Tesla at the Clipsal 500

March 21st, 2009

This seriously is one of the highlights of this year’s Clipsal 500. Part of Murray Walker’s Extreme Machines display, the Tesla is one of the first serious attempts at an electronically powered sports car. In that it uses the cutting edge of current automotive technology, I’m surprised they didn’t advertise, or mention over the PA system that one of the extreme machines was a Tesla. When it went past I thought, ‘What is an exige with funny headlights doing there? They aren’t even accelerating hard (hardly any sound); seems out of place’. Now it makes sense. For anyone who is there today or tomorrow, this is a must see.

Korankei

March 20th, 2009



Mossy thatched roof landscape

Originally uploaded by Augustography.com.au

Here’s some photos taken last year at Korankei, a place very famous for it’s autumn leaves. Unfortunately we arrived one or two weeks early so the leaves hadn’t completely changed colour.

Porsche Meet

March 17th, 2009



IMGP8420

Originally uploaded by Augustography.com.au

Here’s some photos from Sunday’s Porsche meet at Glenelg. Although it was open from 10 till 4, I arrived just past 3pm and most cars had left already :(. I guess the weather was a bit of a deterrent, but made for some nice piccies.

G1 Extreme Drift

March 9th, 2009

Here’s a small selection of photos taken on Saturday at Mallala for the first round of the G1 Extreme Drift.

Congrats to Chris who came second




Read the rest of this entry »

Bamboo and wood

February 24th, 2009



Bamboo and wood

Originally uploaded by Augustography.com.au

One of the many architectural objects common around houses in Kyoto, and especially Gion.

Actually this is just a test post to see how posting to my blog from flickr works. Seems pretty easy! Brilliant.

Clap Count

February 20th, 2009

I was just going through some of my old CD folders and came across a CD I bought in Harajuku a few years ago (Drummania / ドラムマニア). I just looked at their updated website and blog, and found a very interesting feature.

At the end of each post is a small clap button. Click it, and it registers as a clap. For each person who claps for a blog entry, the clap count rises, just like a comment count would by adding comments.

This is handy for people who perhaps are strapped for time and can’t comment but want to let the poster know they appreciate and applause their entry/post. The next step would be to get this functionality working cross-blogs, where popularity is not only measured by page views and comments, but by the amount of applause received.

At the time of posting, I couldn’t find such a feature available for WordPress. Surely such a feature would be easy to code (simpler than the commenting system)?

Herald Sun Future Trends article

January 25th, 2009

I am amazed at some of the claims made by the article talking about Richard Watson’s new book in Today’s Sunday Herald Sun on page 100-101 (vic). Many of his claims seem to be made without any common sense of the timeframes required for common things to become obsolete. Having not read the book, but by the wording of the article which appears to sum up the main keypoints (using a table with columns for ‘goodbye:’ and ‘hello to:’ and rows for years) makes one question what actual research was done to come to some of these strange claims.

Watson reckons that by 2010, the computer mouse will be obsolete. That’s 11 months away! There is no way that every computer’s mouse will be replaced in that short period of time - and older computers that people still use (eg those using the ps/2 connection) most likely won’t support any updated input device.

We’ll also apparently be saying hello to ‘wearable computers’ by 2010. I don’t know where he’s been, but they’re been around for years, although not until recently in the mainstream. Ipod buttoned clothing? Mp3/camera sunglasses? Calculator wristwatch anyone?

Perhaps the wording in the article is a bit overgeneralised, but it continues. Some other impossibilities include no ‘free parking’ by 2015 (meaning I can’t pull off the road in the middle of nowhere), no unfenced beaches by 2020 (Even in WA?), and apparently desktop computers won’t be used by 2020 (we’ll all suddently throw ours out next decade?). We’ll be saying hello to offshore prisons by 2025 (um, why was Australia initially colonised? [note: it isn't a prison country anymore]), virtual holidays in 2030 (the use of the word virtual implies a 3D world, such as that of a video game or any social media; perhaps he means holidays by way of temporary sensory replacement), and video wallpaper by 2035 (we have been able to project video onto a wall for over a century; the technology implied here [durable paper thin displays] is more likely to be used for the invisibility cloaks he references in 2045).

Most absurdly, he claims also that by January 2059, ‘petrol engine cars will be extinct’. Petrol engined cars will never be extinct. We will have more energy efficient vehicles in the future, which may replace the majority of current automotive solutions. However, petrol engined cars will forever be with us, even if it is just the enthusiasts or collectors, that will be keeping them running as long as the need for stylish automobility continues.

Sure many of the technologies mentioned either already currently exist or will in the future, but the timeframes mentioned are not well founded. Perhaps it could be that the article/book is geared towards city life, where the majority of the current world population resides. My criticisms might sound a bit harsh, but it doesn’t help that the article states no author, and concludes with the price of the book, as though it’s a paid advertisement. Perhaps I should read the book :)