Friday, November 19, 2004

Canon CanoScan LiDE 35


Scanner CANON CanoScan Lide 35 Posted by Hello


Price: £59
Overall rating:**** (4 out of 5)
Manufacturer: Canon
Luke Peters, Computeractive 19 Nov 2004



The Canon CanoScan LiDE 35 is slim and lightweight and features a double-hinged lid. This allows large items to fit on the scanning bed. It has an optical scanning resolution of 1,200 x 2,400 dpi and enhanced 48bit colour depth.

Mounted on the front of the scanner are four shortcut buttons. Each will launch its own application to scan and copy documents, create an image file, or generate an email attachment. These buttons can also be reconfigured to launch an OCR application or create PDFs.

In our tests, the CanoScan 35 took only 10 seconds to create an A4 preview and 11 seconds to scan an A4 image at its lowest resolution setting of 75dpi. This is largely due to the fast USB 2 connection. Scanning at 300dpi took 26 seconds but its maximum 1200dpi resolution took five minutes.

Scanning quality was good and the supplied software, including ArcSoft PhotoStudio 5.5 and Scansoft OmniPage SE, can remove any dust or scratches.

Contact: Canon 08705 143 723
www.canon.co.uk

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

CREATIVE.COM - Products - Zen Portable Media Center

CREATIVE.COM - Products - Zen Portable Media Center: "Video, Music, Photos - When and Where You Want!

Creative Zen Portable Media Center puts all your favorite videos, music, and photos at your fingertips wherever you are. Take digital entertainment from your PC with you on the go, including recorded TV shows, downloaded videos, home movies, music, and photos. With Windows Mobile software featuring an easy-to-use, familiar Windows Media Center Edition interface, Portable Media Centers let you enjoy immediate access to all of your favorite entertainment - anytime, anywhere.

Creative Zen Portable Media Center enables portability of up to 85 hours of movies1, 9,000 songs1, or up to tens of thousands of photos1 on a sleek, handheld device.

Price on Ebay about £200

CREATIVE.COM - Products - Zen Portable Media Center

CREATIVE.COM - Products - Zen Portable Media Center: "Video, Music, Photos - When and Where You Want!

Creative Zen Portable Media Center puts all your favorite videos, music, and photos at your fingertips wherever you are. Take digital entertainment from your PC with you on the go, including recorded TV shows, downloaded videos, home movies, music, and photos. With Windows Mobile software featuring an easy-to-use, familiar Windows Media Center Edition interface, Portable Media Centers let you enjoy immediate access to all of your favorite entertainment - anytime, anywhere.

Creative Zen Portable Media Center enables portability of up to 85 hours of movies1, 9,000 songs1, or up to tens of thousands of photos1 on a sleek, handheld device.

Price on Ebay about the £200 Mark

Friday, November 12, 2004

Samsung Digimax V50


SAMSUNG DIGIMAX V50 Posted by Hello
Samsung Digimax V50
An unforgiving but feature-packed camera
Price: £329
Overall rating:*** (3 out of 5)
Manufacturer: Samsung
Chris Cain, Personal Computer World 12 Nov 2004



It may not be the first name you'd associate with digital cameras, but Samsung has enjoyed success with its Digimax range. The V50 is the company's latest feature-packed model, aimed at those looking for substance as well as style.

Chief among its specifications are a 5megapixel resolution, the ability to capture mpeg-4 Quicktime movies at 640 x 480 with 30fps, 3x optical zoom, a rotating 2in LCD screen and the option of using a variety of AA batteries as well as rechargeable packs. The camera can handle nine power sources.

It can also use SD/MMC and Memory Stick Duo/Pro Duo cards, and supports add-on lenses. The camera even comes with a carry case.

While the V50 offers a variety of automatic and manual modes complete with a 4cm macro mode and presets for portraits, landscapes and other common scenes, in use its menus and buttons can be very annoying. We found it easy to accidentally press the mode buttons when using the zoom, for example, and the menu system is slow and awkward.

