
Metalpeter's Journal
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11/10/2005 19:28 #28223
Sports shotCategory: photos
I didn't listen to The sabres on the radio last night they lost. But I saw this picture in the sports section of the paper today. It looked better there then on line. You can see Birons eyes behind the mask. It is really an amazing picture. I would love to be able to take photographs like that. I'm ok with using a camara but I could never be good enough to take sport photographs. Using a "real or professional " camara is more diffacult. There are light setings and shutter speeds and all that kind of stuff to figure out. I can't really aforid those kinds of camaras some of them are verry pricy but are verry good. Then you also need differant lenses depending on what you are going to shoot and where from. Hopefully I will make it to another Hockey game and take some more digital pics and share them.


11/08/2005 19:29 #28222
Vote I voted today. I think that voting is important. It would be nice if money wasn't so important to the running for office. Hopefully who ever wins will make a differance and it won't be the same crap as allways. Some people don't vote because they think they are all criminals. I think that maybe some day that may change but I doubt it. I think it was Bill Maher who said the rupublicans are the party of bad ideas and the democrats are the party of no ideas, i thought it was kinda true and kinda funny. I think the two main party system is hurting this country. I havn't seen a 3rd party canidate who really stood a chance of winning. Hopefully that may change soon.
11/08/2005 00:21 #28220
victorianCategory: photos







I don't know why I like victorian houses but for some reason I do. I like around here how they make them bright or at least with high contrast. Hopefully I will get around to taking some pictures around Buffalo. I have a few but I need to go out one day and put a day in around delaware and maybe even go down to the rich part of town near McKinley and take pictures of those huge houses but for now pics from other people on the web will do. ok back to football.















twisted - 11/07/05 20:21
Hey, that fifth pic is "postcard row" - Alamo Square, SF. Just five blocks :::link::: from my new place. Who's going to come visit?
Hey, that fifth pic is "postcard row" - Alamo Square, SF. Just five blocks :::link::: from my new place. Who's going to come visit?
metalpeter - 11/06/05 14:04
The pics are just to look at for now I don't have any plans. I was hoping to find some buffalo Houses but on my second search I didn't but after this comment I'm adding some more of the ones I downloaded.
The pics are just to look at for now I don't have any plans. I was hoping to find some buffalo Houses but on my second search I didn't but after this comment I'm adding some more of the ones I downloaded.
matthew - 11/06/05 12:52
What are the pics for (e:metalpeter)? These look mostly "west coast" style victorian. Buffalo has an enormous amount of victorian style houses itself. I can give you a few adresses if you'd like.
What are the pics for (e:metalpeter)? These look mostly "west coast" style victorian. Buffalo has an enormous amount of victorian style houses itself. I can give you a few adresses if you'd like.
11/07/2005 18:33 #28221
wifi camara gamers chairCategory: technology
Every Monday I do enjoy reading the Buffalo News. They have the click section wich often has some interesting stuff in there. I had seen an article about a kodak camara before that uses wifi technology so you can send pictures with out having a computer. The camara sounds amazing it really does. I don't have that much to spend on a camara but if i did it , it sounds like a camara I might buy. The other article I posted after that is about a "Gammers" chair. I do like video games but not a gammer nor do I have a new system but if I did and I wanted to go to that next level based on this review I might get it. I thought they are both interesting pices of technology. Before I forget I also wanted to comment that I like the new theme colors of (e:strip).
new Kodak Wi-Fi camera
By CRAIG CROSSMAN
KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS
11/7/2005
Kodak's EasyShare-One has a 3-inch screen that tilts and is one of the first digital cameras to have built-in wireless Wi-Fi communications capability.
Film isn't dead, but I'm hard-pressed to remember the last time I saw someone taking pictures who wasn't using a digital model.
Yes, I can still buy VCR tapes, cassettes and records but why would I want to when I can buy DVDs, MP3 recorder/players and CDs?
I acknowledge that there will always be someone out there who will buck the trends and technological benefits. I figure they either derive some strange pleasure letting people know they like doing things the old-fashioned way, or they somehow feel that the old analog technology looks and sound "richer" than their digital counterparts.
