the things we think but do not say

design, travel, fashion, shopping, Chicago, HubwearNovember 25, 2007 7:16 pm



Hubwear in Chicago magazine

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

Hubwear is nearing the close of its second year and it’s been a thrilling ride. But let me back up a second since some of you might not know what I’m talking about.

Hubwear is the project that I created with my finacee and partner Sara just under 2 years ago. It’s a website that sells t-shirts (currently) to urban travelers that have a story to tell. And watching it happen right in front of my very eyes, it’s grown and grown and become a real business, with real products and real customers.

Back at the beginning in April 2006, it grew from a tiny stem cell to what’s now a rather healthy young kid. And to take the child analogy even further, when I started working on Hubwear at the beginning without anyones help, it was a scrawny, ugly kid with little to no sense-of-self or direction. It was a spotty, acned pre-teen. But once Sara got on board, the rebellious brat got a rude awakening and got sent to Excel boot camp! Suddenly, orders were being recorded in a timely fashion! Shipments of shirts from American Apparel were flying in just in time for finishing. Rigorous quality control was finally in place and there was a dramatic drop in errors and wasted product. Our spotty pre-teen was finally growing up and getting ready for high school.

Last year we got a lot of good blog links, referalls and endorsements (most notable was by Springwise ) and this year has seen more of the same. But just in the last week, we got our first major, printed publication!

Chicago Magazine included us in their Christmas Gift Guide this year and we’ve been bombarded with orders. (Irconically enough, here’s a link to the feature on their magazine’s site

There’s just something about being printed, on paper, in a real magazine that somehow gives any product legitimacy. Even in a time where Web 2.0 interconnectivity is everything, having our t-shirts in magazine means we can reach an audience that might never have seen our concept before. This year, Chicago Magazine. Next year, Lucky!

So, Horray for Hubwear! Horray for good press! And here’s to a thrilling 2008!



music, techOctober 30, 2007 9:00 am



_DM37934

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

I’ve gone full circle with my Touch now.

During the first few days of ownership I was flush with pride while looking and playing with my slim little friend. Oh, how lovely it was to look at. How delicate it was to hold. How sweet it was to see Coverflow glide between albums…

But then precisely a week into my love affair, something dark inside woke up and realised how annoying it was to use. Would it have killed Apple to give me some freaking real buttons? Every time I want to change advance a track or even just adjust the volume, I have to mess with the ‘radical new multi-touch interface’. It is pretty sexy to deftly glide your fingers over the surface and have it react, but when it means I have to glide my finger to do anything, then it’s starting to be multi-pain-in-the-ass.

I started moaning to everyone! “God, it’s so slow to browse the internet, even on WiFi!”. “Why do I have to do five things before I can just go to the next song?” “Why did I pay $400 for something that’s more annoying to use than my old $200 Nano?”

But as try as I might, I just couldn’t let go of Touchy. I just relaxed, saw differently the annoyances and turned them into ‘charming quirks’ and let the Apple fanboy in me reason myself into a stupor. For about two dark days back there, I even thought about getting a Zune! I know, I know… Everyone else laughed too. Poor Zune. On paper the new Zune looks like a really good deal: 3.2″ screen, 80gb, $250. What’s not to like?! Well, the public derision for a start, “Oh you got a Zune! Wow. You’re brave.”

So, the main reasons to love my little Touch are still present: awesome video playback, svelte body, good battery life, great music playback. The other annoyances like, slow web browsing (Safari apparently has little to no cache to load pages), annoying multi-touch interface to get to the most basic functions, are still there too. I just learnt to live with them. The other said reality is that for much of my music I don’t have the album art which makes the 3.5″ screen a little redundant.

In conclusion, my Touch and I have go through some tough times, but we’re still together.

PS. I’m off to NY this Thursday to see my sister run the New York Marathon this weekend. Amazing huh? I’m also excited to see if I can kill the Touch’s battery on the trip watching Soprano’s episodes on the way over. I’ll give you a battery update soon!

social, tech, connected, shoppingOctober 17, 2007 6:35 pm

This post comes in the very recent wake of my new iPod touch. It prompted me to pay more attention to my current media consumption methods and it brought light to the question of how to integrate such a unique device into my life.

