Monthly Archive for December, 2006

Online Generators

Do you like to use wizards or online generators to create code, shrink graphics, or automate other common tasks? If so, then you should definitely check out a posting from Smashing Magazine where they have a huge list of online generators.

One can discuss, whether web-generators are useful or not. On the one hand, they don’t challenge our creativity, but on the other hand they make our life easier and save our precious time. However, it doesn’t matter really. What matters is that we use them if we have to solve some problem quickly and efficiently. We’ve taken a look at the most useful online-generators for web-development and listed them below.

Yahoo! Top Searches of 2006

They seem to be a bit early with this, but Yahoo! is the first major search engine to release their top searches for 2006. The top ten overall searches are:

  1. Britney Spears
  2. WWE
  3. Shakira
  4. Jessica Simpson
  5. Paris Hilton
  6. American Idol
  7. Beyonce Knowles
  8. Chris Brown
  9. Pamela Anderson
  10. Lindsay Lohan

There are lots of different categories as well as links to relevant pictures.

How Steve Jobs Came Up With ‘The Perfect Thing’

From E-Commerce News:

How did CEO Steve Jobs rescue Apple and create the most important consumer product of the 21st century (so far)? The answer will not be comforting to those who work for relentless, hard-driving, impossible-to-please CEOs. According to Levy, the iPod became The Perfect Thing and a marketplace blockbuster because of Jobs, in all of his boss-from-Hell genius.

10 Minute Mail

Long-time friend and reader Shawn sent me this…

Check this out: http://www.10minutemail.com/

It might be good content for your ezine. It gives you a temporary email address so that you can sign up for more info on other sites, read/get the info you want, and then the address is gone (so you can avoid spam, too much email, etc).

You have to leave the page up after it gives you an address. It refreshes and shows the reply emails you get.

I haven’t tried it myself, but it sounds interesting.

2006, Brought to You by You

From the New York Times:

Imagine paying $580 million for an ever-expanding heap of personal ads, random photos, private blathering, demo recordings and camcorder video clips. That’s what Rupert Murdoch did when his News Corporation bought MySpace in July. Then imagine paying $1.65 billion for a flood of grainy TV excerpts, snarkily edited film clips, homemade video diaries, amateur music videos and shots of people singing along with their stereos. That’s what Google got when it bought YouTube in October.

What these two highly strategic companies spent more than $2 billion on is a couple of empty vessels: brand-named, centralized repositories for whatever their members decide to contribute.

All that material is “user-generated content,” the paramount cultural buzz phrase of 2006.

‘The world needs only five computers’

From TechRepublic:

Industry lore likely is wrong to attribute to IBM Chairman Thomas J. Watson the famous misjudgment that there’s a world market for five computers.

But Sun Microsystems Chief Technology Officer Greg Papadopoulos thinks the idea will pan out eventually.

“The world needs only five computers,” Papadopoulos said on his blog. He then listed seven–Google, eBay, Amazon.com, Microsoft, Yahoo, Salesforce.com, and what he called the Great Computer of China–but let’s not split hairs. He was trying to make the point that “there will be, more or less, five hyperscale, pan-global broadband computing services giants.”

Show Texture in Your Photographs - Digital Photography Tip of the Week

Showing texture in photographs is not that difficult when you know how to capture it. Photographs are a two dimensional medium, so to show texture, we need to light our subject in such a way that we present the illusion of depth in the image.

To maximize texture in a photograph, side lighting is key. That is the direction of light comes across the face of the subject from one side to the other. This directional light will highlight the ridges of the texture and cast shadows into the valleys. These highlights and shadows are what is needed to emphasize texture in your photograph. On the other hand, front lighting is very flat and can be used to minimize texture in a photograph.

Below is an example comparing side lighting against front lighting. This is a 100% crop from two photographs taken from the same location, with the camera setup on a tripod. The only difference between the two is the lighting used to illuminate the wall I used as a subject. This is obviously an extreme example, but it illustrates the point well.

The first image is shot using frontlighting. As you can see, frontlighting illuminates the wall evenly and shows very few ridges or depressions in the wall, while side lighting emphasizes the ridges and depressions.

To use this in your photography, when you want to emphasize texture in your subject, turn it to so that the light falls across your subject. If you want to minimize texture in your photograph, turn your subject into the light. A word of caution though, if your subject is a person, apart from removing any modeling (sculpting of the face through the use of light) turning them into the light may cause them to squint.

Knowing how to properly light your photos to achieve the look you want will help you create stronger, more dynamic photographs.

Next week I review the ExpoDisc white balance filter for more accurate colour rendition in your photographs. Until then, happy shooting.

The digital photography tip of the week is written by the PCIN Assistant Editor, Chris Empey. Chris is a long time photographer and is currently the President of the Niagara Falls Camera Club. You can see more of his photography at his Photo of the Day website.
If you have a tip to send Chris, or a question about digital photography he can address in the newsletter, send it to chris@pcin.net.

Computer-challenged elves need not apply

From TechRepublic:

Hammers and nails are gathering dust in the elves’ workshop this season.

That’s because two hot gifts–PlayStation 3 and Tickle Me Extreme Elmo–are almost entirely dependent on software inside. These new toys are just the latest evidence that software platforms have become one of the most important economic and technological developments of the early 21st century. They are the invisible engines behind not just toys, but the businesses of the future.

Spam doubles, finding new ways to deliver itself

From the New York Times (via CNet):

Hearing from a lot of new friends lately? You know, the ones that write “It’s me, Esmeralda,” and tip you off to an obscure stock that is “poised to explode” or a great deal on prescription drugs.

You’re not the only one. Spam is back — in e-mail in-boxes and on everyone’s minds. In the last six months, the problem has gotten measurably worse. Worldwide spam volumes have doubled from last year, according to Ironport, a spam filtering firm, and unsolicited junk mail now accounts for more than 9 of every 10 e-mail messages sent over the Internet.

Partition Manager 8.0 Professional Software Review

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I just finished reviewing Partition Manager 8.0 Professional from Paragon Software Group:

When a product has been around for many different versions, it is often hard for the programmers to come up with enough new features to make the upgrades worthwhile. I’ve reviewed several Paragon Software Group products in the past, and have always been impressed with them, but I wondered how the new Paragon Partition Manager 8 could be any better than the last version. I was quite impressed by Partition Manager 7 and still use the recover CD whenever I need to do some tweaking. After using Partition Manager 8 for a while, and testing both the installed version as well as the recovery CD, I can say that it is definitely a worthy upgrade.

Read the rest of the review…