08 June 2006

Civic Reborn


The New 2006 Civic
Originally uploaded by Glenn Gutierrez.
The new "whip" has arrived in my driveway. For the past couple of years, I had been eyeing Jettas and Mazda3s. My 9 year old Korean vehicle was starting to cost more in repairs (and downtime) than I preferred, so it was time to go shopping. Luckily, Honda had some aggressive plans up its sleeve, and they were dished up just in time.

They really changed the Civic for 2006. I'm not talking about a couple of body panels and a sprinkle more horsepower. With the introduction of the Honda Fit as the new entry-level car, it's as if they want to keep the Civic targetted at the same people who bought one years ago. In other words, it also grew up. It has now become a refined, possibly even classy, sedan or sport coupe.

While I love the way it looks on the outside, the interior makes me giddy. Let me say now that I love technology, I love science fiction, and I love video games. The new Civic delivers! All of the smart technology is there, from full side airbags down to an audio input jack for your MP3 player. The Civic EX comes standard with ignition-killing transponder keys, which only allow the vehicle to start if a code is sent from your key to the car. This should slow down a casual thief, who you might even catch red-handed if you install LoJack like I did. That brings us to Science Fiction, which makes its entry with the voice controlled navigation system, which, once you use, you realize all cars should have. One can choose a male voice instead of the standard female voice for feedback and directions, but one would have to be insane (or maybe a girl.. heh).

And video games? This thing is fun, fun, fun to drive. From the rice-rocket-tight suspension with a smoothed out ride, to the digital dash readouts which you easily adjust to in about 10 minutes, to the slightly smaller steering wheel which does something for the sport-feel but I don't really know what yet, I am enjoying every second in this vehicle.

The math also worked out with this car. It gets an EPA estimated 40 mpg highway, 30 mpg city, even though the new engine pumps out 140 horses. It qualifies as a ULEV vehicle (Ultra-Low Emissions), which rocks! I finally had to fill it up and calculated my first tank of gas at 30.11 mpg, which is pretty good for the beginning of the break-in period. I tested and bought the car with 20 miles on it, and I plan to drive nicely for at least the first 1000.

So far, the new 2006 Civic is a serious winner. Mine was built in Canada, and there have been a few reports of problems with Civics from that plant, but none have shown up on mine. I know 'Navi' Civics are not staying on dealer lots for more than a few days at a time, so this car is not very old, and they may have worked things out by now.

If you are planing to buy something nice yet fun in the $16k-$21k range, you need to go check out the new Civic. It's a little smarter than the Mazda3 and a little less expensive than the fancy new Jetta. It might be just right for you too.

Labels: ,

14 December 2005

Review: Mackie Onyx 400F


400F Inner Box
Originally uploaded by Glenn Gutierrez.
Miracle of miracles, the Mackie Onyx 400F audio interface is finally in stock, as of December 6!

I've been using a MOTU Traveler since trying to buy the Mackie for my new studio rig in May of this year. It has been solid with the G5 and Logic 7.1. But I'm still going to try the Mackie because the Traveler has more options than I need, and the Mackie has the potential to sound even better with its Onyx pre-amps and AKM converters.

I'll update this as I go...

My original setup had AES/EBU digital (XLR jacks) running between my DAT deck and Digidesign 888/24 interface. The MOTU Traveler also had AES/EBU so that was easy. The Mackie 400F has coaxial S/PDIF, so I had to run some new cables behind the desk. The DAT deck has optical S/PDIF, but my trusty old Midiman CO2 converter now has a job again.

The Mackie powered up fine, with an apt Christmasy display of its green LEDs. I turned it off just now, while I boot up the G5 and uninstall the MOTU Firewire drivers. I don't want them interfering with the 400F, just in case.

It seems I have one of the earlier CDs which mistakenly didn't include the Mac software. So I'm off to Mackie.com to download...

All installed, and the 400F is working perfectly. It sounds fantastic. There has been some talk on forums about the high-end sounding "brittle," but I have a feeling this is a misconception based on something beyond the listener's control, like ear fatigue or bad monitors. The high-end is not brittle. If anything, it is stunningly crystal clear. I fired up Logic 7.1.1, set it to 192KHz, and launched an FM synthesizer plug-in. Clean!

