(Formerly) Canada’s ATI makes a huge comeback in the graphics business

The graphics company once know as ATI has launched something of a coup this week with two new products the Radeon 4850 and 4870. NVDIA has been dominating the desktop 3D graphics market for a while now but it looks it’s now ATI’s turn to leapfrog. Now it’s just too bad they got themselves bought 2 years ago out by the absolute trainwreck of a CPU company AMD. The 48xx technology is just for PCs for now but should eventually filter down to notebooks and even macs.

If you are in to this sort of thing, check out AnandTech’s review:

ATI cardFor now, the Radeon HD 4870 and 4850 are both solid values and cards we would absolutely recommend to readers looking for hardware at the $200 and $300 price points. The fact of the matter is that by NVIDIA’s standards, the 4870 should be priced at $400 and the 4850 should be around $250. You can either look at it as AMD giving you a bargain or NVIDIA charging too much, either way it’s healthy competition in the graphics industry once again (after far too long of a hiatus).

Anyway, kudos to the boys and girls in Markham Ontario for pulling this off. You may just save your parent company yet.

You can buy one here.

Posted in Archive, hardware | 1 Comment

On the success of London’s electronic transit card

The benefits of the programme are multiple in terms of streamlining travel, reducing queues, minimising cash handling, reducing the possibility of fraud by customers and cash theft by staff, and generally improving the customer experience. Having said that, the biggest benefit is the £60 million reduction in annual operating costs for TfL of the ticketing system since implementing the Oystercard.

An Oyster that’s a Diamond, London’s Contactless System

Toronto’s own equivalent the contactless Presto card is currently in trials, and may one day unify transit fares across southern Ontario. This link is for the metronauts out there.

Posted in Archive, opencities | Leave a comment

Greg Gillis’ Girl Talk kicks music in the ass

Girl Talk Toronto Spin Gallery
Girl Talk Toronto Spin Gallery 2

At the $5-or-more level, buyers can choose to download the album in [DRM-free] MP3 or FLAC format, the latter being exact copies of the original source files without compression. Also included is a single MP3 file featuring the music without track breaks. Link Moar

M:

mp3 or flac?

T:

flac is for wankers

M:

T:

Audio compression algorithms work by taking out extraneous data (likemicroseconds of silence) from the raw source data file reducing the total file size. Lossless algorithms like FLAC or winzip for that matter, studiously make sure that all of the original meaning down to the last bit can be recovered. MP3 goes further by also taking out, unrecoverably, some extra data from parts of the sound file that the human ear can’t actually hear resulting in substantially further file size reduction. For really low-bitrate mp3 compression (like 128bit or less) the algorithm is starting to take out some parts of the sound that the human ear can tell the difference, just a little bit.

Essentially however, the differences between good high-bit-rate mp3 (like 192bit VBR) and completely lossless compression like FLAC are largely imaginary.

Not that true-blood audiophiles aren’t willing to pay gobs of money all the time for imaginary sound differences all the time.

These people are wankers.

mp3 is also more widely supported by every media player everywhere. FLAC not so much.

M:

whodathunk. damn it’s really hard to decide which track to send. they’re all really really good!!

T:

OMG holy crap ya!

Why has this turned into a music blog all of a sudden? I dunno, but file under Girl Talk Doesn’t need bill C-61 to rock you.


Now go download the crap out of this album
. And pay for it.

Ironic for what’s basically a hyperkinetic schizophrenic cyclone mashup of past factory-produced hits in a nuclear blender of awesome, this album is both 100% the future of music… and a future that is wide OPEN.

Girl Talk is a two-fer another example of alternative (PWYC) business model that will probably be wildly successful. And of course, he’s long been the poster child of fair-use in mashups and sampling.

Photos: Greg Gillis / Girl Talk live at Spin Gallery in 2006. Moar.

Posted in Archive, drm, music | Comments Off on Greg Gillis’ Girl Talk kicks music in the ass