As I mentioned in a previous post, my life is pretty full and it seems that since we cut out TV from our lives, my consumption of media has become… ’strategic’ for want of a better word. I have to plan for it. Since losing TV, I’m no longer passively just absorbing TV and letting it wash over me like a fog. For better or for worse I now have to seek it out and be very specific about what I watch, how I watch it and when I watch it. For the most part, this post is about visual media (TV shows, movies, video podcasts) and less about music.

So if I take casual TV enjoyment off the table for a second, how, you might ask, do you keep up with water cooler conversations? Well, I don’t. Or rather, I do a very bad job of it and I’m constantly going, “Who yo talking about?”. Quite honestly, the one thing I miss the most is TV commercials. And then that was only 1 in 10.

“But what about the news? How do you know what’s happening with Brittney’s custody case?” Well, to keep up with these hot news stories I usually just read the New York Times website and since setting it to my default home page on my browser, I’m about a hundred times more current with my affairs than I was even before I lost TV.

You see, now that I know that I’m missing out on TV (and all the secondary benefits) I’m now more conscious of getting what I need from it. Maybe there’s something inherent in reading news that’s written with a sense of perspective or had a moment of reflection that I like (NY Times) that’s never appealed to me when I watch reporting of something that’s happening as it happens. I just think the commentary is better.

And one unexpected outcome is the recent realisation that the mobile NY Times is really good. It’s the same content formatted into a single column for viewing on crappy smart phones. While I appreciate the effort it took to make the ‘real internet’ on my iPod touch, the ‘mobile internet’ works pretty well too. I might start to read the mobile Times on my Touch now. It just loads faster.

So, News is taken care of. Done.

What about TV shows? “How do you know what’s happening on Grey’s Anatomy?”

For this, I had an one word answer, Netflix. But after all our best intentions, Sara and I haven’t sat down to watch a DVD in weeks. Our current queue is sitting still and it’s no one’s fault, but getting both of us to sit down and chill out to watch a TV show is harder that it sounds.

I know that once our class is finished we’ll have more than a few minutes free, but it’ll quickly get filled up with things to do for our new house. But you see… this is where my iPod touch comes in handy.

I finally found a great, reliable method* to rip the DVDs from Netflix which makes it now perfectly possible for me to watch a movie/TV show/documentary or podcast in the two 30 mins commutes I make each day. It also means that I can turn around a DVD in a day since I can rip the DVD that night and watch it at my leisure. It’s like taking a laxative for our Netflix queue.

A very new tool that I’ve came across recently was the “Watch Instantly” service from Netflix. It’s amazing. Seriously cool and very addictive. I watched a marathon, back to back, almost full 48hrs of NBC’s Heroes Season 1 using this streaming service and I’m now hooked. Using IE (not Firefox) it streams DVD quality streaming content(using fancy Active X controls) to your laptop within 20 seconds. Not bad just as long as you can find the content you want, since the selection is a fraction of what you can find in their physical DVD library.

So as far as I’m concerned, that takes care of TV and movies. Which leaves me with music.

Well, I’m a self proclaimed music whore and I’m the kind of person where I consume music constantly and voraciously. (Does anyone voraciously do anything other than ‘read’?) I think I listen to about 3-5 new albums a week which for years just meant walking into Reckless records (in Chicago) and walking out with a stack of CDs. Now, I have to admit that my physical consumption of CDs has fallen over the years to a near drizzle when it was a down pour. But I’m listening to as much if not more as I ever did. And with every good or great album I listen to, I’m tell everyone I can to get the word out.

In this age of multiplicity in tastes and channels for the distribution, keeping abreast of your passions is harder than ever. You’d think it’d be easier, for me, the sense of ‘oooh man, I’m missed this gem of a band” is ever present in my mind. Between two friends who are way more on top of the scene than me (shout outs to Craig and Lucas!), Bleep.com, russian mp3 sites, Soulseek, Epitonic.com, myspace, Pitchfork, BBC 1Xtra and the iTunes music store (not for buying just browsing thanks), I can barely keep up.

