Category: Tuesday Tech
New color scheme and blog changes.
As a first step in returning to regularly posting here, I have updated the color scheme of the blog (I was never particularly happy with the previous one – though this one may be a bit too blue-heavy).
As a second step in returning to regularly posting here, I have removed the “daily posts” link from the nav bar above. That also means that I’m dumping the idea of themed daily posts. It was fun while it lasted but it was inevitable that I would grow tired of the self-imposed restriction.
Instead, I’m going to make a point of posting something interesting every day when I get up. The topics will likely still be the same as my previous array of daily categories, but they just won’t be limited to the day of the week.
This will be the last official post in the daily categories. In the future, instead of “Wednesday Whine,” I will simply use a new “Whine” category. The same goes for all the others.
I’m sure there will be days when I’m too busy to post anything but I’ll try not to let that happen too often, as there’s almost always something interesting going on in the world that I want to comment about.
In case you’re curious: This blog receives about 12,000 unique visitors a month, so there are definitely plenty of readers out there. It’s down about 9% over the last 30 days so I hope to bring that number back up as I resume posting once again… which will be later today, after I eat lunch.
Until then, comment and let me know if there are any particular topics you enjoy reading my thoughts on.
TweetTUESDAY TECH: Realistic Red Glowing Eyes on the Terminator Salvation Voice ‘N Vision Skull Toy

Here’s further continuation of my ongoing series of Terminator-related posts leading up to the release of Terminator Salvation this week. If there’s ever been an appropriate film series to post about something “tech,” it’s definitely the Terminator series. However, today I’m not posting about any technology shown in the movies, but rather the excellent use of the…
Lifelike Red Glowing Eyes on a Terminator Helmet Toy
When I first posted that toymaker Playmates would be releasing an endoskeleton helmet toy complete with voice-changer and glowing red eyes, I knew I had to have it. What I didn’t predict is just how fantastic of a job the company would do in creating the red eye effect.
Rather than taking the easy way out and simply mounting a couple of red LEDs in the skull/helmet where the endoskeleton eyes should go, Playmates created a very believable sunken-eye effect through an exceptionally well-executed use of the Pepper’s Ghost effect. This decades’ old effect is most commonly-known as the secret behind the ghostly ballroom dancers in Disney’s Haunted Mansion attraction. It’s a simple illusion that reflects a light or lighted object on an angled piece of glass or other transparent material.
In the case of the Terminator Salvation T-600 Voice ‘N Vision Skull, as it’s officially known, the effect is used to make the iconic red Terminator eyes appear as if they are set deep within the skull. Here are a few pictures I took of my helmet to better illustrate how well it works:

Front and back side of the Terminator helmet/skull without the eyes turned on.

The view from inside the Terminator helmet, looking through the “goggles” that make up the eye sockets. They resemble swim goggles, but with an added angled transparent piece of plastic, which you can see overlapping eyes here.

Here are the same front and back views as above but with the eyes turned on. As you can see, from the front, the red eyes appear to sit directly in the middle of the sockets, just as they should. From inside, however, the hot spots aren’t visible while looking outward. Here’s a better view from inside the helmet:

The red LED lights are actually mounted above the eye sockets, pointing downward. Looking out while the eyes are turned on doesn’t result in a blocked view of any kind. A general red glow can be noticed, but it doesn’t restrict vision at all.

These side/angled views show how the eyes appear to be sunken into the head, making it seem like they’re actually sitting right on top of the wearer’s eyes. Staring directly into the helmet’s eyes is actually quite a creepy experience.
It’s a very impressive effect that I have never seen achieved as well in any other consumer product. Well done Playmates.
TweetTUESDAY TECH: Watch Out for Rosetta

