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Month: November, 2013

The Dilemma of Downloading a YouTube Video

There are worse ways to spend 10 minutes than juggling in Google’s Winter Wonderlab. Plus you get your very own YouTube video to share. But what can you do if you want to immortalize the memory?

There are worse ways to spend 10 minutes than juggling in Google’s Winter Wonderlab. Plus you get your very own YouTube video to share. But what can you do if you want to immortalize the memory?

Should you find yourself with a spare hour in New York City over the holidays, you absolutely must pass through Bryant Park on 42nd and 6th Ave.
There’s the ice skating rink going as well as the pop-up shops and dessert kiosks.  Who knew walking through a park could be so much fun?!

This year, Google has a rather large pop-up presence there, sporting a
‘Winter Wonderlab,’ featuring their Nexus 7 tablets and Chromebooks.

Play. Create. Chill.
In the center of their pop-up store is a high-speed photo studio inside a giant snow globe. In it, they shoot a slow motion video of you with a moving camera on a track. The result is a wicked cool 20-second sequence of you having fun in the globe, surrounded by fake falling snow.
(The actual elapsed recorded action is only about 2 seconds.)


Then, they download the file, and you’re invited to customize your mini movie with music and distribute it via one of their Nexus tablets, conveniently waiting for you in the pop-up store.

The whole point is to get you to say, “Mmmmmm….Nexus tablets.”
And then go buy one.

I’ve got to admit, their marketing tactic was rather compelling.

And I’m also not embarrassed to say I kind of liked my corny little video from their Winter Wonderlab.

The Google folks even provided me with my own URL to call up my cinematic moment, which conveniently lives as a YouTube video, housed in a Google Winter Wonderlab wrapper.

But you can also click on the video itself and call up the original YouTube page where the video lives.
(Remember, Google owns YouTube.)


Can You Keep your Snow Globe Joy Alive Forever?

So there I was watching my video, and I said to myself,
“Gee, wouldn’t it be nice if I could download my silly video to take a look at whenever I wanted?”

Sure I’ve got a link to forward for anyone to watch.
And the link is always there for me, right?
(I don’t think YouTube is going anywhere.)

That said, I suppose it’s an open question how long Google will keep its
Winter Wonderlab open in the digital space.
(Snow globe videos aren’t so hip in July.)

The Dilemma
The problem is you can’t download YouTube videos.
Google understandably doesn’t offer that functionality.
(since they want you to keep giving them plenty of online clicks to feed their advertising model)

So now what?

At this point in the conversation, it’s important to share some legal realities on this point…

YouTube officially frowns on the downloading of their videos through other technologies. This would break their terms of service.
Plus, you don’t own the copyright on someone else’s content.
YouTube does suggest one exception if you are trying to download your own content.

So in this particular case I wanted to download specific imagery of Barrett juggling Styrofoam snowballs.
But I didn’t create the actual content… Google did.

Hmmmm… How gray is that?
(Next question…)

So I’ll simply say I may have considered the following investigative mission.

Think of this as solely a theoretical exercise…

How to Download a YouTube Video
I quickly realized I wasn’t alone in this intellectual query.

There are a whole lot of players out there offering to help you out…

Keepvid.com
But I was interested in finding a quick, ‘relatively’ mainstream solution that didn’t require additional software downloads…

I asked a few friends, (a Gen X and a few Gen Ys)
and they immediately replied…
“KeepVid!”

Seems I’m a little late to the party…

Keepvid.com has actually been around for years…
And after doing a little research, I saw it’s often mentioned as a major player in this space.

KeepVid’s usability is pretty straightforward.
There’s only one annoying pothole to avoid.
Don’t click on the ‘Download’ or ‘Play Now’ buttons on the top of the page.
Those misdirect you to advertisements.

PCWorld has posted this useful ‘how-to video’ on using KeepVid.

A Decision for Another Day?
So there you have it.
Do proceed conscientiously…

And to repeat, this is all simply an exercise of the mind…
A noggin rumination, if you will.

If the Shoe Fits…
That there are effective ways to force video content off a webpage is not a happy reality for many multimedia-hosting websites.
But it should also give you pause…

  • If you upload your own videos to share on these websites…
  • Then set their permissions as non-downloadable…
  • And believe that they are safely ‘not grabbable’

…think again.

If you upload your own multimedia content into the universe, there are always ways for others to get it.
(yeah)

Now, we’ve come full circle.

Enough said.

All right, enough worrying for one post…
Now, go make your own snow globe video and have some fun!

Retraining your Borg Mind to Master the Sounds of iOS 7

When the update bar gets to the finish line, your iPhone will never be the same. Better. Stronger. Faster. And unfamiliar. Welcome to the updated audio world of iOS 7.