For instance, I only just heard, “Some loud thunder” by ‘Clap your hands and say yeah’ for the first time today. For some indierockanistas (I just made that up), this is probably unthinkable to have slept on such seminal work… but then maybe ‘they’ think it’s all so derivative anyway…

I’m getting off topic here, um…

The point is that I’m still consuming music and I still love it. My last three iPods plus the new Touch have all supported my addiction and I’m sure that it’s not going to get any easier. Even before I carried an iPod, I used to rock a CD player that played mp3s (a full 650 megs worth!) I don’t expect that I’ll stop buying, recommending, and listening to new music any time soon.

On a side note, when I settle into my new house, I’m going finally plan, strategise, and roll out my long lived dream of a home music server. It’ll involve a fully working PC, with nothing else on it but iTunes, Firefox and a shit load of music. I think that somewhere in there, my Touch will act as a wi-fi remote control too. But more on that in the coming months.

So, in conclusion, while my Touch hasn’t completely changed the game in how I go about my media consumption, it certainly supports and extends what I do with it, how I do it and when I do it. Which I think is that name(s) of the game these days.

Give me control and I will consume it.

*Handbrake is a fantastic piece of open source, multiplatform software that makes this whole process super easy. It takes the DVD and makes Quicktime files where every works, with none of the issue of the usual issues, like, no audio or audio which skips. The best part is that the software has tons of handy presets, like iPod and iPhone. Neato.

design, skymall, tech, shoppingOctober 15, 2007 10:03 pm



iPod touch

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

I got a new iPod touch today and boy is it a sweet piece of tech..

Now the number one question that I expect to answer is this: “Why didn’t you get an iPhone dude?”

Well the answer is complicated. I have a a corporate phone from work and they’re unsurprisingly, not supporting them. For one, AT&T is holding up transfers of corporate work accounts from ‘personal’ phones like the iPhone (weird eh?) plus there’s no real MS Exchange server support for it either. This would mean that all I’d be carrying around in my pocket would be a cellular web browser to get my Outlook email and appointments. Not that smart, when really, my Blackjack does a very competent job of that.

For anyone that has a corporate email phone like the Blackberry, the iPhone just doesn’t quite handle it all that well. For everyone else, it’s bloody amazing.

Now, this leaves me with two possible iPhone routes: hack one OR get one and take myself off the corporate plan. And while I’m happy to give throw money at Apple, I’m less excited at giving money to AT&T again.

And hacking the iPhone is just too fraught with danger since there is now an established cat and mouse game between Apple and the hacking community to one-up each other.

While I could potentially live with a hacked iPod touch that didn’t work every now and, I couldn’t live with a temperamental cellphone. It’s just plain irresponsible of me to have an dodgy iPhone just because I wanted one so bad.

So the iPod touch it was for me.

Tragically for me, only a few weeks ago I was the happy owner of a recent, fully functioning iPod nano 8gb. It was black, tiny, and very easy to lose. Which is exactly what I did coming back from New York in the back of a cab leaving La Guardia. And not only that, I managed to lose in the same little bundle my pair of kick ass in-ear headphones by Shure which I got custom fitted ear molds. Ugh.

Clearly, losing two iPods in less that four months is not funny, so I have to be super vigilant with this one. Having your car broken into is not anyone fault, per se, but forgetting stuff in the back of a cab is.

I’ll give a better report of my findings as I learn them.

Incidentally, I bought this today and it came preloaded with the 1.1.1 firmware update.

talking the talkOctober 11, 2007 5:30 pm



Lucas Becomes A Man -36624

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

At this precise moment, I’m in the early phases of a new project at work. I’m listening to the new Radiohead album, In Rainbows (pretty good btw) and taking stock of the varied balls I’m juggling at the moment.

I apologise for the narcissism and slight, ‘woe is me’ness of this post, but what’s a blog if not a little narcissistic.

So, from the top:

1. An onslaught of innovation and design projects from IDEO. It’s still the best design company in the world and it still kicks my ass everyday.