When Apple made the switch from packing its computers with PowerPC chips to using faster Intel ones, it needed to find a way to let older, PowerPC-only software still work in OS X on Intel machines. Emulation was the answer that enabled most PowerPC programs to run fast enough to be useable. However, this emulation can also be troublesome when accidentally invoked, so…
Watch Out for Rosetta
I have an iMac PowerPC G5 in my office that I do most of my work on. My wife, Michelle, almost exclusively uses our newest computer, an Intel MacBook. For browsing the web, I use Safari in my office but have always used FireFox on the MacBook as I found it to be considerably faster than Safari. I chalked it up to the Intel build of Safari being less efficient than the PowerPC one.
Since we got the MacBook, Michelle has told me on a number of occasions that it was too slow. Every time I used it, I thought it was extremely fast, especially when compared to my older iMac. I could never figure out why she thought it was so darn slow when I thought it was quite speedy… until the other day.
I was using FireFox on the MacBook to look at a few web pages, including Yahoo. Everything was loading fine. Then Michelle wanted to check her e-mail, so I handed her the computer and watched her bring up Safari, followed by an extremely slow-loading Yahoo home page – much slower than I had just loaded it a few minutes prior. It was time to figure out why Safari was acting so sluggish.
After uninstalling the latest beta of Safari 4 and returning it to the more-stable Safari 3, I found that it was still equally as slow. I cleared the cache, cookies, and changed several more settings with no change in speed. Finally, it occurred to me to check to see if Safari had somehow been switched to running in Apple’s PowerPC emulation mode called Rosetta. Sure enough, it was.
Upon unchecking the box telling it to use Rosetta, I instantly found Safari to be just as fast as FireFox ever was. Michelle is much happier using that machine now as well. I have no idea why Safari was ever set to run in Rosetta, but I’m glad I finally figured it out.
The moral of the story is if you are using an Intel-based Apple computer and find a particular program to be running much slower than you think it should be, try the following steps:
- Locate and highlight the application in Finder.
- Right-click on it and select Get Info (or press command-I on the keyboard).
- Look for an option that reads “Open using Rosetta”.
- If it is checked, uncheck it.
- Celebrate.
TUESDAY TECH: Elgato Turbo264 and Turbo264HD

I do a lot of video compression. A LOT. My computer probably spends more time compressing videos than not and it’s probably in need of a break. Unfortunately, there isn’t much break time to give it when some videos take upwards of 7 hours to compress. However, my hopes are high that a certain gadget will relieve some of the strain on my CPU…
Elgato Turbo264 and Turbo264HD
I was listening to the Daily Giz Wiz podcast yesterday, as I often do, and heard host Leo Laporte finally discuss a gadget that I am actually considering purchasing. However, even after reading a ton of online reviews, I’m not sure if it works as well as I’d like it to. Hopefully someone reading this can tell me.
The Elgato Turbo264 and Turbo264HD appear to be nothing more than USB keys – but evidently they pack some powerful processing power inside. When encoding videos to the popular H.264 flavor of the MP4 video format, these devices kick in and speed up the process, cutting down compressing times by at least half. I’ve even read reports of videos that formerly took several hours to compress taking only 20-30 minutes with the Elgato devices installed. That’s one of those claims that I find hard to believe, but hope it’s true.
Both devices are for Mac OX and the Turbo264HD only runs on Intel-based Macs, supporting widescreen resolutions up to 1280×720 (it supports 4×3 resolutions as well but I’m not interested in those). The original Turbo264 only runs on PowerPC-based Macs but doesn’t support HD resolutions, as it maxes out at 960×540.
I do compress a good amount of 720p content for Orlando Attractions Magazine, but do most of my work on my iMac G5, which has a PowerPC chip. Generally, I am only in a rush to compress 640×360 video to get online (usually onto YouTube), so it seems like the cheaper Turbo264 would be the right option for me. But then there’s that part of me that’s telling me to just buy a new Intel-based computer and get the Turbo264HD for around $100 more.
So if anyone out there has either variation of this device, comment and let me know if it really works as well as some say it does. If so, I may just buy the cheaper one right away and hold out on the other until I have more of a reason to upgrade my main machine.
TweetTUESDAY TECH: Looking Deeper at the IBM Supercomputer versus Jeopardy Contestants