My unit does emit a high-frequency whine, but it is extremely faint. I didn't even notice until I read about it online.

The 400F also includes Tracktion 2 and a suite of VST plug-ins. While fully WinXP and OS X compatible, these plug-ins are unfortunately not available in AU format, nor do they seem to work properly with FXpansion's VST-AU wrapper (which is unusual). I hope they release proper AU plug-ins at some point, since these plugs do look interesting.

A strange detail emerged when I ran a loopback test to determine recording delay. Let me first state that latency feels very good on the 400F, at least as good as the MOTU Traveler. In other words, I can play virtual synths on a MIDI keyboard and the sound doesn't seem to "lag" behind my playing. But while the MOTU had a universal recording delay of only 64 samples, the 400F first tested at around 2540 samples. When I adjusted some forgotten settings in an attempt to improve this number, it actually went up, as high as 6000 samples even after restarting Logic. I finally rebooted the entire machine and testing was steady at 2544 samples. To be clear, this is not the amount of latency or delay of a live signal, but the offset at which Logic "prints" your audio after a live recording. I'll take a guess that the large number is related to the native CoreAudio support from OS X. I also have the 400F on a Firewire PCI card, instead of the built-in ports. Whatever the reason, I now have my Recording Delay set to -2544 in Logic 7.1.1, OS X 10.4.3, running on a Dual G5 2.7, and audio prints dead on target.

All in all, the Onyx 400F is a fantastic value in this price range. It's a keeper.

Labels: ,

28 November 2005

Review: Tapco S8 Active Monitors

Imaging is impressive on the S8. I've mixed on NS10's, JBL 4208 and 4312, and various Genelec and Tannoy models. The S8 is not as pretty as the Genelec, but I prefer it that way. Some Tannoy monitors, especially the older concentric units, are cleaner than the S8 but not by much.

Build quality is excellent, too. These are heavy, solid beasts. I'm sure there are seams on the cabinets, but we couldn't find them. They are also good looking, much more dark and aggressive than photos can relate. Overall, we have no complaints at all, especially at this price.

This is what's so great about the S8: They are an astounding value. They will definitely show you what is right or wrong with your mix, and do so better than anything else in its class at high or low volume (yes, that is an option no one ever talks about). I had read some reports about bass power problems, but I believe they perform much better in an actual studio/room rather than in a store showroom where sales-staff have likely cranked the back-panel bass option beyond reason.

If you have a chance to listen before you buy, you should. If not, search online for reviews and comparison shootouts. The S8's are a solid investment for anyone shopping in this range.

http://www.tapcoworld.com/products/s8/index.html

UPDATE January 2008: It looks like the Tapco S8 and S5 might be on their way out, replaced by the Mackie MR Series Studio Monitors, due out next month. They have similar specs, price, and an even nicer, more minimalist Mackie aesthetic.

http://www.mackie.com/products/mrseries/splash.html

Labels: ,

04 November 2005

Update: Epson Stylus CX4600

This is an update to an earlier review.

It is now November 2005. About one month ago, it was time for the 3rd round of cartridges in the CX4600. Not bad for one year of light printing. My parents hadn't reported any major problems beyond one color clogging every so often. I was not pleased how much the ink level dropped when doing a single head cleaning, but I've used Epson printers for years and I wasn't surprised either.

However, all is not well. If I hadn't been there and seen it myself I wouldn't believe this. Yellow was running low first, so we replaced that cartridge. Levels check showed a fresh, full yellow tank. But when we printed a test page, there was no yellow at all. So we started a cleaning cycle. This emptied the magenta tank, so we replaced that one. The resulting test page now had no yellow or magenta. The same occurred with cyan and black, so I thought maybe we had received some bad (or old) Epson cartridges from Amazon. The little PC board connectors did look slightly different, but the product numbers were the same. I could hear ink sloshing inside and everything else checked out. In fact, after cleaning, Epson's own software showed ink levels dropping. So there was communication happening.