When the update bar gets to the finish line, your iPhone will never be the same. Better. Stronger. Faster. And unfamiliar. Welcome to the updated audio world of iOS 7.

You are more Borg than you know.
Remember on ‘Star Trek’… that race of evil, technology-enhanced humanoids, all enslaved to the connected, collective ‘Hive Mind?’
Yeah… those guys.

The good news is I’m not here to report that you’ve lost your free will to technology.
(not yet)

The bad news is you’ve already lost total control over parts of your unconscious autonomic mind to your mobile operating system.

Case in point:
iOS 7.

Reprogramming Your Autonomic Tech Self
Your smartphone probably isn’t drilled into your forehead or otherwise hardwired via more elegant solutions.
But since you carry your phone about with you everywhere you go, it might as well be.

And when you’re not directly interfacing with it visually, the method your phone uses to stay connected is through a myriad of audio cues:

  • ‘Ding a ling.’  Your phone rings.
  • ‘Bleep.’  You’ve got mail.
  • ‘Ping.’  Hey, you’ve got a text.
  • ‘Ta Da.’  There’s calendar invite.
  • ‘Pong.’  Here comes a tweet.
  • ‘Beep Beep.’  Time for your appointment.
  • ‘Wahhhhhh.’  Your date just cancelled on you.

You really don’t have to think about what all the sounds mean anymore.
You just intuitively know it.

It’s like not having to think about breathing.
Your autonomic nervous system controls that in your brain’s medulla oblongata.
(And you thought you’d never again use that factoid from high school biology class.)

So what happens when all those familiar iPhone audio cues change?
Enter the new and ‘improved’ world of iOS 7.

Your iOS Life as It has Been… is Over.
I finally upgraded to iOS 7, Apple’s newest mobile operating system for their mighty army of iPhones/iPads.
I’m usually a late adopter, waiting around a few weeks for the 2nd or 3rd update tweak before I pull the trigger.  First versions are always a little buggy.
(I jumped in this time at iOS 7.0.3.)

It’s no secret that this new iOS looks quite different.
And it contains enough operational updates to require your focused attention while you’re brushing up on how to use it.

For me, the larger problem wasn’t what I had to relearn visually.
It was losing the ability to understand the sounds of my phone’s updated language.
My phone would talk to me, and suddenly, I couldn’t understand it.

It felt as if my connection to the Borg Collective had been severed.
And I was about to began wandering about aimlessly with my arms flailing this way and that…
(not that the behavior is so unusual for me)

The only solution was to learn all of the new default audio cues.
And then let that information slowly seep into my medulla oblongata…

Sure, I still kind of knew what was happening when the phone rang.
Although I did miss calls, sometimes thinking I had heard someone else’s ring tone…
And the default jingle is so much more soothing, you can easily miss it in the roar of life.

Plus, I felt detached from the newly foreign sounds.
Even the on/off clicking cue was different… It had more echo.
Couldn’t they leave anything alone?!

Help!!!
What alternate universe had I been transported into?
My happy, Borg-like relationship with my iPhone was now just a mess.

Resistance is Futile
After a week, I decided it was time to go back to the future.
I just didn’t dig the new language.

(No, I didn’t ‘man-up’ and stick it out till my unconscious sufficiently absorbed the update.)

Instead, I drilled down deep in the iOS settings menu to discover
‘Classic Sounds.’

And I reactivated them.
(all of them)

Mmmmmmm… Classic Sounds.

I felt all warm and cozy again.

Yes, one day I’ll personalize the language of my iPhone with some of the newfangled audio cues.
(‘cause old sounds do eventually get boring…)
But I’ll determine the schedule of implementation, thank you very much.

And thank you, Apple for leaving the back door ajar for me.

I’m happy to report that symbiosis has finally been restored in my little
bio-tech relationship. I can again walk and talk with my iPhone… with ease.

My sense of individuality remains intact.
Total assimilation can wait for another day…

What I Learned while Flying to Florida with our Son

The view from 30,000 feet isn’t the only distraction for a three year old. Technology in flight has its own lure…

The view from 30,000 feet isn’t the only distraction for a three year old. Technology in flight has its own lure…

I’ve just returned from a little family trip to Florida.
Of course, the big question was how my three year old was going to handle his JetBlue adventure to the Sunshine State.
(He’s not a frequent flyer yet.)

As it turned out, technology played a big role in his airborne experience.
And mine as well…

Beware the Gobble Monster
Our big mistake was giving him a little knapsack to carry, which housed a few precious toys.
(I thought that would smooth out any rough edges in his experience.)

At the security gate, when it was time to place our carry-on bags through the X-ray machine, he immediately declined the opportunity to give his up.

Then there were tears.

