Diamonds

I’ve gotta say this is one of the coolest things I’ve read about in a long time. A company in Boston has come up with a way to make diamonds from scratch, and I’m not talking about diamond dust. Real diamonds. Potentially big ones. This has some pretty incredible possibilities.

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Art Imitating Life

If you’ve ever heard of the game World of Warcraft, you know that it is an MMORPG (Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game). It’s one of those games that can consume your life if you’re not careful, which is just one excellent reason I’ve avoided it (others would be the cost, and limited free time now that I work 40+ hours per week).

Recently something pretty cool happened in the world of the game. Blizzard, the game maker, introduced a new area with a new boss. When players got there, a spell called Corrupted Blood was cast upon them. Here’s where things get interesting: when players returned to towns in the game, they brought the disease back with them. The result was a virtual plague that quickly spread throughout the game. It was strong enough to kill low level characters and must have been a serious pain even to those at higher levels.

The fact that the whole thing was never supposed to happen doesn’t really matter. The plague spread in a very “natural” way, imitating a real life scenario. I’d say that’s both really cool and pretty scary at the same time.

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Why Microsoft Decided to Back HD-DVD

Jordi Ribas, Microsoft’s director of technology strategy for Windows Digital Media breaks down the reasons Microsoft decided to back HD-DVD over Blu-Ray as the next generation of optical media. According to Microsoft, Blu-Ray failed the test in six critical areas.

“Our decision is based mainly on where the formats are today,” Ribas said, referring to Microsoft. “A year and a half ago, both format organizations had very similar goals, and to some extent, the story of Blu-ray was actually very powerful. It had higher capacity, it had what we would consider benefits at the time. But then as time went on, and we’d seen what’s the reality of both formats today, and what were promises versus what’s proven and what’s real, that’s when we decided to make the decision.”

I’ll have to say I haven’t really been following this whole thing very closely and there’s one main reason. Usually competition is a good thing for consumers because it will drive down costs, but this time around that’s probably not the case. You have studios and software companies splitting over which technology to support which means in order to continue to buy a wide spectrum of movies and games, you’ll need to have players capable of reading both formats. Sure, multi-format players won’t take long to hit the market, but how much extra will we have to pay? I’d hate to see this turn into a Beta vs. VHS battle where the superior technology ends up losing out in the end. Then again, after reading this article it isn’t clear that one trumps the other (There’s an interesting comment about capacity in the article). In my mind, it doesn’t really matter which is better; I’ll most likely end up needing both which means I better start saving now.

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Why Did Apple Kill the iPod Mini in Its Prime?

I think this guy has an excellent point.

No one was suggesting they wanted a flash-based player over a hard drive one, and no one was complaining about the iPod mini being too wide or too heavy. In comparison to the iPod mini, the iPod nano made the battery even harder to get at, lowered its battery life, removed the “remote connector,” ditched FireWire support, weakened the device making it much more fragile, and features a scrollwheel inconsistent with that rest of the iPod lineup.

The nano is cool and all but I don’t really understand why they chose to completely replace the mini instead of just adding to the line or why someone who owned a mini would run out and replace it with a nano. I also like the mention of Motorola CEO Ed Zander’s supposed joke about his feelings for the nano.

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LED Bulbs

A few months ago I started looking into using CFL (compact fluorescent) bulbs for our apartment. They cost significantly more than a standard incandescent bulb, but they last several years and use a lot less power so they quickly pay for themselves through energy cost savings. I decided to replace all of the light bulbs in our apartment with CFLs. Now there is something even better out there.

By bunching together groups of LEDs, manufacturers are creating new bulbs that use even less energy for the amount of light they put out. A flashlight that lasts for several years? I might have to look into that. Still, at current prices I’ll be waiting a while before getting rid of our CFLs for LEDs.

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