Storing small memory cards

I don’t know if I’ve ever publicly admitted this, but I’m a gamer. I play at least half an hour every day, and usually more than that. I have numerous electronic gaming systems and even a huge collection of board games for when I want to be away from a computer. I’ll play any game at least once, and when I find a favorite I’ll spend days working to master it.

I didn’t grow up playing video games like many of my peers, but got into it in college thanks to my friend Clark. (Clark also introduced Stevie Case to computer gaming their freshman year of college … small world.) I like solving puzzles and gaming is my constant outlet for that aspect of my personality, and I’ll always be in debt to Clark for being my guide.

There are a couple Nintendo DS Lite games coming out in the next few weeks that I’ve pre-ordered to take with me while I’m traveling for my book publicity. Unfortunately, I don’t have a very organized method for taking all of my DS Lite games (about 30) with me. After a little research, I’m looking at getting one of these:

A Memory Card Album with anti-static pages that can hold three games (or SD cards or MMC cards or other small discs) per page:

Or, a Memory Card and Manual Holder that has places for games and the instruction manuals that come with the games. It too could easily hold other small memory cards:

Do you have multiple games that are stored on small discs or do you carry small cards for work or your camera? How do you keep them stored in a safe and organized fashion? I’d like to know what you use. The smaller memory cards get, I think the more we’re going to address this issue.


Samsung’s sneaky little two-faced camera

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Samsung’s new TL225 camera not only has a hee-yuge LCD on the back, it’s got a little one on the front. Why? So it can show you a countdown timer for group shots, let you properly frame your arm’s-length self-portraits, and remind you to smile. Useful, or gimmicky? Jury’s still out. But we worry that it’s just a matter of time before someone releases a camera with LCDs on all six faces.

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TuneUp your iTunes collection

I use iTunes to organize my digital music collection and, for the most part, it suits my needs. I say “for the most part” because similar to the problem I’ve been having with the photographs that I had scanned, not all of my music has correct information associated with it. Fortunately for my music, though, I don’t have to go through my entire iTunes collection song-by-song to straighten out the missing and incorrect data. I have found a program that simply corrects my data — TuneUp.

Based on algorithms and other technical things I don’t fully understand (kind of like the iPhone app Shazam), TuneUp picks up where iTunes leaves off at properly identifying the music in my collection. I no longer have seven Track 03s on my playlists. All I have to do is drag the misidentified song into the “cleaner” and TuneUp pulls up possible matches. (The cleaner function is displayed at right.)

In addition to identifying songs, it also fixes formatting, finds rarer cover art, matches artist names, and even gives information about the songs in your collection sort of like VH1’s old Pop-Up Videos.

There are other programs out there similar to TuneUp, I just happened to find this program first and since it worked for me I didn’t try the others. If you have tried other programs and had success, please tell us about your experiences in the comments. TuneUp is free for a “limited-access” download, and is around $20 for an “unlimited” version.

If only I could find a program to clean up my digital photographs as easily …

(Image from TuneUp’s website … I fear if I show my music collection you all will make strange — but probably correct — assumptions about me! And, it should go without saying, but I wasn’t paid to write this review.)


Les Paul dies at 94

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Very sad news today that Les Paul, virtuoso and solid-body electric guitar inventor, died at the age of 94. I had the pleasure of seeing him just once several years ago at the Blue Note–an unforgettable privilege.

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The Nine Eyes of Google Street View

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Yesterday, Art Fag City posted the latest installment of IMG MGMT, their annual image-based artist essay series. In “The Nine eyes of Google Street View”, artist Jon Rafman posts selections from his collection of Google Street View screenshots, exploring the range of culturally meaningful (not just informational) images captured by the nine-lensed Google cameras. His collection covers a lot of ground, but it’s all strangely cinematic, capturing bleak urbanity, perfect rainbows, armed robberies, and surreal landscapes equally well.