In terms of pictures, the V50 is unforgiving. The camera seems to be very sensitive to any shaking in the user's hands, especially at maximum zoom, resulting in a large number of blurred images during tests.

Shots that were in focus came out clear and detailed with little chromatic aberration, although not quite up to the standard set by the Canon S60. We were more impressed with the movie mode, which can capture clips to the capacity of your memory card.

Overall, we had mixed feelings about the V50. While it looks good on paper, and features such as the rotating LCD are a plus, its performance didn't match our expectations.

Contact: Samsung 00 80 012 263 727
www.samsungcamera.co.uk

Wednesday, November 10, 2004

What’s Inside That MP3?

What’s Inside That MP3?
Pop quiz: Have you ever found yourself driving down the road listening to the radio when your favorite song comes on? You panic trying to figure out the band’s name that performs the rockin’ tune. Without any real thought, you ask everyone in the car to quiet down with the Blind Faith that the D.J. might name the artist as the song comes to a close. In its infinite wisdom, the radio station either jumps right over to a commercial or simply pauses for brief station identification. This is the land of confusion!

Those of us lucky enough to partake in the MP3 player experience are spared from this kind of annoyance. Assuming you buy your music “legally” from legitimate download sources, you may have noticed that both your PC-based media player and hardware MP3 player will display the name of the song, along with other important information, thus preventing the frustration that stems from not knowing the name of a great song. And we’ve all been through the desert on a song with no name.

After all, this is merely an audio file and has no ability to retain or display such data, right? Actually, the MP3 audio format does offer this ability, thanks to a little something called the ID3 tag. Here's the part where you are supposed to say, "Ooooooh" and "aaaaaaah." Remember that it's not unusual to be loved by anyone... I mean, to see ID3 tags that lack some of the data that would be helpful in indexing or accessing at a future time. This is the most common problem with music that was "borrowed" (or pirated off a file-sharing network). It is my understanding that people who upload music illegally often don't take time to enter much more than a song name with the band attached. Then again, what do you expect from people that choose to Ballmer their music? Do they have too much *clap, clap* time on their hands?

Generally speaking, the six most common ID3 tags are Title, Artist, Album, Year, Comment, and Genre. For most people this is plenty. All of their wants and desires are covered with the data that ID3v1 provides. ID3v2, on the other hand, is quite a bit different. In addition to being a lot more flexible than its predecessor, ID3v2 allows for an image to be encapsulated into the tag. I've been looking so long at these pictures of you that I almost believe that they're real - and within a tag, they can be!

By now, you're thinking, "Dude, this is sooooo MP3 101." Don't worry, I'm about to satisfy every power user out there. That's the power of love.

Every geek would agree that ID3 tags have really changed the way we enjoy audio. Having album data right there inside the audio file is pretty cool, but what about the music on your hard drive that doesn't contain this type of information? Remember that music in that folder with all of those songs you ripped from the 14,000-count CD collection in your basement? Two years later it's just sitting there gathering virtual dust being totally neglected. Does anybody really know what time it is? It's time to organize, yo.

There are dozens of utilities that take the "byte" out of unknown song tracks. My current favorite is ID3-TagIT. The UI is a little sluggish, but it makes up for that problem in its list of features, including v1 and v2 tag transposition and file-case conversion. The Open Source folks are bound to adore Mp3 Tag Tools, which help you strip annoying underscores and leftover %20s. Then there is Mp3tag, the universal Tag Editor. It handles APE, WMA, OGG, and AAC. Oh, and MP3-Tag Generator. The UI is completely unwieldy, but it rivals ID3-TagIT in muscle. msTagger was developed by a Polish programmer. It mostly reminds me of the simple, classic Windows 98 Find Files dialog box. TagScanner sports a very robust set of export tools. Al Pacino's favorite would probably be The GodFather. Word on the street is that this is the one to beat.

There are various other programs available, but the ones here are completely free. How much do you love me now? 'Cause that's the way (uh-huh, uh-huh) you like it.