My old Dell Digital Jukebox (from like 5 or 6 years ago) finally drove me insane enough that I shelled out a few bucks and got a new MP3 player. I wanted something that was around the same hard drive size as my Dell (20 gb) because I wanted to be able to play not only music, but video files. Mark wrote about his new Vision:M so this is one that I wanted to check out. I did research for a week or two on different players, reading reviews on New Egg, CNET, and at Circuit City. The general consensus of the Vision:M was that it was a great player. Not only did it play MP3’s but it also played video (in several formats), had an FM tuner, and displayed pictures. It just so happened Circuit City had the player on sale, so I left work and picked it up last week. the audio quality from the player is excellent, but tell me, why doesn’t any electronics maker have an equalizer setting for hip-hop or rap? I’ve never come across one that has (except maybe Sony). The 2.5 inch display is very bright and colorful. I loaded The Boondock Saints, The Fifth Element, and the first season of Psych onto the player. The video quality on the player was excellent. Files that were compressed to 700mb looked awesome on the small screen, though I know if I played them on a tv, I would see a huge loss of quality. Luckily, on a screen that’s 2.5 inches, you don’t notice it at all.
The controls took some getting used to, as it has a touch pad that goes vertical instead of the more familiar wheel of the iPod. It didn’t take me long though, as my digital DJ also had a vertical wheel, though it wasn’t touch and I’m still getting used to the sensitivity of the touch pad. One thing I don’t like about the design is the volume is controlled via the players operating system and not a button on the player itself. Not that big of a deal, but I don’t like unlocking my player to turn up and down the volume when I need to. In case you are wondering, if the player is locked, the screen goes off which allows for longer playtime. With the player unlocked, the screen stays lit, although dimmer than if the player was active.
The software that came with the player is very intuitive and easy to use. I did notice that on my Vista Ultimate pc it seemed to max out my dual core processor. On the XP professional dual core pc at work, I didn’t notice it doing this. What’s great about this player is that it is very easy to NOT use the software. Dragging files into the audio or video folders on the drive using Windows Explorer is as easy as moving files to another hard drive. So, I don’t even need to use the software that comes with it (unless I want to make a playlist).
Overall, it is an excellent player, supports more video formats than the iPod, doesn’t have to use iTunes, and is much cheaper than an the iPod. It is well worth the money and I’m very happy thus far with my purchase.
Women Targeted by the Abortion Industry
Yes, you read that right. “Women Targeted by the Abortion Industry.” At work today I was downloading a Catholic podcast for a client. Looking at the list of podcasts, I saw this title and it made me think. There’s an abortion industry? This is news to me. Hell, I didn’t even know there was an industry. Is abortion a multi-billion dollar worldwide conglomerate now? Like, is there a place where people head to work each day manufacturing medical equipment, then market said equipment to women? Are there posters on buses and in airports that read “Have you had your abortion today?” or “Two scoops never felt so good!” Now, I don’t read Cosmo or watch Oprah, but this so called industry must be advertising there, since women are the primary demographic for those two outlets. Does the abortion industry sponsor golfers in the LPGA, Danica Patrick in NASCAR, the WNBA?
There is no “abortion industry.” There aren’t people sitting around in board meetings plotting on how to get abortions up so their profits rise. They aren’t marketing abortions to women. I don’t even know how people can believe this garbage. Next thing you’re gonna tell me is that the Catholic religion is the one true religion and that Catholic sex abuse is just the porn industry targeting priests. Give me a break.
Poll: Americans trust Congress over Bush on Iraq
I guess when you fuck up for this long people start to lose faith in you, huh? Too bad BushCo doesn’t care about what the American people think and still do whatever they want.
Not surprising. Again, this doesn’t matter to BushCo. They think they are above the law. Hell, Cheney doesn’t even think he belongs in any branch. One minute he’s claiming Executive Privilege on his documents and transcripts, and the next minute saying he’s part of the Legislative Branch. Don’t you love how they mold the government to whatever scandal they are facing this week?
