Nerdnology

Nerds + Technology = Nerdnology

Did my entertainment life just change?

clock February 17, 2009 21:11 by author Corby

I have tried everything under the sun to create entertainment for myself...or at least shift my lifestyle in a way to fulfill my entertainment needs for the few hours a night I have to consume entertainment.  I have a Roku for streaming TV and movies to my television from Netflix, a Wii when I need to rock some tennis or ski my fat backside down a mountain missing 7 flags (ug, I know), I have a Tivo for time shifting content of my choosing from network and cable broadcasts, I have a 5 disk DVD changer, I have the highest level cable with HD + "On Demand", I have an iTouch full of video podcasts and audio podcasts...  Basically at any given moment between 6pm and 10pm I should be in complete control of how I spend my evenings...at the mercy of NONE....even the big whig "we know better than you what you want to watch" network broadcasts.

But even with all of this technology at my fingertips, I still have been finding myself struggling in the evenings to entertain my brain in either a fun way or a meaningful way.  I'd say 1/4 the time, I am generally enthusiastic about what I find on TV.  I have certain television programs I dig. The Big Bang Theory, Dirty Jobs, Survivor (I know...get off my ass), Big Brother (I know...get off my ass), The Amazing Race, Mythbusters, The Office, and a handful of others.  But the other 3/4 of the time from 6-10pm I am searching out things...looking for something that doesn't suck...or at least doesn't suck enough for me to turn the channel.

Tonight, thanks to a posting on Facebook, someone pointed me in the direction of http://live.twit.tv.  I thought "why not, it's either freaking American Idol, which I hate, or some crap on cable about UFOs or Monsters...."  So over I switched to watch Leo Laporte, a guy I listen to weekly on This Week in Tech.  Well I hve just spent the last 3.5 hours watching Leo Laporte and his various guests create shows, discuss technology, discuss the podosphere, and basically entertain my nerd brain this entire time.  I actually have had my 50" LCD Sony Wega TV turned off for hours because I've been watching this stream on my Macbook (holy crap, 24% battery left..I better charge).

So is this the future of my nerd entertainment?  Have I just evolved from a nerd that watches Cranky Geeks on my iPod from the toilet, listens to TWIT at work, and generally hits G4 TV every now and then for nerd news delivered by random hot chick into a dude that has spent way too much money on technology to satisfy my nerd entertainment cravings only to spend every waking moment watching video streams of nerd news on the internet instead of watching the cable I pay $130 a month for?  

 

 Leo Lapore, Twit, the entire Twit.tv network are far more entertaining to this geek than crappy broadcast television.  The few things I actually dig I will probably continue to Tivo and catch when time permits...but my days of watching "Extra Extra" just because it is on at 6:30 and it's either that or Wheel of Fortune, which I can't watch because our stupid dog barks at the door every time a correct letter "ding" dings (the dog thinks it's the freaking doorbell). are completely over.  I think I have truly set my mind at ease with not having to watch my TV and my cable just because it's a big TV and I am paying out the ass for cable programming.

If it sucks, it sucks...and I won't watch.  I will find my own content....I will watch it when I want and how I want....I will not be forced into the mind numbing boredom of crap, crap, crap any more....I, my friends, will watch nerd shows on the internet.  Thank you very much Leo Laporte! 



Unibody Macbook, adapters, TV, Netflix streaming, Roku, and Blockbuster Alternatives

clock November 26, 2008 19:25 by author Corby

Since I got my new Macbook in mid October of 2008, I have been wanting to connect it to my 50" Sony Wega LCD TV.  At first, my interest was only out of curiosity but after recently discovering the Mac version of the Netflix streaming player my curiosity switched to that of necessity.  If I am able to connect the Macbook to my TV and stream Netflix movies, talk about a pig in mud!

After some research done over at my other blog, www.helpmeswitch.com, I figured the only way to do it was to connect via the mini display port out to a second connector.  Well I just got back from the Apple Store and here's the scoop.

