2008.11.30

tsai.gr

Μια από τις απολαύσεις που δύσκολα ικανοποιεί κανείς στην Ελλάδα είναι το τσάι. Δεν είναι μόνον το γεγονός πως είναι δύσκολο (εαν όχι ακατόρθωτο) να βρεί κανείς ποιοτικό, καλό τσάι στην Αθήνα (πόσο μάλλον εκτός αυτής), οι διαθέσιμες ποικιλίες στο εμπόριο είναι ελάχιστες· πραγματικό τσάι (βλ. καλής ποιότητας τσάι εισαγωγής — τσάι που ποτέ δεν είναι συσκευασμένο σε σακουλάκια) δε θα βρεί κανείς σε κανένα supermarket. Στην καλύτερη θα βρεί κανείς κάποιο Earl Gray ή ‘Generic’ Πράσινο ‘τσάι’ σε συσκευασίες των 100 ή 200γρ. που συχνά στερείται τόσο της γεύσης όσο και της ποιότητας που κάνει το τσάι επιθυμητό.
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» An out-of-touch visual cliché to connote “the digital age.”

Jonathan Hoefler’s semi-lyrical piece on the pixel’s history and future. [via subtraction]

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» Boxee Invites.

One of the most promising open-source projects regarding the home-theatre/TV (at last!) that combines excellent æsthetics, killer media features and social networking is Boxee. Boxee is based on the XBMC project. Note that while this is alpha quality software, it’s impressively stable, yet unsupported. Boxee is currently available for the AppleTV/Mac OS X, Ubuntu Linux 32bit - 7.10 and 8.04 only at the moment - and in source code form.

I’ve got some invites for the invite-only alpha testing phase, so if you’re interested drop me a comment below and I’ll send you one.

Update: No more invites here, comments are now closed. I’m sure you can find some elsewhere pretty easily.

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» At this point the megapixel race should probably stop

One thing that bothers me with professional photographers, is that often they are completely clueless about the physics and technology aspects behind their gear — they typically possess a very superficial understanding of it all, defined solely by the tech. slang of the trade, enthusiastic peers and the press. Much like a new linux user learning how to pay a visit to a web forum, mailing-list or irc channel and thinking he or she has become linux masters.

Along those lines is the now so common megapixel myth: that higher pixel count automatically translates to better pixels. The 50D review, and indeed the camera itself, provide a pretty compelling demonstration of why, even with the best lenses out there, a very high pixel count can suddenly make ‘optical resolution’ a much more familiar term to all those that seem to focus only on the electronics; if the top lenses, beasts costing thousands and weighing kilos, are barely sufficient to provide adequate pixel detail at 15MP and an APS-C sensor, you can easily imagine how bad so many compacts sporting 10 or 12MP may very well be with their subpar, mediocre lenses.

If anything, the review demonstrates that the 50D probably represents the last of a series of cameras that came before it; for in the future Canon is most certainly going to shift its focus to other areas of the camera besides pixel count; features that are hopefully going to make its successor a much better camera overall.

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2008.11.01

Breaking The Law…

…or how ‘Le Sénat français a décidé de violer la législation europeénne’.

Sarkozy’s authoritarianism seems to be behind this. Yet it puzzles me how violating EU legislation can be so easily accepted by the Senate:

« 1° La suspension de l’accès au service pour une durée de trois mois à un an assortie de l’impossibilité, pour l’abonné, de souscrire pendant la même période un autre contrat portant sur l’accès à un service de communication au public en ligne auprès de tout opérateur ;

It seems to me that this is in direct violation of Amendment 138 of 2002/21/EC — you’d think they hadn’t read it:

(ga) applying the principle that no restriction may be imposed on the fundamental rights and freedoms of end-users without a prior ruling of the judicial authorities, notably in accordance with Article 11 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union on freedom of expression and information, save when public security is threatened, in which case the ruling may be subsequent.

emphasis mine.

It’ll be interesting to see whether they actually do something with this, or whether this ‘illegal’ law will be used only as a deterrent. If they do, I’d be so happy to see someone take the French Government, their ISP and any other third party involved in this to the ECJ and win.

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