We went out the next day and bought more new ink from OfficeMax, again only true Epson brand. Same result. One day, the CX4600 was printing fine. As each new color ink was installed, it simply stopped working. The scanner and card reader still work. Epson's advice? 'Clean the print heads.'

We ended up getting a good deal on a replacement CX4600, since we had all this ink, the original was out of warranty, and it would likely cost more just to ship it somewhere to be 'looked at.' The new one works perfectly with the very same ink cartridges.

What does this mean? I believe that Epson changed the electronics in these ink cartridges at some point, which broke compatibility with first generation CX4600 units. I don't know if this was intentional or accidental, but I know this one was registered with Epson and we were not notified. Therefore, the situation is inexcusable.

At the very least, I will no longer recommend Epson printers to friends. The only exception will be people who need direct CD/DVD printing, since Epson was erroneously granted a patent on that here in the USA, barring Canon or HP printers from having the same capability in this market. My own R200 is still going strong (I bought a whole new one when it was time to replace the ink, since that was cheaper).

The CX4600 is indeed a nice little AIO when it works. It's too bad Epson has fallen so far into the razor blade marketing model, that they feel no responsibility towards customers whatsoever. Two words for Epson: Karma & Capitalism. They are both going to show you what-for down the road.

Labels:

23 July 2005

Review: Dell 2405FPW LCD Display

The nice thing about a review of this large LCD panel is that I don't need to say much. I bought it to use as a computer display (see other uses below). I plugged it into the PowerBook via DVI when it first arrived, and it sprung to life at full 1920 x 1200 resolution immediately. I temporarily used it on my 5-year-old G4 with a graphics card which could only manage 1280 x 1024 pixels. The display had options to fully stretch that signal to fill the screen, stretch it proportionally and pillarbox, or simply show it 1:1 with black on all borders. I chose the latter for top quality.

And now on the new G5 with a phat graphics card, it continues to kick ass. Once or twice on the G4 while rebooting, the Dell seemed to get confused when the video signal went away briefly. A simple power cycle fixed that. But on the G5, the Dell 2405 seems perfectly comfortable. They do their handshaking as if they were meant for each other. Standards are good. The Dell even falls asleep when the G5 tells it so.

Quality-wise, the Dell is very good. In fact, I would have said "excellent" but I just got a new 20" iMac G5 in as an admin machine, and it has the best display I've ever seen. To compare, the Dell has great whites, but the iMac is slightly better. After spending some time on the Dell, it's not much different coming back to the iMac, but you can tell it's just a little more balanced (maybe better blue, where the Dell either seems to have too much or not enough). I could probably run the same calibration tools on both and get them even closer. But that would still leave an interesting effect I notice at close range: The pixels on the iMac are crisp, while the Dell's have a slight glow about them. Again, I wouldn't even have noticed without having them side by side. Some people might even like the Dell's glow/blur, as it can make text and graphics look less blocky at small sizes. Personally, I prefer to see what I'm doing, but again, it's not a huge difference between the two.

The 2405 features DVI and VGA inputs for computers, as well as composite, S-Video and component connectors for video. I tried connecting a DVD player with both S-Video and component cables, but the result was a highly distorted picture in both cases. This was a Philips 727, which can output interlaced and progressive video. No matter what I did, it wasn't useable.

A Motorola 6200 HD cable box with DVI output was different, but not better. A tiny version of its output would display on the 2405 then go blank. I'm guessing this was some sort of copy protection, but that would be pretty damned lame if I can't even watch the show in the first place, let alone dupe it. What ever happened to one generation allowance schemes like SCMS on DAT tapes? There was definitely some "talking" back and forth, since I had to do a defaults reset before the cable box would again work with my HDTV and ReplayTV properly. This was a fun, though unsuccessful sidetrack for me. Your mileage may vary.

If you do plan to use the 2405 on a Mac or as a TV display, you obviously won't use the included Windows driver. But that does come with one limitation: The normal setup menu accessed by the display's on-board controls doesn't offer brightness adjustment. Never fear, a trick is nigh: Instead of starting with the Enter button, hit - (minus). This will pop up a mini brightness menu. Easy like pie. And as you can see in the photo above, OS X 10.4 or later even supports screen pivot on many native graphics cards.