Due to the fact that I already owned a DVI to HDMI conversion cable, I opted to drop $30 on a mini display port to DVI cable from Apple.  Once connected to the Macbook and the TV, I fired up input #7 on the TV.  POW, Leopard appeared on the television in all of it's glory.  Step two was to try to stream some video, as using an s-video cable and 1/8" to RCA (red/white) cable going from an XP laptop to the TV worked the same way....until I attempted to stream Netflix or, for that matter, run anything in Windows Media Player or VLC.  Both players left a black box in the center of the XP output on the TV.

Needless to say, Netflix fired up and I started streaming episode 1 of season 1 of Dr. Who.  But wha, wha, whaaat?  Where's the audio?  I have always been under the impression that HDMI handled both audio AND video but I appear to either A) be mistaken or B) have an issue with the mini display port to DVI to HDMI setup.  Perhaps the DVI downgrades the signal and only allows the video output.

So I reverted back to my old 1/8" to RCA (red/white) cable and went from the Macbook's Line Out to the TV's audio in....no luck.  No audio.  Video yes, but what good is it sitting across the room staring at the 50" big screen if I can barely here the Macbook's speakers cranked all the way up without hooking up some sort of external computer speaker arrangement?

So unless I can find a different audio cable to connect the Macbook to the TV, I may have to return the $30 mini display port cable to the Apple Store and find another solution.

That solution, from all of my research, is a device called The Roku.  The Roku is a small set-top device that connects to your home network (yes, it has wi-fi!) and your "watch instantly" enabled Netflix account (I believe this the $8.99/month, one rental at a time minimum to turn on the "watch instantly" capabilities).  So for 3 X the expense of the mini display port adapter, this device handles it all and is in all honesty MEANT to connect Netflix to your TV.

The $100 price point isn't too bad, considering renting a movie from the video store is over $4 a pop now...in a matter of a few months, the device would pay for itself even taking into account the $9/month Netflix fee.  Over a year or two, it would easily more than pay for itself in convenience alone!

As an alternative to the Roku, Blockbuster has just released their MediaPoint player.  What's the difference?  Well for the $99 you actually get 25 movie downloads....and each download is a la carte, which means that unlike Netflix, you actually fork out $1.99 for each video you download to the MediaPoint player.  So I guess the toss-up between the two devices would be the number of movies you watch.  If you watch a bunch, Netflix is the way to go.  If you watch very few, MediaPoint from Blockbuster might be you cup of tea.  

The remaining issue between these two players is the content library behind them.  Netflix claims 12,000 movies (less that they actually stream live) and Blockbuster claims 2,000...a rather large difference, if you ask me.

For my money, the Roku will probably be the way to go.  Once I take back this mini display DVI adapter to Apple and convince my lovely bride to allow yet another box to sit next to the TV, I'll write a report on the Roku.

If only my Tivo, which I have been a diehard fan of for years, would cooperate with Netflix....I know there was talk about this years ago, but nothing ever came of it...what a huge, huge, huge disappointment from both Tivo and Netflix



Tivo + Mac

clock November 10, 2008 19:47 by author Corby
OK, I have had a TiVo for 5 years (on my second one actually) and I love it....especially after spending the last two months off TiVo and onto my local cable company's "DVR" option. Thumbs down to that, thumbs up to TiVo.

So a while back I purchased the upgrade to Tivo ToGo or Tivo Desktop Plus...I can't recall which, but I do know it allowed me to transfer files from my TiVo to my PC and visa versa. Now that I'm on a MacBook, I wondered if there was the same capability.

After much research and installing the .dmg file TiVo's website pushed out, it turns out that there is not a TiVo-built software solution for the Mac like there was for the PC...you have to buy a 3-rd party piece of software (for $80!) to get TiVo files from the TiVo to the Mac and visa versa. Toast 9 says it'll do the trick...but there's no way I'm blowing $80 when I already bought the upgrade from TiVo for their PC application.

I guess worst case is that I can transfer shows from TiVo to my XP box, then send them over to my MacBook via the home network...but thumbs down! I can see why many Mac users have said that they feel like second class citizens when it comes to software options...


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