short distance travel

it’s that time of year to make arrangements to get to CES in las vegas and macworld expo in san francisco. in previous years, these events collided on the same days, but as apple computer moves into the consumer electronics space with ipods, both shows, both in january are important events. apple also plays a hand in the music show called NAMM in late january too.

what you see a macworld you get to use immediately, but what you see at CES comes in october, so i expect to see blu-ray and hi-def recording devices. for all those that are going, do use the best internet technology to find the best prices on flights, trains, and places to stay. i start with kayak, then move to orbitz and travelocity. some airlines only book direct like southwest.

x64 as future

as software solutions seem to move toward open standards, hardware platforms are moving this way as well. just one year ago, we had various CPU’s that dictate a specific OS platform. there was ultraSPARC, AMD x64, PowerPC, intel itanium 2, and intel x86 EM64T. now as industries converge, the move toward an industry standard hardware platform has begun.

sun microsystems has open solaris for the x64 platform, microsoft was windows XP x64, red hat linux runs on x64, novell SUSU linux runs on x64, and coming next year, mac OS X will run on x64. each hardware vendor can optimize the hardware by selecting various ASIC’s and components to maximize applications to make their respective OS shine. we are just eight months away from the mac OS X tiger x64 release, and data centers around the globe are preparing for the transition.

the move to standardization

at the 2005 annual sun microsystems stockholder meeting scott mcnealy, CEO, gave a optimistic view of the next generation of computing. in a matter of a few short years, we’ve moved through the stone age of computing, the iron age, the industrial age, and skipped through the internet and information age, and landed squarely into the participation age.

sun in june 2005 started a share ad campaign, with employees, industry partners, and visionaries. in the new age of participation computing users bid, podcast, download, school, and live on the web. every device, from a handheld, desktop, and light bulb have IP addresses to communication on the participation highway. sun wants to build the infrastructure for the next data center, in direct competition with IBM.

sun has some compelling strengths like complete control of solaris OS and hardware, even though they are moving aggressively into standardized hardware based on X64 architecture. as a company, like other industries, green computing (low cost, low energy density, low administration, high performance) is also a factor.

their technologies to make this all happen are display over IP, star office, java desktop, and java enterprise system.

changing clocks

there’s a twice a year ritual called changing the clocks to either prepare for the return of standard time or anticipating daylight saving time. sometime in 2007 all these rules will alternate again, and the long established time calendar changes.

i find it impressive on how many clocks require adjustment. fortunately, desktop and notebook machine usually have a network time server to work, so their clocks are updated automatically. it’s the DV camcorders, televisions, digital photo cameras, automobile clocks, watches, phones, thermostats, microwaves, wall clocks, cuckoo clocks, and other time pieces requiring modification. every year, another device comes on the marketplace, like an ipod or portable DVD player that also needs adjustment. good luck finding all those devices before 2 AM sunday morning.

mac zealot and PCIe

i unapologetically am a mac evangelist. in the industries of entertainment, architecture, visualization, publishing, and other creative endeavors the mac platform is the only solution. the tools work and excel on mac OS X and the power mac machines. just listing the applications is a who’s who in the software pantheon: final cut pro, DVD studio pro, photoshop, illustrator, dreamweaver, shake, pro tools, indesign, and maya define entire industries.

last week apple announced three new power mac systems, all with dual-core CPU and access to the fastest GPU’s available from NVIDIA. expect the fastest ATI GPU’s in a future announcement. all machine also inherit faster RAM, and a new PCI-express (PCIe) architecture, a change from the AGP and PCI-X motherboards of previous generations. the old PCI standard was a parallel strategy whereas PCIe is serial, much like the move from IDE/ATA drives to SATA drives.

the user community welcomes the new systems, especially the power mac G5 quad, a sight to behold when it comes out next month. some users are balking that their investments have come to a crash, as PCIe systems will not allow the use of PCI-X or PCI conventional cards at all. PCIe is an entirely new architecture, not just a faster revision of the PCI workhorse cards. this is not a driver issue, but the cards don’t fit, much less work. maybe in the future a riser may come along that bridges from PCI conventional/PCI-X to PCIe, but not today.

in some professional industries the PCI investment may exceed 2 or 3 times the investment in the system, with VBR MPEG-2 boards, SDI boards, audio boards, and connectivity boards easily surpassing $1000 and up. the one consolation to these folks is the CPU rating stayed the same in the 2.0 GHz and 2.3 GHz dual G5, and while they last in the marketplace, the PCI-X machines, along with PC3200 RAM, are still available. get them while you still can, because in a few weeks the only thing out there will be PCIe and PC2-4200 RAM.

powerPC goes out fighting

apple does not disappoint when it comes to product announcements. independent of any major mac event, apple has sprung several very significant products in the last several weeks. first we got the new imac G5 and video ipod. today the second shoe falls on the powermac G5 quad, a behemoth of a system. you get four processors, and i’m sure several more virtual processors for a great price.

finally the partnership with NVIDIA and apple pays off with the availability of professional graphics cards. we say a farewell to the geforce line and welcome the quadro PCIe chipsets to the mac. now i believe 3D software will work on par with wintel systems and linux systems.

november 2005 cannot come soon enough to get my hands on one of these fantastic products. the intel product line is a long ways away. i predict sometime during macworld SF 2007 with the intel chipsets inside the powermac. portable systems will get intel inside by june 2006.

video ipod revolution

apple delivers a knock out blow to VC-1 and other proprietary standards. AVC, or advanced video codec, also known as H.264 by the ITU and MPEG-4 Part 10 by ISO/IEC is an open standard developed my many patent holders. VC-1, the public face of microsoft window media 9, along with flash video 8, or on2 video are both welded shut boxes of technology with one patent holder to take the reins.

multiple companies including apple, IBM, Barco, Dolby Laboratories, Fraunhofer Institute, HP, Motorola, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung Electronics, TANDBERG television, and Texas Instruments have all joined forces to give consumers product choice and unlimited possibilities. the fruits of that partnership were the first successful H.264 or AVC product, the sony playstation portable device, and now the second mass consumer product, the apple ipod.

north american disney TV shows are only the start of what is possible in AVC. the codec can scale from mobile phones at 128 pixels all the way to 1080 pixels high definitions images. all media is going to AVC for content delivery for quality, compression efficiency, and broad support through the consumer electronics industry, information technology industry, and broadcast industry.

mac joins GPU future

when apple moved to an open standard operating system, BSD UNIX, most developers and users saw the potential of using GNU license open source software on the mac. slowly, the same transition is happening on the hardware side, as apple will be moving the entire mac line, including powermac, imac, powerbook, and ibook to intel chipsets.

today, apple announced the latest imac, and aside from the wonderful home technology hub, the most significant move in my mind is the retirement of the accelerated graphics port( AGP graphics). most high end graphics subsystems require not AGP 4X or 8X, but higher end PCI-express (PCIe), and now the fall 2005 imac includes a radeon PCIe for access to next generation GPU’s.

sometimes apple surprises the mac community by launching newer technology into the imac in advance of the workstations like the powermac or servers like the xserve. i hope PCIe makes it to xserve and powermac lines very soon, so anyone can access highest ATI or NVIDIA technology.

end of mac 3D?

to my amazement, autodesk has made a definitive agreement to acquire Alias. autodesk acquired discreet some years ago and acquired 3ds Max. Now maya and motion builder may die since they directly compete with autodesk products. only the future will know the actual outcome, but this is not good for competition.

maya and motion builder were also the power players on mac OS X, so maybe 3ds Max may move to OS X too, but maybe they’ll drop support on my platform of choice.