I still haven't had a chance to try the flash media card slots on the side of the 2405, or the built-in USB 2.0 hub. I'll try to update this entry or leave an extra comment if/when I get the chance.

Recently, I've seen killer deals on the Dell 2405FPW pop up again. If you can pick it up for near $800, it's a no-brainer. Like I said when it arrived, even at the normal $1200 MSRP, this thing is the best deal out there by a wide margin. Get it? Wide..

And I don't even notice the Dell logo when I'm using it.

Labels: , ,

08 July 2005

Review: Sonnet Allegro Firewire PCI Card

I purchased this card to pamper a Firewire audio interface, which it does well, leaving my native Firewire ports for other things like hard drives, iPods, etc.

Installation was zero effort. Just open up the computer and pop it into an empty PCI slot. Mac OS X 10.4.1 requires no drivers. The ports simply show up as standard Firewire, not even some stepchild class sub-set, just Firewire. Can't ask for more.

But you do get a little more. My audio interface has many power options: Firewire bus power, portable battery power, or AC adapter. Since I was switching to a PCI solution, I thought I'd need to start using the AC adapter. But the Allegro FW400A supplies sufficient bus power to run a MOTU Traveler! I didn't even realize this until after I'd spent a day working with it, then noticed the AC adapter was still sitting in the box. I hadn't expected this since the card has no option to connect hard drive style power leads inside the computer. Apparently, this is not necessary, at least for certain devices. The audio interface seems perfectly happy. It continues to run without a single hitch at low latency (64 samples).

Note: The original Allegro FW400 card did not support the Power Mac G5 motherboard. So be sure to get the newer Allegro FW400A. This is the model reviewed here, and it is working perfectly in a new Dual 2.7 G5 Power Mac.

Highly recommended, especially when a good Firewire hub costs nearly twice as much, but your devices would still be sharing one bus.

Labels: ,

29 June 2005

Review: Comfort Products Shiatsu Massage Chair

I have a new rule: Sit in a chair before buying it.

I'd been considering this rule already, after a few cheap chairs made their way in (and out) of my studio. But I thought perhaps this one was different. The supposedly high list price and sturdy appearance fished me into buying this chair mail-order from Amazon.

Shiatsu! What an exciting word to put on a product! The so-called massaging fingers are impressive at first. The biggest problem with this entire item, however, is when the fingers stop. Even at their most 'retracted' position, they still jut into your back. There is no way to simply sit in this chair for long periods of work time. I've resorted to timing the most flattened posture of the fingers with the remote control, trying desperately to smooth them out.

That's not easy when the battery no longer holds a charge. After only a few weeks, and 4 charge cycles, the Charge light just flashes mocklingly when I try to activate any functions. Using or charging the battery while working seems like a good plan, until you remember that you're attached to a very cheap, and very short, wall wart AC adapter cable. I'm a long-time portable computer user, so I know how to maintain rechargeable batteries. This system is simply junk.

The non-Shiatsu massage is no better. It feels like there are 4 Nintendo rumble packs tucked into this chair, two in the lower back area, two in the seat. Do they do much besides shake and make noise? No. Anything at all for tired shoulders? No. A friend and I also discovered that the lower back Shiatsu/rumble combo is too low for a 6' person, but too high for a 5' person. There is no adjustment.

And now I've noticed the arms are starting to come loose. At first, it was only the left side. I re-tightened the hex bolts and figured I had overlooked them during assembly. But now the right side is wobbling and the left side is a little loose again.

I thought I was getting a good deal on a high end product at Amazon, like the occasional killer deal on Calphalon cookware. Nothing is further from the truth. It arrived in cheesball overseas cardboard packaging complete with eye-popping color graphics, and a photocopied instruction manual inside. I'm trying to track that manual down now, to find out if the warranty is over already.

No more 'Comfort Products' for me.

Labels:

24 November 2004

Love, Angel, Music, Baby

(aka LAMB)

Wow! I haven't liked a pop album all year, and I was tired of being negative on new releases. But Gwen Stefani's new album is great from many perspectives. Of course, if you don't like Gwen, this won't magically seduce you, so feel free to skip it. Yay freedom!