Then again, it just may be that they think an old dog can't learn new tricks, which is pretty silly since these newer technologies are actually simpler to use while empowering their user with so many more abilities.
If I had to pick the most important thing one gets using a digital camera, I would have to say it's instant gratification. You immediately get to see the picture you just took on the camera's color screen.
And right in line with that gratification comes the ability to share your images with everyone who's with you. So the bigger the screen on the camera, the easier it is to let everyone around you see what you just took.
Many of the newer cameras are offering 21/2- and even 3-inch screens. It is this concept of sharing that is the focal point of Kodak's latest digital camera, the EasyShare-One. But this camera goes way beyond sharing via its 3-inch screen, which also pivots out and tilts for easier viewing. It's one of the first consumer digital cameras to have wireless Wi-Fi communications built in.
If you're near any wireless hotspot, you can transmit the camera's images directly over the Internet without a computer. Using the built-in stylus, simply select any picture you've taken that's stored in the camera's memory and want to share. You can compose an e-mail message directly on the camera by tapping your message in via the virtual keyboard displayed on the screen. Tap in the e-mail address, hit the send button and your e-mail message along with the pictures you've attached are instantly sent out over the Internet via the wireless connection.
The Wi-Fi abilities can also be used to send your images directly into your personal computer. And Kodak's newest EasyShare Photo Printer Dock Plus Series 3 also has Wi-Fi so you can wirelessly transmit any picture from your camera to be instantly printed.
Of course, you can also directly connect the EasyShare-One camera directly to the computer via a USB connection as well as docking the camera directly on top of the printer. This latter method lets you use the EasyShare-One's 3-inch screen as the printer's monitor screen so you can make printer selections via on-screen menus as well as preview what is about to be printed. This double use of the camera's screen for both camera and printer is clever and economical. A printer with its own color screen would be more expensive, as is the case for Kodak's older Photo Printer 500.
As for the EasyShare-One's other specifications, they are fairly standard, offering a 4-megapixel image, 256 megabytes of built-in memory (expandable via flash memory cards), a 3X optical zoom lens, autofocus, built-in flash with red-eye elimination, self-timer and a burst mode for faster pause times between pictures.
It can also record sounds via its built-in microphone as well as take full-motion videos with their duration limited only by the amount of memory in the camera. The 3-inch color touch screen lets you perform a wide array of editing features, such as an on-camera cropping ability via a movable crop window.
The Kodak EasyShare-One is a remarkable digital camera from one of the world's leading camera manufacturers. And while its general abilities are sufficient for most of us average picture takers, the addition of Wi-Fi and the camera's built-in software to take advantage of that wireless ability certainly makes this camera stand out in the crowd.
Windows- and Macintosh-compatible, the EasyShare-One camera sells for $599.95. The Easy
Share-One Photo Printer Dock Plus Series 3 goes for $179.95 at www.kodak.com.
A butt-kickin' rumble for video gamer's chair
By RON HARRIS
Associated Press
11/7/2005
Associated Press
Buttkicker Gamer powerfully shakes center post of a player's chair when a video game emits low bass audio frequencies.
SAN FRANCISCO - In an effort to deliver the ultimate sensory experience, most top video games marry earthshaking sounds with high-quality graphics.
It's a goal that often falls a bit short.
Let's face it. Sitting in a chair playing video games feels pretty much just like sitting in a chair.
That's where a new device called the Buttkicker Gamer comes in.
It's a thick metal device ($170) that clamps tightly to the center post of most office chairs. Powered by a 100-watt amplifier and low frequency transducer, it shakes powerfully when a game emits low bass audio frequencies.
Delivering physical feedback to a gamer is not new, but previous efforts have tended to focus on gentle buzzing and making a hand-held controller vibrate.
The Buttkicker Gamer takes all that to a whole new level - the seat of the pants - and it works quite well.
The manufacturer suggests using the device to feel the gaming action without having to crank the sound. I found it fun to do a bit of both.