2. Teaching a 7 week class at the School of the Art Institute (each class is from 9am to 4pm). It’s a mix of under graduate, graduate, and continuing studies students. It’s a great mix of students in the class (we have a mother and daughter combination) and after the 3 week, I really got a good sense that the group is galvanising together into a cohesive team. I teach this with my partner in crime, Sara and my students would be seriously suffering if it weren’t for her.

3. Running a small t-shirt business, Hubwear, with my business partner Sara. We’ve run this for almost 2 years now and each quarter we’re seeing a slow, steady increase in awareness and acceptance of the concept. After trying to run it on my own for about 6 months, and making a lot of mistakes along the way, Sara is now a full time partner and contributor to Hubwear. The entire backend processes are now being managed by her and Hubwear is running better than ever. You know, I almost wrote a post ages ago about trying to start a new business. It was called, “Feeling complacent? Start a business.” It was going to extol the fact that almost every spare minute is swallowed up by improving the business. It would have been a great post, trust me.

4. Getting a married next year to my beautiful fiancee Sara (her again?!). For being engaged for two months we’ve already getting through some of the bigger decisions. Date, venue, caterer (almost!), groomsmen and bridesmaids… the next big one will be the final invite list. What a giant socially awkward game this is. Ugh. Oh and we now have a year to raise a shit load of money too. This wedding’s not going to pay for itself you know :-)

5. Buying my first house. Well it’s our house. And it’s really a condo. But still, it feels really good to say, house. My house. Wow. We should be finally closing by the end of the year and I can tell you with no uncertainty that I am ready to move. Wicker Park is dead to me. What the hell happened to it? Yuppy assholes like me is what happened to it! Christ, you can’t swing a cat without a Venti Decaf Soy Chai Latte being knocked out a manicured hand and splashing the hood of a Landrover. Ugh.

So, there you have it. Five big balls. All moving, and all differently weighted. And to be clear, it’s not as though all five of them need to stay in the air indefinitely. The class for instance will end in just two more weeks and when we teach it again in the spring we can finally reap the benefits of the hard work in creating the class. But knowing me, when one ball evaporates, another one will get thrown in there just to keep on my toes.

While I feel a little overwhelmed at times it is an exciting period of my life. I can only say over and over again, how thankful I am to have Sara as my partner, girlfriend, friend, confidant, sounding board, muse and soon to be wife. If I’m good at one thing, it’s coming up with the “What if…” statements. She’s even better at coming back with the ‘This is how we do it…” responses.

More posts to come, once the class is over, I promise.

talking the talk, photography, Chicago, weddingSeptember 10, 2007 11:20 pm

april and lucas wedding
Last year at Halloween, Sara and I hosted a party where I created a photo booth for our guests. I wanted to thank everyone for making such a great effort for their costumes but it was also a way to get a chance to experiment with some lights. That weekend was my first experience with rented lights (from Calumet, natch). Well, I’m glad to say I’m a lot more experienced and I got asked a few months ago to try a reprise of the photo booth at a friend’s wedding.

Photo booths can come in all manner of forms. Some are small little box-rooms complete with swiveling stools and curtains. Some are fully manned, ‘booths’ that have a photographer carefully operating them for guests. But the one that I saw that opened my eyes to the whole concept was at a wedding in Martha’s Vineyard, by a photography by the name of Joe Mikos. A terrific wedding photographer btw. Joe set things up so that any guest could take a seat in a special room and shoot photos of themselves for fun with a camera setup on the other side of the room. The experience was enlightening. The shutter was triggered by the guests and everyone gets to pose and look silly. Endless fun.

But there was one aspect that I thought was lacking in the setup I saw. Even though the camera was digital, there was no visual feedback for the guests. You just had to take it for granted that the shots turned out ok. You’d see the photos eventually by contacting the bride and groom, or if you’re willing, through the photographer.

To me, this looked like an easy design opportunity to give the guests that vital piece of feedback. At the Halloween party, I set up the camera to record directly into my laptop and then I simply turned it around to face the people. Pretty obvious really.

Now, I’m hardly an expert so I’m sure that you can probably go about things in a smarter way, but I will try to recount my steps as best I can. And before it gets too confusing, I’m going to be using the words, ’strobe’ and ‘flash’ interchangeably throughout. Same thing, two different names.

Ok, so the setup does requires a fair bit of kit some not so expensive, some kinda expensive.

1. A digital camera or a digital SLR that lets you fire the camera remotely and that has software available that let’s you record your images directly to a laptop. Nikon and Canon digital SLRs have all this in spades. This process is sometimes called ‘tethered shooting’ by some photogs and it’s often used to let art directors (or in this case, drunken guests) view the images as they are being taken.

2. A strobe/flash or two. This can take a wide variety of forms from off camera flashes like the Nikon SB-800 or the Canon 580 EXII, a large soft box, or even a ring flash. I like to rent my lights from Calumet as light are pretty expensive. I’ll assume that you can set them up. I just asked my rental guy at Calumet to run through it all with me.

3. A way for the camera to trigger the strobes/flashes. I’ve only ever had excellent results from with Pocket Wizards (which work by radio which means there’s no line of sight issues) so I would happily recommended them. They are expensive but there’s more than a few ebay knock offs. Just search for ‘wireless radio trigger‘. The cheapest, non Pocket Wizard way is to use a long sync cable for your camera, but you’re probably going to have to make sure you’re got a Wein-Safe-Sync-thingy to make sure you don’t accidentally fry your camera. Radio triggers never have that problem.

Remember this bit does not trigger your camera, only the flashes. To trigger the shutter on your camera go to the next step.

4. The actual remote that fires the camera itself usually comes in two common forms. Many consumer SLRs (like the Nikon D70, 50, 40 etc) have a IR port on the front of the body which can take a IR signal from a tiny little remote which is very affordable (< $20). If you look carefully, you can see it in hands of the photos in this post. I hear that a universal TV remote can even work. Since it's IR it need a good, clear line of sight for it to work. Usually not a problem, just something to be aware of.

The other kind of remote is usually only used on professional DSLR camera bodies, like the Nikon D200/300, D2x/D3, or the Canon 1 Series cameras and the 5D. A port on the front of the camera takes an electronic signal from a little hand held trigger. They're usually branded Canon or Nikon and usually expensive. For some reason, the same type of IR remote for the non pro cameras that were only $20 are now really expensive at $330 for the pro camera bodies.

While no less expensive, but certainly more versatile is employing a Pocket Wizard as your trigger. Now this bit gets confusing.

To get the PW in your hand to trigger the camera, you've got to get a cable that runs from another Pocket Wizard that's sitting on the hot shoe of your camera. You've got to run a cable from the hot shoe mounted PW into a special port on the front of the camera to trigger the shutter. While renting Pocket Wizards is usually not that expensive ($15 a piece) this bloody cable that fires these professional body cameras is not rentable and over $100! Remember, if you do go down this route, you're now looking at renting/owning three PWs: one for the trigger, one for the camera and then one for the strobes.

5. Ok, now this might not be totally obvious, but where you position your laptop will have a huge impact on your photos. The whole point of this kind of setup is so that the feedback from the laptop lets each guest really nail the shot they want. Seeing each shot immediately after each shot encourages a lot of experimentation. When I did my first photo booth, I setup my laptop just somewhere off and to the side of my camera, sitting on a stool I think. I had no idea what a problem this would eventually become. Once a guest saw their photos being replayed on the laptop screen, their eyes were constantly drawn to the screen. You couldn't get them to look at anything else, and especially not at the lens! So, for a lot of the photos from my first party, everyone's eyes were pointing down and to the left of the image. Once it happened, no retraining was going to fix it.

Haloween0359

So this time, I wanted to be sure to position the laptop so that it was as close to the lens as possible. And there’s really only a few places that this could mean; either directly above, to the side or below. After trying out all the options, I found to my surprise that setting the laptop just below the lens worked the best. This time around, all the guest eyes look like their looking directly into the camera, when in fact their eyes are glued to the laptop screen.

To position the laptop, I used another tripod and bought myself a “laptop plate”. I had no idea these things existed, but Manfrotto makes one. I got mine for $40 at Calumet even though this link says it’s $100. Its basically a cast iron plate with a reversible 1/4″ and 1/8″ screw thread on it. Heck, anything that you can adjust as a flat level platform will work here.

photo booth setup

6. One additional thing that I developed for the booth at the wedding was the use of an LCD projector hooked up to the laptop. By relaying the images from the laptop to a space outside the booth, everyone else got to see what was going on in the booth. It just got even more people thinking of what to do when it was their turn.

Ok, so with that long list of stuff to get, here are the steps for setting up the photo booth:

1. Download or install the software that lets you record your images directly to your laptop. The two pieces of software that I have experience with, is Nikon’s Camera Capture Pro and Canon’s EOS Utility. Nikon’s software is an additional expense to the camera while Canon’s is shipped with it’s DSLRs. If you’ve got a Nikon camera, I’d recommend going here and testing out their 30 day trail. If you’re sneaky like me, you could try starting your 30 day trail the same month your wedding is scheduled…

The software is should be pretty self explanatory but the thing to get right is setting where the files are being written to (your desktop, an external hard drive etc) . Watch out though for a step where you might have to tell the software to open an application to view the images. Canon uses a separate application to view the images called ZoomBrowser EX.

2. Connect the USB cable to the laptop and to the camera. Test out a shot to make sure each image is writing to the laptop and the image is reviewing on screen afterwards.

3. Mount the camera onto a tripod and frame the shot with a test subject (or use yourself if you’ve already got the remote working).

4. Activates the strobes and test fire your flashes directly (no need to confuse matters yet with Pocket Wizards or sync cables).

5. Attach a Pocket Wizard to your camera’s hot shoe mount.

For small flash units like the Nikon SB-800 or the Canon 580 EXII, connect the other Pocket Wizard to your flash with the cable that ships with the PW. One end goes into the PW the other end goes into the flash. You really can’t screw anything up.

If you’re using larger strobes and their power packs (Profoto, Bowens, Hensel etc), then you’ll like need a slightly different cable than the one that ships with the PW. I would recommend that if you rent the lights make sure that the rental location supplies the appropriate cable.

Whenever you use Pocket Wizards, just make sure they’re both on (seriously, I’ve forgotten this step a bunch) and make sure that both PWs are on the same channel.

6. Set up your laptop on to another tripod and sit it on the laptop plate. Position the laptop directly under the lens. If you have it, connect the LCD projector to the laptop and position it outside the booth and project the images onto a screen or a wall.

7. Test fire your setup!

On the night of the party each time someone uses the booth the sequence of events should play out as such:

Drunk guest picks up the remote and triggers it with their sweaty hands,
The camera receives a signal and the shutter on the camera is released,
Simultaneously, the Pocket Wizard mounted on the camera sends a signal out and fires the strobe(s),
The camera’s sensor records an image and the file is written directly to the laptop,
The laptop displays the images on the screen,
The drunk guest is amazed at the feedback and tries the shot again!

april and lucas wedding I can haz cheezeburger
Many thanks to April and Lucas Daniel for asking me to setup their photo booth. They created some very handy white board speech bubbles for their friends and family to leave messages in their photo guest book.

Lastly, thanks to Craig for helping me set up the booth this time and suggesting that I write this up.

If you’re looking to have one of these things at your wedding but are stuck on how to do it yourself, give me a shout at georgeaye [at] gmail dot com.
april and lucas wedding we're done

talking the talk, design, tech, connected, shoppingSeptember 5, 2007 11:47 am

NEW UPDATE:

The first real, full review of the iPod touch by PC Magazine is here. Still looks pretty solid. I wants it.

iPod touch
Oh thank God. I might not have to buy the iPhone anymore. The iPod Touch has every feature I’d want from the iPhone without the phone part!
WiFi web browsing, Google maps, NYTimes, Coverflow, multi touch photos…

iPod Touch FTW!

UPDATE!

Holy crap they’ve just leveled the pricing for the iPhone and the new iPod Touch. Argh! And the most shocking news was the price cut for the iPhone - $200 off. What a slap in the face for anyone that just bought one just yesterday.

UPDATE!

An open letter to early adopters of the iPhone have been written by Steve Jobs. The one letters asks that they be forgiving to Apple for screwing them over. A $100 free gift certificate to Apple stores has been offered as some form of compensation, but obviously, this mainly benefits Apple more than anyone. Hmmm.

Some more thoughts on the iPod touch:

For me, the iPod touch has pretty much everything I’d want from an iPhone without the need for a new cellphone bill. So as much as one converged device would be pretty sweet, paying about $1200 a year to AT&T is something I’m glad to do without. I’ve been very fortunate you see and recently joined the corporate cell phone plan through work.

I’m probably going to be rocking my Samsung Blackjack for the next 18 months, so in the mean time, the iPod touch awaits. For me, three major barriers exist for my iPhone adoption:

1. Microsoft Exchange Server support with full ‘Direct Push’ email is lacking for the iPhone. This could be fixed in the next few months.
2. I’d have to get a new account and phone no. with AT&T with the iPhone and then get that migrated over to the corporate plan. Probably doable.
3. I already have a freaking phone! And it’s being paid for! I want to throw my money at Apple, not AT&T. This one is hard to swallow. AT&T can go bite me as I’ve never had so many dropped calls until I moved to their networks.

One aspect to the iPod that makes me so personally excited for its release is its WiFi capability. For me, this could mean that from the comfort of my couch, I could read the NY Times, check in on my Flickr page, reply to my GMail and type into my blog. Most of what I use my laptop for at home is casual browsing. I don’t have a fully functional PC at home any more, so this little fella might just be all I need.

But earlier today it hit me! A killer app that I might actually kill someone for (at least gratuitously injure).

Can someone please write a application that lets me control iTunes remotely from the iPod touch. And I don’t mean, can I play my mp3s from my iPod. No. I mean, can I control the library of mp3s that’s sitting in my house, attached to a dumb PC, from my iPod touch? Please?

This would an incredibly compelling way to utilise the WiFi hooks and its massive touch screen! Most home owners have a stationary computer. Often it is hooked up to the main stereo system in your home. Currently, there’s been very few options to control your music library and have it play through your main stereo.

Apple released the AirPort Express which has AirTunes, which lets you use your laptop to control your music collection remotely as it sends the audio signal wirelessly to the stero. But a laptop is hardly that convenient to carry around your house. For a lot of people, your laptop is your only computer and then you’re back to square one again: controlling what’s playing by returning to the physical heart of the collection. I want to have something that lets me see my collection, control it, but not necessarily be standing right next to it.

Using an Apple remote to control your iTunes is simple and cheap solution, but your control is very limited to play, pause, next track. The only other solution that exists that I know of is the Sonos. This is the solution that I’d love to have but can’t afford. For $1000 (including the $400 remote) it gives the user the ability to see, control and direct what’s being played from your computer. And yes, its a luxury to have a colour screen just for your music remote control, but it’s bound to be a great experience. Your computer can now just sit still, chill out and pump mp3s to a stereo.

With the iPod touch, I might finally be able to have something as cool, as visual and as powerful as that Sonos without paying $1000 for this one experience. It means changing your perception of the iPod from being your entire music collection, to simply being a window into your library. A sexy, 3.5″ touchable window.

Another UPDATE!

talking the talk, social, connected, Chicago, weddingSeptember 4, 2007 8:47 pm



Sara on CBS News

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

So, this’ll be my last post about the proposal I promise*.

A week ago, a reporter from CBS Chicago News contacted Britton at the gallery. He asked if he could speak to me and Britton being the stand up guy that he is took the call and didn’t pass on my info straight away.

I spoke to the reporter later that day, and being the media whore that I am, I immediately agreed to an interview the following Tuesday. We arranged to meet back at the gallery. It was my first visit back to the space after the event.