The songs have great melodies and interesting vocals. The production is different from anything out there right now, and a lot of it distills the best elements from the 80's. New Order and Freestyle fans will find a few interesting tracks near the end of the album, including guest appearances by Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook. This is not just another No Doubt CD, it's a very cool electronic project with great songs and a kick-ass vocalist.

Technically, the album is outstanding. The mixes are huge and incredibly present, but still natural sounding. I think this has something to do with the purity of Gwen's voice being easy to mix above the usual problems of mid-range crowding, and it has already given me new ideas. The mastering is jaw-dropping, and much-appreciated by someone like me who does the occasional final processing. The ability to maintain such clarity and bass, while pumping the signal so hot, is a serious talent. There is only some occasional distortion in hot moments, but it's good ol' pleasant crunch. Brian "Big Bass" Gardner at Bernie Grundman Mastering deserves his title.

Definitely worth picking up on sale for under $10 or on iTunes for $9.99. I wish there were a few more photos of the lovely Gwenifer, and some have been disappointed that the lyrics aren't as allegorical as some No Doubt odysseys, but I guess you can't have everything. I think it's just what I needed right about now.

Labels:

28 August 2004

Review: Epson Stylus CX4600 All-In-One

Please see my review update.

I just finished installing this machine for my parents, who are running OS X 10.3.4 (Panther) on an aging iMac G3/400 DV. The entire process was simple and uneventful. My surprise came afterwards when I started playing with the CX4600. It's a very solid little All-In-One (AIO)!

After reading reviews of older Epson, HP and Canon AIO's, I was worried about several things. So far, the print quality is very good, on par with my own C84. In fact, the CX4600 uses the same 4 separate CMYK ink cartridges as the C84, which means you won't have any trouble finding them at stores. The paper transport is a little loud, but not too bad. Printing is very quick once it gets going, with a quiet side to side undulation.

The scan quality is excellent for most uses and you can freely choose your resolution. Hint: the installer will put Epson Smart Panel on your desktop, but I prefer Epson Scan which is also installed in your Applications folder. This is the same control panel you might have seen before in the Epson Twain driver. You can choose Full Auto mode, where it will magically figure out what you are scanning and adjust settings to match (even finding and scanning multiple photos into individual files), or Professional mode, where you choose everything. To be honest, I use the middle "Home" setting on my own system, since it offers that very cool auto-magic assist with the ability to override when necessary.

Using the Copy function is.. fun. I can't explain why, but it's nice to *not* configure, adjust, crop, fit, or launch anything. Just hit the Color or B&W Copy button and it goes to work immediately. I must be easily entertained. Again, the quality is excellent. Professional designers will likely own a scanner and photo printer, but they (I) might consider owning one of these for convenience too.

Memory Card slots are the bonus which puts the CX4600 over the top. I think I spent the most time looking up info on these, to see if they could be used with iPhoto in OS X. The web site doesn't say. The owner's manual doesn't say. But the answer is YES! Along with everything else, the installer drops CardMonitor and PhotoStarter onto your drive. The latter can be set up to launch iPhoto when you plug your camera's card into the CX4600. The 12 test photos I took imported perfectly afterwards (set PhotoStarter so that it does not auto-download the photos; let iPhoto handle it). The manual does mention this functionality for Windows, so I'm sure it works just as well.

Minor annoyances: The CX4600 can only be connected via USB, so there is no longer any excuse to make customers "choose" their own cable. It should be in the box. And the installer warns that it will take a long time. They're not kidding. But it's only because it runs several individual installers, which all require your admin password and often spend a very long time searching your drive for some reason. It would be less painful if you could do this in one pass and walk away while it works. However, that's all history. Once set up, it is a thing of beauty.

Don't be turned off by the photos of the CX4600. In person, it actually looks very classy. The top portion is covered in a metallic paint, making it appear less like a recycling bin and more like a stylish computer peripheral. It's also smaller and heavier than it appears. The software is fairly seamless and lets you dig deep if you know where to look. That's about as good as it can get. If you've been looking for an All-In-One, this new Epson is a great choice.