I tried the unit with two of my favorite action-packed PC games - "Boarder Zone," a snowboarding game, and "Counter-Strike," a first-person shooter. It took some fine-tuning with the low cutoff and high cutoff frequency buttons. Toying with those allowed me to adjust the rumble delivered to the clamp, and by extension, my seat. I turned on the high and low cutoff buttons and set the frequency knob to 40 hertz, per suggestion of the manual. Other adjustments can be made if the user is going to sit in the Buttkicker powered chair and listen to music, but I wanted to play.
The suggested settings worked well. When I cranked the Buttkicker output too high, my chair rattled at even the slightest bass frequencies, scaring the daylights of me and my dog.
On the snowboarding game, the Buttkicker rumbled as I made a hard landing. In "Counter-Strike," it was the loud blast from my weapon or a nearby explosive device that got the Buttkicker going.
Some more docile games didn't lend themselves to such feedback, and I often found myself reaching to disable the Buttkicker and re-enable my plain old 2.1 subwoofer.
But this device by The Guitammer Co. delivered quite an experience as billed, and it got me looking forward to trying dozens of games on my shelf all over again to see if it will kick new life into them.
On the Net:
www.thebuttkicker.com
11/05/2005 18:16 #28219
Sad day for cokeCategory: soda/pop
I heard a brief little story about coke vanilla being phased out. I think it is to bad and I wonder what ther black cherry vanilla will taste like. Gross I think besides there is allready the classic Cherry coke wich tastes much better then cherry pepsi just like the vanilla did. I don't care if you call it pop or soda the full term is soda pop. An icecream soda is soda mixed with icecream ever heard of an ice cream pop, yes and it is a complete differant thing it is one of many icecream novalities. It is known as Soda because it comes from a soda machine. The stuff in cans and bottles dosn't and is a completely differnt product but most people call it soda wich is incorrect soda is more of the bubbley water stuff. Ok i'm going off point i don't care what you call it pop or soda I use both, i had to poke holes in the argument for both sides. I prefer Pepsi to Coke. But the Vanilla coke tasted better then Pepsi Vanilla. (on a side note does anyone know where to find lemon pepsi or pepsi vanilla every where I go I only see diet?, Thanks!!!!) Vanilla Coke tastes verry stongly of Vanilla and has a little bit of coke flavor. The Pepsi Vanilla is just the oposite it mostly tastes like pepsi with a little vanilla. I remember for years only coke made flavored cola in the cherry coke and pepsi fans wished and wished pepsi would come out with one and they did. Cherry pepsi is good but not as good as cherry coke. I was surprised when both coke and pepsi came out with the lemon then the lime but no lemon lime. They came out with lemon first but I thought it should have been lime first. Adding your own lime to your soda was done in my family for years and adds that something to it that is really good that is why i'm surprised lemon came out first but maybe somepeople did it that way. Putting a lime in is still better then the lime flavored pop but when you don't have limes (I never do) it works preaty good. When I go somewhere that has a fountain like Burger King I like to make Spokes. If done correctly they taste amazing. The trick is to add sprite to the bottom then coke on top. if you mix the proportions right the drink is still dark and tastes like coke but you get the lemon lime flavor. Be verry carefull if you over fill the sprite it can taste kinda icky you taste the sprite and the coke instead of just the lemonlimeyness. In any event here is an article from I think USA today's website.
Coca-Cola to phase out Vanilla Coke as sales decline
NEW YORK (Reuters) — Coca-Cola (KO) said Friday it would phase out its Vanilla Coke, Vanilla Diet Coke and Diet Coke With Lemon beverages in the United States by end of this year.
Coca-Cola says it must remain flexible as beverage landscape changes.
The announcement came a day after the world's largest soft drink maker said it would phase out Vanilla Coke and Vanilla Diet Coke in the United Kingdom early next year. The company said sales have declined.
Coca-Cola added that it plans to introduce Diet Black Cherry Vanilla Coke and Black Cherry Vanilla Coke in the United States in January 2006.
The company said Vanilla Coke, which was introduced in the United States in 2002 and Diet Vanilla Coke in 2003, could return sometime in the future. Details about whether Diet Coke With Lemon, which made its U.S. entry in 2001, would be brought back were not available.
