24 June 2010

Japanese Ring tones cure sinusitis

Japan has taken that step towards your mobile phone being a medical health device by designing a ring tone that clears your sinuses... hana SUKKIRI MELODY has variable frequencies that are said to dislodge the pollen from your nasal cavities and let it fall out your nose. Will this lead to a speight of people holding their phones to their noses rather than answering them? Not sure, but it seems a little far fetched. You can download this ringtone here.

If this was such a good idea, why not come up with sounds that have therapeutic effects elsewhere? Frequencies that dislodge the earwax from your ears, or are played after closing time to sober people up for the way home, or music that makes you better in bed.... though that already exists I suppose.

18 June 2010

LOCAL GOOGLE - INFURIATING

OK, 10 points goes to the person who can work out how to actually get to www.google.com from the UK. It's crazy.Any variation on typing in www.google.com actually re-directs me to the www.google.co.uk website. This includes:

  1. Typing www.google.com into my browser
  2. Searching for Google.com and clicking on the google results and still getting re-directed
  3. Starting 'safe browsing' - i.e. supposedly anonymous browsing and trying the above.
You can't change any of this through your search settings.

A little research has found that it's actually google doing this at their end, when they see my IP address, so the only way to get around it seemingly is to spoof your IP address. Or, to use their new secure version of Google search which is on https://www.google.com




16 June 2010

WORDPRESS IS MORE THAN A BLOGGING SERVICE

Ok, so if you know me well then you know that although I have my moments of genius I also have my 'slow' moments. To be honest, I think my lack of realisation that blogging sites had become web site building services is one of those. Perhaps it's because of their slow, insipid creep towards being self-building websites that it's crept in under my radar. Perhaps it's because I'm still old school enough to think that sites that build websites can't be the best approach. Either way it's naive.

Not only is Wordpress an amazing way to build a website, people with little or no knowledge of how a website works can build websites in a fraction of the time it takes to build one in dreamweaver and ultimately had far more of the social media services & functionality built in than I could ever manage. Enhancing the site involves downloading another widget and installing it. Bingo. Hours of an individual's work captured and used to your end's without you missing a single night's sleep or having to cancel that date. What happened to the geek crown of sacrifice?

All I can say is, if you have ever wanted to build a website but don't know how or just want the opportunity to express some random part of your personality then give it a go. It's so easy it's embarassing.

10 June 2010

ONLINE BACKUP SERVICE

Fret no more about whether or not your computer, or indeed any internet connected device is backed up. It's ok to have an external backup drive, but realistically we just don't back up to it enough. Complacency sets in and all of a sudden it's been months since the last back up and critical files are at risk of loss.

Fail rates of drives may be low, but 2% fail in some way in the first year, but it's not just that. 43% of people manage to accidentally delete files every year, plus there is the issue of theft. Only 3 in every 100 laptops that are stolen are recovered, plus there's fire, dropping your laptop, spilling water on it. I'm not suggesting it's going to happen, but sometimes these things do. Let's face it, when it does happen, it's devastating. It was the loss of my drive 10 years ago that led me to start my photo website so that I felt that at least in some part, my photos would always be there. 

Carbonite is a backup system that uses your broadband network to backup your entire drive of your laptop or your phone to the internet. Clever software you install monitors what files have changed and backs them up in the background without you doing a thing. All this for less than £50 a year. Brilliant.



9 June 2010

GOOGLE IN PRIVATE

Google launched something pretty cool today, but perhaps something that wouldn't immediately appear so. If you've ever wanted to search for something without your ISP knowing about it - for example illegal downloads - then you may have been concerned about using your search to do so. Not any more. Google have launched a secure version of their Google.com search which means that only Google and you know what it is that you searched for.

The same goes if you are on a public computer - you can search without worry that the next person is going to see your search history - though it may well still be tracked on your machine if you're not using private browsing. 

It's only available on the main google.com site at the moment and can be reached either by going to the www.google.com site and then putting an 's' after the http or by bookmarking that page i.e. https://www.google.com.

Now, what can I search for?

3 June 2010

phone posting

This is my first ever phone post. seems weird to think this is publishing to the web, from my Android phone, over the phone network, on to the web, into my blogger site, onto my blog and streamed via RSS to miune. Simple? No. Impressive? Yes.

2 June 2010

I drove an electric car today!!!

Wow. Well this is one of those moments - the first time I ever drove an electric car. It was very impressive to be honest. Not only was it electric, but it was a great car too.

Based on the Mitsubishi 'i' car chassis, the engine has been replaced by a purely electric drive train and battery that can be charged from the household mains from flat to full in 6hrs. Not bad, bit like my phone really. That charge will cost you £1, making the annual estimated bill £144. Brilliant.

Driving it is so different. The power is totally consistent, a bit more like the opposite of breaking - it's smooth and even rather than jerky, either as a result of the engine changing gear manually or automatically. Spookily quiet as well, though with the windows down - it was a summer's day - the sounds of the city were enough.

Acceleration was good - we beat a Bentley and a Prius off the lights by quite a margin - apparently it's about 30% quicker than an equivalent 'city car'. It's due out at the start of next year thanks to the government's recent announcement that they are giving £5k rebate off electric cars and although I don't think I'll be getting one myself just yet (at about £30k) if I had the cash and lived in the city I'd probably do it. No congestion charge, no car tax and less than a weekend's spending money a year on charging. Life changing.