Updated! Please see my review update.

Labels:

13 April 2003

Review: Taxcut 2002 Platinum (Mac)

The Good: TaxCut is less expensive than TurboTax and was first to OS X last year. Now it imports last year's TurboTax data!

The Bad: Now I know why it's cheaper. TaxCut is a mere advertisement for H&R Block. The program does its best to confuse the user into giving up and driving to the local office for human filing help. TaxCut's web-based "Help" system will run you around in aimless circles. The so-called automatic update asks for permission to connect to the Internet, even though that's how the Help works the entire time. If it finds an update, the program claims that it will handle everything. Not true, it simply dumps you on their web site where it doesn't even show you which files you should download and manually install. Skipped an interview question accidentally? Don't try the Back button, because half the time it will skip back an entire section instead of that last page. You get to start over! What about that one year head-start in OS X? I guess it wasn't long enough to pop the lid on Cocoa so we could use a mouse with a scroll wheel.

The Ugly (as of April 13): Pop-up menus in the interview questions look empty until you pop them open. After you make a selection, it doesn't show anymore, as the size goes back to zero. After you complete a section (i.e. 1099-MISC worksheet) and come back to its directory, sometimes the item you just created will display and sometimes it won't. And I hope you didn't change your mind about that single item you decided to add in an Itemize list yesterday. When you open your file today, the entire list you created will now be titled "untitled" and contain one item called "value."

The Fugly: TurboTax import? All seemed well until I got to the final error check. "You have 270 errors and 4 warnings." Why? Because I suddenly had 69 depreciation lists, only three of which were legit. All 270 errors stem from a logical error taught in programming 101: Anywhere I'd entered a "No" or zero in TurboTax was now a blank in TaxCut, and it thinks I haven't answered questions about whether I've sold an item or not, or to which copy of the Schedule C this should be applied. There wasn't even a way to mass-delete all the extra forms. I had to visit each form to delete it. When I got to the vehicle expense section, my vehicle from the previous years didn't show up. I guess it didn't import. Wait! Yes it did, because now I'm getting errors for each one, also because of one or two "missing" choices. Waste more time repairing, and.. No errors, no warnings, proceed to state.. Three warnings. Visit the first warning. An incomplete description, circular Help, and a suggestion to modify the "form below." There is no form below. That's enough.

The numerous and pathetic bugs in TaxCut would be acceptable in other types of software. But this is a program with a deadline, written by people who are supposed to be good at details (if nothing else). I'm left feeling unsure about my personal taxes for the first time in several years of MacInTax aka TurboTax Mac. As much as I don't like Intuit's attitude towards customers or their decision this year to charge extra for Schedule C help, I'll be looking at TurboTax next year.

Labels:

25 June 2002

Beware Etronics.com

I purchased a cordless phone from Etronics.com in October 2001. My purchase arrived with scratches and smudges, and worse, no manuals or warranty info. I managed to clean it up, as I would any refurb, since it was a really good refurb price (about 55% of original MSRP). Their prices on other items seem just average.

When I finally reached them the first time, they claimed that they don't sell refurbished products. I took them at their word. All I really wanted was the user manual and warranty. Easy!

Dear Mr. Gutierrez:

Thank you for your e-mail correspondence. We apologize for the condition in which you received your merchandise. We do not sell used or refurbished merchandise, so I'm not sure why there would be scratches on the unit. In any case, we will be sending the manual and any other paperwork right away per your request, and we apologize for any inconvenience.

If you have any further questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact us again.

Susan
Etronics.com
Customer Service
(800) 541-1490


Everything was cool, they were going to send it right away. Weeks pass. Nothing.

I contact them again, and on January 2 receive this glorious example of English:

HI
I do apologize about the inconvenience this might have cause you
I will have the order send again to the warehouse and have them shipped the missing stuff to you immediately


Happy Holidays

Leo Landau
www.etronics.com
212-475-2450 x 2219 / 1-800-323-7669 x 2219


When I contacted them on January 23, the true nature of Etronics "customer service" became apparent. The attitude at this company is not about helping people, it is about protecting the company.