Yesterday, IBM announced the next phase in their ongoing Open Advancement of Question Answering initiative in the form of…
Jeopardy Contestants versus IBM Supercomputer
You may have already read these headlines or heard about it on your local news broadcast, but if you’re like me, you likely didn’t dive any deeper into this story -- and there’s a lot of diving to be done.
Here’s Jeopardy host Alex Trebek and a few IBM employees to explain the basics:
The last time a human versus machine match was as widely popularized was when chess champion Gary Kasparov battled IBM’s “Deep Blue” 12 years ago:
So what makes “Watson” different than “Deep Blue”? IBM has a page dedicated to answering that very question:
Deep Blue was an amazing achievement in the application of compute power to an extraordinarily challenging but computationally well-defined and well-bounded game. By searching and evaluating a huge space of possible chess board configurations, Deep Blue has the compute power to beat a grand master.
[...]
Watson faces a challenge that is entirely open-ended and defies the sort of well-bounded mathematical formulation that fits a game like Chess. Watson has to operate in the near limitless, ambiguous and highly contextual domain of human language and knowledge. Ultimately Watson’s scientific goal is to demonstrate how computers can get at the meaning behind a natural language question and infer precise answers from huge volumes of content with justifications that ultimately make sense to humans.
Rather than challenging the human to search a vast mathematical space, Watson challenges the computer to operate in human terms. To understand and answer human questions and to know when it does and doesn’t know the answer — to assess its own knowledge and ability — something humans find relatively easy.
Like Deep Blue, Watson may not mimic human thought processes to get the job done, but unlike Deep Blue there is ultimately no guarantee for Watson that an answer exists or that it can even be inferred from its sources, no matter how long it may search.
In other words, winning at Chess uses an entirely different skill set than understanding everyday human language. Sentence formation, especially as used in Jeopardy, is more of an art form than a science and Watson cannot simply rely on a database of possible word combinations in order to understand English.
Moreover, much in the same way that Deep Blue “sat down” in front of Kasparov to play chess with no help from computer operators or programmers other than to simply start it up, Watson will be pitted against Jeopardy players using only its own “senses” to buzz in and answer questions. It will not be networked or controlled, but rather fed each question electronically at the same time that the human players receive them. It is then up to Watson to interpret what the question is asking for, buzz in, and answer appropriately before other players do.
So it it like Googling the answers while watching Jeopardy? Not quite. Have you ever actually tried to look up Jeopardy answers online while watching? Google responds with so many results to every query that it’s nearly impossible to find the right answer in the few seconds that it takes a person who already knows the answer to ring in and respond. So even if Watson were connected to Google, it wouldn’t be able to sift through the hundreds, if not thousands, of search results it found for each question.
Making Watson understand language is part of a project called the Open Advancement of Question Answering initiative, founded by IBM and Carnegie Mellon University. Accurately understanding human language is one of the keys to naturally interacting with any machine. While voice recognition technolgoy exists today, it is often inaccurate and requires the user to recite specific pre-determined commands in order to get a computer to perform a task.
But imagine if you could simply talk to your computer as if it were another person and it would, in response, do whatever you asked. Rather than opening a Web browser, typing “Google.com” into the address bar, and searching for “lasagna recipe”, and hunting through hundreds of Web pages for the best one, a computer could just be told, “Get me a good recipe for lasagna,” and it could bring you a high-rated recipe without showing you all of the steps in-between. This is one of the boundaries between the mouse/keyboard paradigm of human-computer interaction we know today and the “space age” interaction we so often see in science-fiction films.
Unfortunately, it is not known if the battle between humans and machines on the Jeopardy set will be aired, or even taped. My guess is that if the computer performs poorly, we won’t see much more on the subject until it is improved. But if Watson rises to the challenge and looks like it could beat Ken Jennings’ records, I sense a whole new series of “Are You Smarter than a Supercomputer?” reality shows to come.