"I don't know if we have ever taken out a flavor and brought it back to the market, but the landscape continues to change and we want to be as flexible as possible to adapt to the changing landscape," said Scott Williamson, a spokesperson for Coca-Cola.
The phase out follows declining sales for the brands in the United States.
Vanilla Coke sales slipped to 35 million unit cases in 2004 from 90 million unit cases in 2002, while Vanilla Diet Coke sales dropped to 13 million unit cases last year from 23 million unit cases in 2003, according to Beverage Marketing, a beverage research and consulting firm.
Sales of Diet Coke with Lemon have fallen to 9.9 million unit cases in 2004 from 24 million unit cases in 2001, data showed.
Analysts have said that one of the keys to the company's future is to innovate new products that will help Coca-Cola capture more consumers who have moved away from sugary soft drinks to diet versions, or to healthier low-or no-calorie beverages such as water and orange juices with reduced sugar.
Both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, the No. 2 soft drink company, are battling for the allegiance of increasingly picky U.S. consumers. The United States is the largest market for the soft-drink companies.
"It is a rapidly changing beverage landscape and it is important for Coke to move quickly to deliver on what the consumer wants," said Gary Hemphill, managing director of Beverage Marketing. "The competition for shelf space is intense."
Shares of Dow component Coca-Cola were down 31 cents at $42.27.
Coca-Cola to phase out Vanilla Coke as sales decline
NEW YORK (Reuters) — Coca-Cola (KO) said Friday it would phase out its Vanilla Coke, Vanilla Diet Coke and Diet Coke With Lemon beverages in the United States by end of this year.
Coca-Cola says it must remain flexible as beverage landscape changes.
The announcement came a day after the world's largest soft drink maker said it would phase out Vanilla Coke and Vanilla Diet Coke in the United Kingdom early next year. The company said sales have declined.
Coca-Cola added that it plans to introduce Diet Black Cherry Vanilla Coke and Black Cherry Vanilla Coke in the United States in January 2006.
The company said Vanilla Coke, which was introduced in the United States in 2002 and Diet Vanilla Coke in 2003, could return sometime in the future. Details about whether Diet Coke With Lemon, which made its U.S. entry in 2001, would be brought back were not available.
"I don't know if we have ever taken out a flavor and brought it back to the market, but the landscape continues to change and we want to be as flexible as possible to adapt to the changing landscape," said Scott Williamson, a spokesperson for Coca-Cola.
The phase out follows declining sales for the brands in the United States.
Vanilla Coke sales slipped to 35 million unit cases in 2004 from 90 million unit cases in 2002, while Vanilla Diet Coke sales dropped to 13 million unit cases last year from 23 million unit cases in 2003, according to Beverage Marketing, a beverage research and consulting firm.
Sales of Diet Coke with Lemon have fallen to 9.9 million unit cases in 2004 from 24 million unit cases in 2001, data showed.
Analysts have said that one of the keys to the company's future is to innovate new products that will help Coca-Cola capture more consumers who have moved away from sugary soft drinks to diet versions, or to healthier low-or no-calorie beverages such as water and orange juices with reduced sugar.
Both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, the No. 2 soft drink company, are battling for the allegiance of increasingly picky U.S. consumers. The United States is the largest market for the soft-drink companies.
"It is a rapidly changing beverage landscape and it is important for Coke to move quickly to deliver on what the consumer wants," said Gary Hemphill, managing director of Beverage Marketing. "The competition for shelf space is intense."
Shares of Dow component Coca-Cola were down 31 cents at $42.27.
theecarey - 11/05/05 22:26
I grew up calling it all "Pop", but I interchange between that and "soda" now. I prefer Pepsi by far over Coke, yet Cherry Coke is (admittedly) better than Cherry Pepsi.
I grew up calling it all "Pop", but I interchange between that and "soda" now. I prefer Pepsi by far over Coke, yet Cherry Coke is (admittedly) better than Cherry Pepsi.
you think money plays a part in buffalo, try nyc. Bloomberg spent 11mill of his OWN cash. Basically he paid 100 something per vote, it is sad.