Friday, April 30, 2010
Jenny Craig: Year 2 - Week Seventeen
Down 0.6 this week. Going the right direction :-)
Labels:
Jenny Craig,
weight loss
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Win Phil's Nexus One Contest Entry (Hard to Handle)
AndroidCentral.com is holding a contest to win a Google Nexus One phone. All you have to do is create a video stating why you want the phone, and people will vote for their favorite videos after the April 30th deadline.
Well, here's my entry to that contest! I'll post the voting link as soon as that is ready.
Well, here's my entry to that contest! I'll post the voting link as soon as that is ready.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Pictures from my dad's Around the World motorcycle trip in the 60's
Between 1964 and 1966, Carlos Caggiani, my father, visited 26 countries on his 1947 Indian Chief motorcycle. His two year adventure is the subject of a book, "Huellas y Horizontes" (Tracks and Horizons). The Spanish version of that book can be found here, and an English translation is in the works for this year.
Below is an album of pictures and newspaper clippings from his voyage.
Below is an album of pictures and newspaper clippings from his voyage.
Huellas y Horizontes |
Labels:
adventure,
books,
motorcycle
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Jenny Craig: Year 2 - Week Sixteen
Down 1.4 pounds this week! So that's a total of 40.4 pounds. I really have to try to break through this 40 pound barrier. Been hovering around here for too long!
Labels:
Jenny Craig,
weight loss
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Fighting Android Fragmentation: Should HTC Sense become an app?
Google's Android OS has been gaining huge ground lately on almost all cell phone carriers worldwide. Companies such as Motorola, Samsung, and HTC have jumped aboard creating handsets that utilize the open operating system. Google's own Nexus One was designed and manufactured by HTC.
One thing HTC usually adds to most of their offerings (thought not on the Nexus One) is a user interface layer called "HTC Sense". This is basically "skin" of sorts that adds some functionality to HTC phones, including cool widgets and social networking add-ons. It is typically highly regarded in the Android world, though there are those who would prefer a "stock" Android installation.
I personally use the Sprint HTC Hero Android phone (pictured). It runs HTC Sense, though it's currently still running Android 1.5, and not the latest 2.1 that the newer phones are getting. This is an example of what people are calling the "fragmentation" of Android. Fragmentation basically means that there are multiple versions of the Android OS out in the wild, causing some software to only run only on certain versions. Fragmentation is bad any way you look at it. Software developers have to choose which version their apps will support, or need to work harder to support them all.
Add on top of that the modifications that some carriers add to their phones (Sprint adds their own built-in apps, for example) and the different skins that certain manufacturers add (HTC Sense and Motorola's Motoblur, for example) and you get a difficult and complex landscape to manage.
Google has announced that they plan to battle fragmentation starting with the next version of Android, code-named Froyo, by focusing the OS to include just the core fundamentals, and breaking out certain features as downloadable apps instead of being baked into the core. This is a great step forward in fighting fragmentation, and it occurred to me that it is only the first step.
Carriers and handset manufacturers need to follow by making their add-ons an a-la-carte affair. Want HTC Sense on your handset? Download the app! Want Sprint TV? Search the marketplace!
Obviously, there would need to be some logic around this for business purposes. For example, only HTC handsets can download HTC Sense in the marketplace. Or only Sprint customers would be able to download Sprint TV.
Or better yet, make HTC Sense (or Motoblur) available to everyone for a small fee. If you happen to prefer using Sense over stock Android, why not be able to install it? And HTC can make a buck in the process. The idea is for ALL Android phones to be able to run the same stock version and get updates from Google, and all the other features and add-ons would be downloadable. Kind of sounds like a regular desktop OS, doesn't it? Sure would make it easier, faster, and more convenient for all!
Thoughts?
One thing HTC usually adds to most of their offerings (thought not on the Nexus One) is a user interface layer called "HTC Sense". This is basically "skin" of sorts that adds some functionality to HTC phones, including cool widgets and social networking add-ons. It is typically highly regarded in the Android world, though there are those who would prefer a "stock" Android installation.
I personally use the Sprint HTC Hero Android phone (pictured). It runs HTC Sense, though it's currently still running Android 1.5, and not the latest 2.1 that the newer phones are getting. This is an example of what people are calling the "fragmentation" of Android. Fragmentation basically means that there are multiple versions of the Android OS out in the wild, causing some software to only run only on certain versions. Fragmentation is bad any way you look at it. Software developers have to choose which version their apps will support, or need to work harder to support them all.
Add on top of that the modifications that some carriers add to their phones (Sprint adds their own built-in apps, for example) and the different skins that certain manufacturers add (HTC Sense and Motorola's Motoblur, for example) and you get a difficult and complex landscape to manage.
Google has announced that they plan to battle fragmentation starting with the next version of Android, code-named Froyo, by focusing the OS to include just the core fundamentals, and breaking out certain features as downloadable apps instead of being baked into the core. This is a great step forward in fighting fragmentation, and it occurred to me that it is only the first step.
Carriers and handset manufacturers need to follow by making their add-ons an a-la-carte affair. Want HTC Sense on your handset? Download the app! Want Sprint TV? Search the marketplace!
Obviously, there would need to be some logic around this for business purposes. For example, only HTC handsets can download HTC Sense in the marketplace. Or only Sprint customers would be able to download Sprint TV.
Or better yet, make HTC Sense (or Motoblur) available to everyone for a small fee. If you happen to prefer using Sense over stock Android, why not be able to install it? And HTC can make a buck in the process. The idea is for ALL Android phones to be able to run the same stock version and get updates from Google, and all the other features and add-ons would be downloadable. Kind of sounds like a regular desktop OS, doesn't it? Sure would make it easier, faster, and more convenient for all!
Thoughts?
Monday, April 19, 2010
Steve Jobs Reiterates: “Folks who want porn can buy an Android phone”
Steve Jobs basically says that if you want freedom of choice, get an Android phone. Thanks for the tip, Steve!
Steve Jobs Reiterates: “Folks who want porn can buy an Android phone”
Steve Jobs Reiterates: “Folks who want porn can buy an Android phone”
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Inky & Blinky & Pinky & Clyde T-shirt from Zazzle.com
Saw this on Zazzle and loved it! If you are a Pac Man fan, this is the perfect t-shirt!
Friday, April 16, 2010
Jenny Craig: Year 2 - Week Fifteen
Ok, so I worked out to try to make up for the baseball and hockey games I went to, and it seems to have helped a bit. Although I gained 0.2 pounds this week, it would have been way worse had I not worked to take some of it off.
As a matter of fact, the day after my weigh-in at Jenny Craig, I had already dropped the weight.
This week is looking free and clear, and I have high hopes of dropping more weight :-)
As a matter of fact, the day after my weigh-in at Jenny Craig, I had already dropped the weight.
This week is looking free and clear, and I have high hopes of dropping more weight :-)
Labels:
Jenny Craig,
weight loss
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Jenny Craig: Year 2 - Week Fourteen
Sigh. Up 0.8 last week, and this week isn't looking much better (baseball game Friday, dinner/hockey game Saturday).
I'll just have to work harder to stem the tide.
I'll just have to work harder to stem the tide.
Labels:
Jenny Craig,
weight loss
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