Hello,
At this time the order number that you have provided for us in invalid. If you have a number beginning with a 3 that would enable us to assist you better.
If you have any further questions or comments, feel free to contact us at any time.
Regards,
Philip


I offer to scan the invoice, to which Philip replies "We do apologize for the misunderstanding. Your order should be shipping out shortly, we are sorry for the extensive delay." Meanwhile, the different phone numbers listed in the emails above rang and rang, without a single pickup.

After several more weeks, I finally reported Supreme Video (dba ETRONICS) to the BBB and in March 2003, Sandy at Etronics miraculously managed to "find" a manual for the phone and sent it to me. Then the spam started up and I had to drop that email address.

It's no major monetary loss, of course. But the principle here should be a serious warning, especially if you're going to spend more than I did. Note: the shipping charges came to $19 for UPS Ground, on a 2 lb. box. Factor that in while shopping, if you think you've found a good price.

Labels:

25 January 2002

Review: Sony SPP-ID975 900 MHz Phone

After reading some reviews here and there, I was hesitant. My old Sony ID910 was having its own problems, with the LCD losing entire rows of pixels. But I loved it otherwise, and still wanted a 900 MHz phone which wouldn't interfere with my 2.4 GHz 802.11b computer network. The ID910 always had great range, the digital 900 MHz quality was great, I wanted a speakerphone, and I needed Caller ID. The ID975 was one of few choices.

Thank goodness! I haven't had any problems with battery life, scrambled directory entries, or reliability. The range is at least as good as the ID910, and it still charges an extra battery (the same T23) in the base. Best of all, it improves many annoyances of the ID910: The handset is much lighter. The 3-line LCD display shows both the Caller ID title and number, so you can try to figure out who it is even if Caller ID doesn't know. The jog wheel makes a user manual completely redundant - I've never even looked at the paperwork, but had no problems entering speed dial numbers or changing the ringer. There are two bright red LEDs on the base unit which indicate if someone has called, and if you have any messages (I'm guessing it listens for a stuttering dial tone when you're not on the line).

All is not perfect, however. Where the ID910 handset had no real external antenna, the 3-inch extra at the top of the ID975's handset is a step backward. The extra battery charging in the base unit cannot power the base unit during an outage, as the ID910's could. And while the New Call and Message LEDs on the base are very nice, there is no indication on the handset of either. Sony still won't let us control the volume of the ringer. It's either style 1-4 or off (0). But these are minor issues.

Overall, I'm very happy with this phone. I hope I don't need a new one until cordless phones and WiFi are no longer competing for the same frequency space. With 2.4 GHz phones becoming popular, good digital 900 MHz phones (most are analog) are becoming hard to find!

Labels:

10 July 2001

Review: Rendezvous with Rama

Arthur C Clarke is my favorite author, and the Rama series is my favorite from him. This universe is his most ambitious, and there is a lot of 'brain candy' to absorb.

I loaned the first book (Rendezvous with Rama is the first of 4) to a friend who talked me into reading Tolkein and Chung Kuo, and he bought the rest himself. He loved it.

Even better, Morgan Freeman has the movie rights to the books and has brought in David Fincher to direct it properly. While this is great news, do yourself a favor: read the books before you see the movie.

There's no way they'll be able to cover all the details. I can only hope mainstream audiences will appreciate it.

Labels:

05 July 2001

Review: Labtec Pulse 424 2.1 Speakers

I have a Monsoon flat panel system at home, but wanted to get something inexpensive for the office. After reading a couple of glowing reviews here and elsewhere, the Pulse was on its way. I didn't expect much, as my first computer speakers in 1995 were Labtecs and definitely sounded like they were cheap. The box arrived well-packed. Installation was a no brainer.

Wow! These things sound enormous. Unreal Tournament is a whole new game. And they make well-mixed music sound even better (try Bootylicious by Destiny's Child - I didn't really like the song until now). The Monsoons do have a bit more clarity at very loud levels, but the Labtec Pulse has this great warmth that is very appealing. The subwoofer is strong and very well matched to the satellites. Crossover point seems perfect.

Labtec has come a long way in six years. Highly recommended.

Labels: