Tag Archive: BOING BOING


As predicted last week in the Boing Boing agricultural almanac, Apple this week releases three new varieties of iPods for the fall crop.

All three bear improvements over earlier generations of this familiar fruit, but some of the new additions—and in some cases, what’s missing—may surprise you. Following are snapshots of the new iPod Shuffle, iPod Nano, and iPod Touch, with taste-test notes.

You can find them all in your local farmers markets soon, or order them now at the online Apple store.

Above, the reverse face of the 4th-generation iPod Touch ($229 for 8GB, $299 for 32GB, or $399 for 64GB). It’s thinner and lighter, with a much slimmer profile than iPhone: 0.28 inch (7.2 mm) thick, and 3.56 ounces (101 grams). It’s also the highest-resolution iPod yet, with a 960×640 backlit LCD display and 326 pixels per inch, and includes some of the new features introduced with the iPhone 4′s launch, such as FaceTime video calls made possible with a front-facing camera and a rear-facing HD camera. In tests performed over the past few days with the device, video capture performance seemed on par with the high expectations set by the iPhone 4.

For still snapshots, the camera is solid, but falls just a bit shy of the very high bar set by iPhone 4. The rear-facing camera on iPod Touch can shoot video at 720p, with maximum resolution of 1280×720. For still photos, maximum rez is 960×720 (720p at 4:3 ratio). Unlike iPhone 4, the Touch doesn’t allow you to to tap-focus on specific spots in the photo you’re about to take, because its camera is fixed-focus. Tapping allows you to tweak exposure and white balance, but that’s all. And, alas, no flash.

On the upside, the Touch now includes that same A4 processor that makes the iPhone 4 so zippy: as a result, speed and responsiveness are similarly delightful.

Above, the 4th-generation iPod Shuffle, now navigable by clickwheel or voice controls. It’s the cheapest music player in the Apple lineup at only $49 for 2GB, and seems like a solid deal if a bare-bones music player is all you need.

Below, the new sixth-generation Nano (8 GB for $149, 16GB for $179, available in seven different case colors). That little display’s pretty crazy, about an inch and a half in both directions, give or take a smidge. The screen seems visually identical to the crispness and resolution of iPhone 4′s “retina display.” A device this tiny isn’t going to be used as a primary photo display device—but sharing baby photos at the gym, or quick references to visual tokens while you’re out and about? Sure.

The notion of storing and showing photos on the Nano becomes more plausible with the new high-res display. But the lack of ability to zoom in or expand “landscape”/widescreen format photos is a bit of a bummer.

No video in this iteration: video playing has been removed from this new generation of Nano. But who really watches video on a wristwatch-sized display? I use a Nano at the gym a lot, and I don’t think I’ll mourn this feature. The Nano is a music device at heart, and performs solidly.

The radio tuner on the Nano works great: reception was what I’d expect from, say, my car radio, and the tuner interface mimics a conventional radio dial (mine’s always set to KCRW). Photos, music, radio, podcasts, pedometer and run history for running/jogging: All this in a device small and lightweight enough to wear on your wrist, as a neck pendant, or clip on your t-shirt. It weighs less than a single ounce (.74 ounce/21.1 grams, to be precise).



Above and below, music and photos on the new Nano. You navigate the menu, and songs or photos within, using multi-touch swipe and tap.

Flick your fingers one way or the other to shift orientation, and various tap gestures allow you to go deeper into options, or back your way out. Took me a little getting used to before I felt like I knew my way around with the new UI, but the new display and lack of button cruft sure feel nice. You’d think something this small would be frustrating to use for touchscreen input, and two fingers at a time might sound impossible—but I didn’t find that to be the case.


Below: At left, the new iPod Touch next to a third-generation iPhone. At right, the new Touch next to an iPhone 4. The Touch really is quite slim, and has a more tapered silhouette, compared to the iPhone 4′s more rectilinear form.



Below: A Boing Boing Video episode (Markets of Britain, by Peter Serafinowicz and Robert Popper) on the Touch. Video playback performance is as solid on the new iPhone 4, and I can imagine spending many spare moments YouTube surfing while in transit. No surprises there: it’s a powerful little multimedia device, with a number of evolutionary advances over its predecessor.


Below: FaceTime on the new iPod Touch. Others call you using your email address, instead of a phone number, since the Touch is not a phone.

You’ll notice two other new socially-minded additions to the Touch this time around: Game Center, for social gaming; and Ping for social networking around music. More on those in future Boing Boing posts.





All photos shot on iPhone 4, by Xeni Jardin; screen capture at bottom of post was captured on iPod Touch.)







Popularity: 1% [?]

’70s biker magazine covers

An assortment of 1970s cover scans from the motorcycle magazine Easyriders.

Articles included: “How to Get Rid of Your Woman,” “Trouble With Twats,” “Why Men Wear Beards,” and then: “Positive Prison Reform Plan.”

Above, the cover art for an issue which contained a feature article titled “How to Select a Good Ol’ Lady.” Apparently, the courtship ritual involves strangling her. Then, meth!

Some of the images on the aforelinked link are not work-safe.

(Submitterated by MikeOliveri)






Popularity: unranked [?]

The beauty and wonder of a squid’s eyeball

squideyeforthevertebrateguy.jpg

Look at this squid’s eye. Just look at it. See anything eerily familiar?

Squid, along with the rest of the family Cephalopoda, haven’t shared a common ancestor with us vertebrates in some 500 million years—long before the evolution of our camera-like eyes. And yet, there the cephalopods are, flagrantly swimming about with eyes that use a lens to project an image onto a retina. Call it Squid Eye for the Vertebrate Guy. So, how’s it work?

Convergent evolution, my friends. Convergent evolution. We happened to hit on similar solutions to the same problem of sight, even though the eyes of vertebrates and cephalopods evolved separately, in very different ways, at different times. Today, we can see that legacy in cephalopod and vertebrate fetal development. With vertebrates, the eyes grow on stalks, reaching out from the brain. In cephalopods, the eyes start as a clumping of cells on the surface of the skin and reach backwards, into the head, to make brain contact. Similar destinations. Very different road maps.

This lovely illustration—featuring dissections of the head, funnel, mantle and eye of a Thaumatolampas diadema—comes from The Cephalopoda Part I: Oegopsida and Part II: Myopsida, Octopoda Atlas written in 1910 by zoologist Carl Chun following a German expedition to the Indian, Atlantic and Great Southern oceans.

You can see more of Chun’s detailed, passionate illustrations at the BibliOdyssey blog.

Image: Some rights reserved by peacay






Popularity: unranked [?]

The ACLU today announced that together with the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, it has filed a lawsuit “challenging the [US] government’s claimed authority to search, detain, and copy electronic devices — including laptops, cell phones, cameras, etc. — at the country’s international borders without any suspicion of wrongdoing.”




Popularity: unranked [?]


Here’s a service that takes Google maps satellite views and converts them into print-and-fold envelopes you can use for your correspondence, creating a kind of handsome, 21st-century stationery.

MapEnvelope

(via Make)






Popularity: unranked [?]

Copyright Agrssor 2010 | Powered by WordPress