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In-ear Headphone Round-up







In-ear Headphone Round-up

In-ear Headphone Round-up 06/24/2005 04:02 PM

headphonesepia.jpgDear readers, we have been wrong. The older folk among us—baby-boomers, cracked former students of the Naval Arts, and other geriatrics—have been underrepresented in our coverage, as evidenced as our hate mail today. Well, old-timers, this one's for you:

The Ipod is out and it's as hot as Rita Hayworth. All those kids outside on your stoop are listening to them. Don't they have school? When we were young, we went to school. What better way to listen to your Ipod than with in-ear headphones. You'll have to remove your hearing aid to use them, but these sassy headphones are a sight better than those goofy big pants these kids are wearing now. Why, only yesterday, I saw one boy with his underwear hanging out of his pants. No respect, these kids. No respect. Don't they know we're at war? ExtremeTech—what kind of title of a magazine is that? Is that pornography?—does a full round-up of these society-destroying earphones. I'm going to go play my numbers now. Then my stories are on.

Upgra de your iPod: In-Ear Sound-Isolating Earphones [ExtremeTech]




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marlboro_amp.jpgMAKE refers us to the best use of a Marlboro pack since, well, its intended one. For under $30, you can build your very own amp, complete with input and headphone jacks, right into your old box of Pall Malls. The guide by Guillermito is very in depth and has some great pictures to get you on your way (it's the classic CMOY amp of DIY yore).

My Marlboro CMOY Amp [Guillermito via MAKE


Headphone Fetish photos


Headphone Fetish photos 08/18/2004 03:05 PM
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Burton Headphone Beanie


Burton Headphone Beanie 09/24/2004 11:46 PM

< img src="http://www.gizmodo.com/archives/images/beanie300329.jpg" alt="ibeanie300329.jpg image" width="182" height="200" class="right border gas849 jfr453"/>Snowboard giant Burton's Fall collection includes this $40 "Headphone Beanie," available in three earth tone colors. I'm presuming it includes the headphones themselves, and are not just woven with places for any old headphones to be run. Then again, I'd prefer they didn't have the headphones inside, so you could choose your favorites. But then again again, $40 is a lot of money for a head sock.

I'm so confused. Hold me.

P roduct Page [Burton via CultOfMac]


Bluetake BT420 EX Bluetooth Hi-Fi Sports
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In order to get the best possible listening experience from your music collection, you need to be able to hear it well. Whether playing CDs, lossy rips, or lossless encodes from your computer, you'll need something the music will sound good on. Enter the Ars HiFi headphone review. Audio mavens and Audio/Visual Club moderators Matt Woodward and Jeff Forbes strapped on seven different headphones and two different amplifiers to see which ones fared the best.

Unfortunately, not all headphones are made equal. High Fidelity (aka. Hi-Fi) headphones are headphones that are held to higher acoustical standards than the run-of-the-mill headphones that come with portable Cassette/CD/MP3 players (yes, that includes the iPod.)

If you're going the HiFi route, be prepared to drop some coin, anywhere from US$60 to US$350 for the products in this review. But if you're an audiophile, it's money well spent. Check out the review to see which headphones are most worth the money.


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Round #2 with Arnaud


Round #2 with Arnaud 04/08/2005 03:14 PM

Here's Arnaud's reply to my comments....

Great, Marc Canter found some time to ans wer my questions. SO time to comment on his answers.

He confirms my suspicion that OPML is a good way to store and exchange MicroContent (he wrote it as micro-content by the way). They did use Weboutliner for that. I have to play with outliners to see what can be done. See if I can get the Structured Blogging approach into OPML somehow.

He also explains why he likes Structured Blogging. The main reason is that it is an effort to get things going. I agree with him here. If I look at the number of clients which I can relate to MicroContent, it is staggering. It is time to get this local information published in a structured way. It shouldn't be left on someone's PC. And Structured Blogging helps here. Time to dive into it a bit more.

Marc Canter sees a lot happening in the field of MicroContent. Great! I've become a lot less pessimistic, so it is good to hear he sees some movement going on. We will get at MicroContent nirvana in the end!

By the way, I like the fact that Marc Canter answers me on his weblog and not in my comments. We have a public conversation, but we stay owner of the things we write, as we publish it on our own weblog. This kind of conversation corresponds to the ideas put forward on the Datalibre mailing-list. Any evidence of a conversation should be visible in the trackbacks.

[MicroContent Musings]

:-)

There's another reason I've been using the public reply technique - comments are broken. Not only my TypeKey comments - but comments in general. They're being turned off in droves and they hide the thread from view. I prefer to see things out in the open. Perhaps notifation or some sort of Attention.xml standards can change all that.