Well, I’d love to tell you that it was a gritty, tough piece of Pulitzer Prize winning journalism. And I’d love to tell you that it wasn’t a classic, fluffy, heartwarming, Human Interest piece. But I can’t.

That being said, my favourite part the video is when he brings up one of the ‘viewing frames’ while his voice over talking. It was a sequence he shot while we were standing together, ‘just being ourselves’. Painfully embarrassing to film, as we had to just stand there, basically cuddling and laughing at nothing in particular, while the camera rolled.

The direct link to the video is here. Watch out for the closing line from Vince. Priceless.

*If I get on David Letterman, all bets are off.

A quick update on the proposal btw. The original post has now gotten over 450 comments and the video on YouTube has now been watched over 325,000 times. Holy crap. It’s still amazing to me the enormously positive response.

photography, ChicagoAugust 23, 2007 4:32 pm



Critical Mass July 2007 -35210

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

If the craziness of this week with the proposal video wasn’t enough, I got some more great news today.

One of photos taken during the last Critical Mass Chicago ride won third place in the Hidden Chicago photo contest in Time Out Chicago!

The winning photos are available in the “Photo Issue” in Time Out Chicago today and online here.

Woot!

talking the talk, social, photography, connected, Chicago, wedding 3:37 pm



yes.

Originally uploaded by emyduck.

After a few days of riding a huge internet wave, the flood of comments, links and hits are starting to calm down around here.

This tiny insignificant, gnat of a blog went from picking up accidental traffic from random Google image searches (not even real text searches!) to at one point, getting 18,000 hits in one hour. That was more hits than this blog has had in its entire lifetime.

Even though I mentioned this in my last post, I would like to take another opportunity to thank everyone for their support. Sara and I are still in shock over how much heartfelt goodwill this video has generated. We’re honored to have read so many lovely warm wishes.

Some of my favourite comments I read so far:

“You had me at laser cut foam core”
“the feel-good YouTube video of the summer”
“Just an all around feel good video. You watch this video - you’re gonna feel good!” as spoken in a strong southern drawl, by JohhnyTV.

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I’d like to acknowledge a few people whose support was critical in all of this:

Annette Ferrara, my friend the writer and art historian who dug the idea from the start. She was instrumental in helping me find a gallery to host the event.

Britton Bertran (from 40000), for being such a supportive gallery owner and idea patron. Throughout the build and during our initial talks, he was able to give really helpful constructive design critique that made the installation so much more stronger. I think that any artist would do well to have Britton in their corner.

Eli Robb, for his performance on the night of the opening. He brought the artiste, Serge Gandaora to life. The black cut-off t-shirt was a nice touch.

To all my friends that were so good for playing along with the ruse. In particular, I’d like to thank Emily (who also took the photo above). Also to her husband, Craig for his fantastic photos of the night that I used for the video. Also to Erin and Chad for their photos.

And to John Grimley and Matt in the studio for helping me understand how to use the bench drill and for letting me borrow the tools from the IDEO workshop.
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And now some answers to the growing list of FAQ:

The soundtrack is by the Icelandic band, Sigur Ros. The song is called Sæglópur from their album, Takk. Please don’t sue me Sigur Ros! I love your song and think of all the people that now do too.

Everyone at the gallery that night was in on the plan. But I think there were a few people who walked in off the street, thinking it was a real opening. Thanks, random people, for making the event look more “real.”

“My Early Muir Owl” is an anagram of “Will you marry me.”
“Serge Gandaora” is an anagram of “george and sara”.

The white ‘art’ on the walls were the original 3′ x 2′ foam core sheets that I used to cut out the letter forms.

I only got one paper cut during the entire build.

The installation took about 24 hours in total. 4-6 hours each day over four days.

How the installation was made:
Each base was cut from a few bits of spare MDF with a circular saw bit on a bench drill.
The tall rods were made from 8′ length of aluminium screen door frames cut to length. Each stroke of the letter forms was a made from stacks of identical cutouts or folded together from a flattened ‘net’.

The full ‘artist statement’ written by Eli/Serge can be found here.

Sara said yes!

++++

In the end of all this, we’re just glad we can share our happiness.