An excerpt:

Within the panoramas, I can locate images of gritty urban life reminiscent of hard-boiled American street photography. Or, if I prefer, I can find images of rural Americana that recall photography commissioned by the Farm Securities Administration during the depression. I can seek out postcard-perfect shots that capture what Cartier-Bresson titled “the decisive moment,” as if I were a photojournalist responding instantaneously to an emerging event. At other times, I have been mesmerized by the sense of nostalgia, yearning, and loss in these images—qualities that evoke old family snapshots.

And finally, I couldn’t mention this article without adding my personal favorite to the collection, an unabashed pair of warriors in Pittsburgh:

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via today and tomorrow

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Personalize Your iPhone With A Unique Case

imageI just got an awesome 3G “S” iPhone — and I’m betting a lot of iPhone fans out there are with me on this one, not to mention the huge amounts of people who jumped on the bandwagon earlier. I’m in cell phone bliss, the only problem is that I’m afraid the iPhone is fairly fragile. My other phone was kind of a piece, but I had it for two and a half years (an eternity in phone years!) and it was relatively bomb proof. I can’t tell you how many times I dropped it and yet it survived. But I know that one tumble is all it would take to knock me out of my bliss! So I need a durable and good looking iPhone case that will help prevent this, since I’m pretty clumsy. Fortunately, there are plenty of good looking and unique 3G iPhone case options out there. Which is another pre-requisite for me! Some of these cases and skins are colorful and will add more personality to your phone.

Head on over to our friends at TheFind to see more!

Fontplore Showreel

Après la navigation tactile selon Microsoft Sustainability, voici ce travail universitaire : une interface visuelle qui permet de chercher dans un catalogue de polices afin de les comparer. Cette table interactive a été pensée par Christian Hertlein et Marcus Paeschke.



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Site du projet.

Previously on Fubiz

Holograms you can feel

Totally nuts! Researchers at the University of Tokyo have developed holograms that provide tactile feedback. It’s one thing to see a three-dimensional ball floating in space but quite another to actually feel it, and that’s the promise of this latest technology, which will hopefully revolutionize interface designs of the future.

The trick is to combine motion tracking (via Wiimotes, of all things) with ultrasonic waves, which can be tuned to provide tangible feedback at a focused point in space. It’s difficult to describe in text, but that’s why we have YouTube; check this video out to see what they’re developing.

via sidequesting

thanks dali!

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The Hottest Headphones To Help You Tune Out In Style

imageConfession: I’m a girl who practically has her mp3 player permanently wired to her eardrums. In fact, I’ve been known to skip class whenever my iPod was too low on battery to survive the walk (though I don’t condone such naughty behavior). As a result, I know all about the importance of a nice, stylish pair of headphones. So what if you’re in the market for a new pair but just don’t have $300 to spring for those fancy-schmancy Dr. Dre ones? Luckily for us audiophile fashionistas, over-the-ear headphones and the more discreet in-ear earbuds are becoming more and more prominent in their use as fashion statements with their sleek designs and wild colors and embellishments, and they still provide excellent sound quality without costing a small fortune. Go big and bold with a cushy neon pair like Aerial 7’s Matadors or keep it sleek with a subtly funky pair of earbuds by Elecom. Check the slideshow for a selection of headphones so hip, you might start wearing them around your neck just to coordinate with your sneakers!

view slideshow

Hot In The Hive: Sonos ZonePlayer 120

imageMy favorite dance clubs are the kinds with multiple rooms or floors that play different types of music in each section. That way, I’m never bored, always have a multiple options to choose from, and all my friends can find a room that they like. Have you ever imagined bringing that into your own home? I found a company called Sonos which makes wireless audio receivers and speakers that work in your home. Start out with the Sonos ZonePlayer, plug in your router and favorite speakers, and you’re ready to go. With this system, you can listen music from your own iTunes library or listen to digital radio stations like Sirius and Pandora. Add ZonePlayers in other rooms and you can have your own in-house dance club. Sing along with Aretha Franklin and other classics in your bathroom and rock out to Gwen Stefani and Rihanna in your kitchen! Best of all, you can control everything with their Sonos controller, your computer, or your iPhone!

Price: $499
Who Found It: facadeindreams was the first to add the Sonos ZonePlayer to the Hive.