But that's not my area or work or exertise right now.

Micro-content is. However we spell it.

Arnaud is one of those true believers too - so I'm going to use this thread with him - to highlight a bunch of different things I've wanted to be known in public - on the record - for sometime now.

I'm not really amazed at how smart Arnaud is - as it takes that to grok all this stuff. As is Thomas Van Der Wahl - who I've been getting to know receenly - but that's another post. I met Thomas at SXSW and he calls DLAs 'Info Clouds' (with a space in the middle) - but that's what's MOST beautiful about these ideas.

I'm sure Michael Sippey and Ben Trott have their own name for all this at 6A - and I bet Barak has HIS own term for it - but we're all (hopefully) working on the same principles.

So here are some fresh replies to Arnaud......

1. Yes OPML rocks, It has since the day it was explained to me by Dave Winer at his house the week he created it. Our outliner - the WebOutliner - uses OPML as it's native form and we did LOTS of work on extending it for various purposes (see below.)

2. So let me tell you about some experiments we did on BOTH Structured Blogging (which is what it's being called right now) and storing MicroContent (properly spelled with the in-cap) in OPML.

2a.

The Birthday party activity

So way back like almost three years ago I run into a writer and XS LT scriptor named Chuck White who had written several books on it - and who wanted to put it to use - with a real interface.

So Chuck and I worked on an example UI - which took some wizard collected info, converted it to OPML and sent it to our weboutliner. That structured data was designed to represent all the info needed to encompass a group based community birthday party.

It worked. It rocked. And one day I'll put it up to show everyone. But for now let me explain how it worked and what it proved.

3. First one selected: what kind of Group, named the Group and decided who was an initial member of a Group. This was all created from a simple web page - but ws designed to work via mobile. To become what I promised Hward Rheingold "Tools for the Mob".

4. The human was then passed into an activity grid - at which point they'd select one category of activities; such as after-school or sports or at-home fun - and then were sent through detailed tab dialogs - which enabled one to fill in all the meta-data regarding this selected activity (how many tables to set up?, what games?, by what rules?)

5. Now with our micro-content (sorry I mean MicroContent) activity data all loaded up - we XSLTed the data into OPML and sent it to our weboutliner - which (presumably)_ would be running an extension to support that particular activity and it's associated meta-data. The underlying notion was that we could transform this data into any form, for any kind of output, format or device.

6. It worked like a charm, was easy enough to be categorized as "situated" by Clay Shirky and allowed me to extend the outliner tool metaphor into what I now call a "stucture editor".

7. Humans certainly understand:

I - Plan party-- define basic party meta-data -- select music and images to play at party -- set up party web site and blog -- establish plans/agenda for party

II - Send out invites-- plug in list of names or retrieve previous names
-- send out invites
-- status of invites (data sent to dashboard)

III - Throw party-- start executing agenda for the day - drive media devices
-- execute milestone during party
-- change party machines to upload stations

IV - Memories-- collect memeoires after party
-- send out thank you notes
-- archival commenting

It's just a matter of how the UIs implement this sort of structure.

7. All this work will appear - soon - in a 'Family Oriented DLA' we're working on.

Still trying to figure out Arnaud's last name...... :-) And where he lives and what he does as a day job. I hope he's really a php hacker looking for work - that would make it PERFECT!


Round Up: To be expected


Round Up: To be expected 07/09/2004 01:11 PM
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Barlow's round 1


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JP Barlow recounts his day in court, on trial for threatening to blow up an airliner with a few grams of pot smuggled in an Ibuprofen bottle. danah weighs in with her own account of the drama....

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GW Bush not AWOL: Actually Secret Agent; Deep Throat; Expressionist Art Collector A shocking followup to the tragic Thatcher news earlier today.

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Rip Digital Round 3 12/24/2004 12:16 PM

Bob Kohn has responded to yesterday's comments from Rip Digital founder Dick Adams regarding the potential illegality of the CD ripping service. Let me sum it all up: Kohn thinks they might get sued; Adams thinks they won't; I think the RIAA is a misguided organization at best, whose current command of logic and decency is unpredictable. I can't help but have this sinking feeling that we're just throwing out chum for the music industry's lawyers at this point, so I'm glad we've reached this agreement to disagree.

Gizmodo Responds Re: Digital Ripping Service [BobKohn]


Poll round-up


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Round Up: Deterrent 07/20/2004 01:07 PM
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DDR2 The Second Round 03/22/2005 05:04 PM

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In-ear Headphone Round-up

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