Probably because people are finally seeing BushCo have no plan on getting out of Iraq. Remember that sign, Mission Accomplished? If this is accomplished, then I’d hate to see what failure is. (source)
Creative Zen Vision:M MP3 Player
My old Dell Digital Jukebox (from like 5 or 6 years ago) finally drove me insane enough that I shelled out a few bucks and got a new MP3 player. I wanted something that was around the same hard drive size as my Dell (20 gb) because I wanted to be able to play not only music, but video files. Mark wrote about his new Vision:M so this is one that I wanted to check out. I did research for a week or two on different players, reading reviews on New Egg, CNET, and at Circuit City. The general consensus of the Vision:M was that it was a great player. Not only did it play MP3’s but it also played video (in several formats), had an FM tuner, and displayed pictures. It just so happened Circuit City had the player on sale, so I left work and picked it up last week. the audio quality from the player is excellent, but tell me, why doesn’t any electronics maker have an equalizer setting for hip-hop or rap? I’ve never come across one that has (except maybe Sony). The 2.5 inch display is very bright and colorful. I loaded The Boondock Saints, The Fifth Element, and the first season of Psych onto the player. The video quality on the player was excellent. Files that were compressed to 700mb looked awesome on the small screen, though I know if I played them on a tv, I would see a huge loss of quality. Luckily, on a screen that’s 2.5 inches, you don’t notice it at all.
The controls took some getting used to, as it has a touch pad that goes vertical instead of the more familiar wheel of the iPod. It didn’t take me long though, as my digital DJ also had a vertical wheel, though it wasn’t touch and I’m still getting used to the sensitivity of the touch pad. One thing I don’t like about the design is the volume is controlled via the players operating system and not a button on the player itself. Not that big of a deal, but I don’t like unlocking my player to turn up and down the volume when I need to. In case you are wondering, if the player is locked, the screen goes off which allows for longer playtime. With the player unlocked, the screen stays lit, although dimmer than if the player was active.
The software that came with the player is very intuitive and easy to use. I did notice that on my Vista Ultimate pc it seemed to max out my dual core processor. On the XP professional dual core pc at work, I didn’t notice it doing this. What’s great about this player is that it is very easy to NOT use the software. Dragging files into the audio or video folders on the drive using Windows Explorer is as easy as moving files to another hard drive. So, I don’t even need to use the software that comes with it (unless I want to make a playlist).
Overall, it is an excellent player, supports more video formats than the iPod, doesn’t have to use iTunes, and is much cheaper than an the iPod. It is well worth the money and I’m very happy thus far with my purchase.
New Research Proves Single Origin Of Humans In Africa
Just found a really interesting article.
Watch out Creationists. Your beliefs are crumbling under the weight of scientific proof by the second.
K-OS- Atlantis-Hymns for Disco
After browsing the iTunes Music Store I found this album by hip-hop artist K-OS. I’ve heard his name in underground hip-hop circles for quite a while but I’ve never actually listened to him before. I had to pick up this album because of the review I read online. I can’t even describe this album. It is more than hip-hop. Where OutKast and Gnarls Barkley left off, K-OS picks up and takes us further. It is definitely a trip through great melodies, beats, and lyrics. I wouldn’t call this a hip-hop albums as it incorporates many different styles. He does some R&B, some rock, some funk, some disco, and does it all very well. The song “Valhalla” is reminiscent of Ricky Nelson or Chuck Berry where “Born to Run” is a mix of Michael Jackson and reggae sounds. Mixing so many genres on one album is a tough feat to accomplish, but K-OS does it so well that the flow is able to continue from one track to the next. It really is a journey through genres. It’s this type of variety in an album that I love. Here are two of my favorite tracks from the album:
Valhalla
[audio:http://pieceofshep.com/audio/08-Valhalla.mp3]
Highway 7
[audio:http://pieceofshep.com/audio/12-Highway-7.mp3]