Tech Hardware In 2009

December 31, 2009

Unlike most, trying to be smart – or dumb – about predicting next year’s trends, I wanted to reflect back on the most useful high-tech hardware in my life this year.

  1. First and foremost is my laptop. In this case, it’s an old Apple Macbook (2 GHz Intel Core Duo, 2 GB Ram) that I upgraded with a 500 GB hard disk drive from Western Digital. It still works fine for editing videos, photos and stories. There was a crack on the Mac’s case (next to the screen) and the Mac repair shop changed it (it was a known defect) and installed a brand new keyboard… all for free (I think it’s still under warranty)!
  2. A Logitech Performance MX mouse that works virtually everywhere, even on glass, thanks to its Darkfield technology. The only downside with this mouse was that they is no trap inside it to store the tiny wireless receiver when I need to free up one of the USB port. I’m always afraid to loose it as it’s so minuscule. Also I must always remember to bring the USB cable that ships with the mouse as it’s needed to recharge it;
  3. Livescribe‘s Pulse Smartpen was a lifesaver for me. It records everything I write and synch it with the audio recording. I never miss a word, during an interview or even a long-form presentation. Even more critical for me, I’m able to go back to a particular speech/interview by just tapping on my notes associated to it. It makes my reporting so much more accurate and faster. I couldn’t do without it anymore.
  4. iPod nano, 5th generation with the audio and video recording. I use it to record short interviews, instead of using the bigger video camcorder; as well as audio conversations/presentations when I don’t have my Smartpen handy. I wish the nano had an external microphone jack like the Kodak Zi8 Pocket Video camera which might replace in 2010, both the iPod nano and my hard disk based camcorder. I would have to check the battery life though;
  5. Google G1 smartphone. If you heard me complaining about my phone, you might be surprised to see it mentioned here. But despite its dismal keyboard, which I somehow got used to!, the G1 got even more useful when Google released its Navigation app. With Google Map Navigation I don’t need a seperate GPS system anymore. The G1 is now my one stop shop for voice, watch/alarm, email, Web browsing, calendar, twitter, occasional photo/video recording and lately, navigation. I’m not using much of the Facebook app yet but that might change next year;
  6. Last but not least, the Roku Netflix player was the most important device in my home entertainment centre, just after the plasma TV but way more than the DVD/VHS player or the intermittently connected Mac mini. Hopefully, Roku will open its media player up (as well as the USB port) so it can play content off a USB key/drive and from more Internet video sources like Hulu. One can dream!

Voila, that’s it for me. Have a wonderful holiday and see you next year!


Bill Gates Takes 5.2% Stake In Kodak

February 17, 2009

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates raised his stake in Eastman Kodak to 7.95 million shares, becoming the fourth-largest shareholder in the struggling camera maker.

Even Bill Gates investments lost money in the fourth quarter (about 20%)

Even Bill Gates' investments lost money in the fourth quarter (about 20%)

Cascade Investments, owned by Gates, holds the investment, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Kodak, which is wrestling with the transition to digital photography, lost $89 million from continuing operations before income taxes last year as revenue fell 9 percent.

By the way, even Gates can’t avoid the fate of the collapsing economy. Investments held by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation fell 19 percent to $9.07 billion in the fourth quarter while holdings at Cascade slumped 18 percent to $4.02 billion, as reported by Reuters.


Kodak Sees Bright Outlook Despite Appalling Results

January 29, 2009

Amid the recession, consumers left Kodak digital cameras on retail shelves.

“The second half of 2008 will go down in history as one of the most challenging periods we have seen in decades,” Kodak’s chief executive, Antonio Perez, said in a statement.

This morning the camera and film company reported a net loss of $137 million for its fourth quarter ending in December, on sales of $2.43 billion, a 24% drop from a year ago.

Kodak is mainly a digital company

For the full-year 2008, Kodak posted revenues of $9.4 billion, a 9% decline from 2007 and a preliminary profit of $54 million.

Full-year digital revenues totaled $6.422 billion, a 4% decline from 2007, and traditional revenues totaled $2.987 billion, an 18% decline.

“Kodak is currently performing assessments of goodwill and long-lived assets, consequently 2008 results are preliminary pending the outcome of those assessments,” the company said.

The East coast company also plans to cut 3,500 to 4,500 jobs, or 14 percent to 18 percent of its work force.

According to reports, Kodak said it expects revenues to rise 5 percent a year through 2011, driven by a 10 percent to 12 percent annual rise in digital sales, while operating profit will more than triple to $1 billion!

Having missed its last forecast, it’s hard to see why Kodak will not miss this overly excessive outlook!


Hot Gadgets For Your Christmas List (Hint: They Are All Mobile)

November 18, 2008
The Blackberry Storm is on Walt Mossbergs list

The Blackberry Storm is on Walt Mossberg's list

They include a phone, a printer, an underwater camcorder and an electronic reader – and they were all shown off at the annual hot gadgets night at the Churchill Club on Tuesday.

The theme this year is mobile. Everything was made to be portable.

According to The Wall Street Journal columnist Walt Mossberg, “the most interesting thing this holiday season is the keyboard-less Blackberry,” which is to go on sale November 21 from Verizon.

This touchscreen iPhone knockoff is called the Storm and it has a more haptic sensibility than the iPhone. When pressed, its screen gives a little to offer the feeling that a button or key has been hit.

It will cost $199 after a $50 rebate.

Also on Mossberg’s Christmas list is the Flip MinoHD camcorder, a shirt-pocket-sized device capable of taking high definition video. The video clips “come out (and) they’re great,” said Mossberg.

The camcorder has the capacity of about an hour and sells for about $229.

Greg Harper, co-founder of the gadget conference Gadgetoff, says he is in love with the first OLED (organic light emitting diode) picture frame for the consumer market. This Kodak product should be available online in time for the holidays and displays an exceptionally vivid, sharp image. “It’s a beautiful screen,” says Harper.

OLED makes a great picture frame, says Greg Harper

OLED makes a great picture frame, says Greg Harper

List price is $999.

Another of Harper’s favorites is the Panasonic SDR-SW20S, a $399.99 camcorder that can shoot underwater to depths of five feet.

Also keep your eye on Plastic Logic, a Mountain View company making a razor thin electronic reader scheduled for release in early 2009, says Evan Williams, CEO of Twitter. It is the size of an 8.5 by 11 inch sheet of stationary and is as thick as a pad of paper, with a large display.

Then, too, “I highly recommend the Kindle” reader from Amazon, says Williams.

Here are several other ideas:

*The RichardSolo 1800 backup battery for the iPhone. Cost is $69.95.
*The ClickFree automatic backup drive. The device plugs into a USB port and automatically backs up a Windows PC – no software to install. A 120gb version costs $75.
*The Planon PrintStik portable printer for computers and Blackberry cell phones. The device is no longer than a ruler and only 1.5 inches high. It prints using Bluetooth and costs $299.99.


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