And finally, he demonstrated a finely executed wrestling maneuver, where he locked his mini sack into his tummy, hit the floor, and held on for dear life.

(Would you want to hand over your most important objects in the world to a complete stranger and a cavernous and possibly carnivorous X-ray gobble monster?)

I looked at my watch…

Fortunately, two understanding TSA agents quickly came up with a solution.
They offered to take our ‘situation’ into a little ‘room,’ escorted my son and wife in, and then reviewed each toy by hand.

I’m told he sternly stood by with my wife while his ‘Kitty’ and ‘Blue Bunny’ were caringly given the official once over.
And he refused to give a farewell “high-five” to Agent Gloria

Ten minutes later, we were on our way to the gate… my son’s knapsack repacked and attached to his back.

“That was hard,” he whispered.

The Best $2 You’ll Ever Spend
When we arrived at the gate, JetBlue had a little kiosk where they were selling headsets for the flight.

$2 each.
(Yes, airlines make you pay for everything these days…)

My wife and I knew about the little video screens on the back of each JetBlue seat and had made our peace about allowing him to channel surf (an activity he’s totally unfamiliar with) as a way to get through the three-hour flight.
Now don’t get me wrong… we limited his channel selection between Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. But there was still plenty of surfing!

So we needed to get him a pair of headphones.
(No, I hadn’t thought far enough ahead to bring one from home.)

But I wondered how good could a $2 headset be?
Then again, how good did it really need to be?
(My boy was still at least a few years out from becoming an audiophile.)

Still, I ran down to the nearest shop to see what they were selling.
(The official story is I needed to pay a visit to the bathroom.)
One swanky headset was going for $20. An even cooler-looking pair could be mine for only $59.

What?!

Headphones have been around forever!
They’re like calculators.
You can probably find them today at the bottom of a cereal box.
They shouldn’t cost more than… a couple bucks.

Exactly.

So I went back to the gate and handed over two singles.
The headsets were fine.
(really)
And they even possessed the normal mini-plug for universal use.

Shortly after we settled into our seats on the plane, my son became immediately fascinated by the built-in monitor in front of him. After he fastened his own seat belt, (four times) he quickly figured out how to operate the channel selector on the seat arm.
Then, he came to a disturbing realization.
This little TV had no audio.

He turned to me…
“Dada? Where is the sound?”

It was time to improve on my 0-1 batting average for the day.

So after the thrill of takeoff, I pulled out the headsets and introduced them to him.
(He had never needed one before.)

“Ooohh…”

He promptly plugged in and slipped them onto his head.
(upside down)
And then he held them in place with both hands for the next three hours as he totally embodied the definition of couch potato.

One might debate our parental decision on how we focused our son’s attention for those few hours.
That said… our flight was dream.

Something Missing on Takeoff
Fast forward to several days later and the return flight…
(And yes, we had a wonderful time in Florida.)

So, we were back in our seats, and I found an open moment to furiously check some iPhone emails before receiving the lights-out signal from the crew.
(We’ve all come to expect the dreaded announcement requiring you to turn off all your electronic toys after the cabin door is sealed.)

As I studied my in-box, a stewardess’ voice flooded the aisle.

I deepened my concentration in an attempt to slow down the space/time continuum, and I lost my ability to decipher outside audio detail. It all became a blurred muffle.

Her otherwise friendly speech degraded into the teacher’s voice in a Charlie Brown cartoon.

When the announcement ended, I noticed that something felt different around the cabin.

I turned to my wife.
“What was that about?”

My wife smiled and replied,
“JetBlue is the first airline to allow you to keep your portable electronic devices on during takeoff.”

What?!

I missed this pivotal ‘PED’ moment in consumer tech history, because I was checking my email?!

How ironic.

I sat there with my glowing iPhone, almost stunned, not knowing what to do with my newly found freedom.

As it turns out, both JetBlue and Delta had released their stranglehold on lightweight electronic devices three days earlier in response to the
FAA’s Halloween announcement allowing the expanded use of PEDs on flights.

On November 1, they became the first US airlines to take advantage of the new rules.
Actually, JetBlue claims to be the very first, but apparently it was a photo finish.

Where Were You when PEDs were Freed?
I continued to ponder this new reality…

Apparently, dangerous interference from active PEDs doesn’t actually exist. And it doesn’t threaten an airplane’s navigation instruments on takeoff and landing.
(The next thing you know, they’ll be telling you trans fats are good for you!)

But you still can’t make a phone call during the flight.
(like I’d be able to find enough bars anyway)

And you’ve still got to stow your laptop during takeoff and landings.
(Hovering laptops in the cabin can be hazardous to your health…)

As I think about it now, the Lester family was actually mid-air to Florida while all of this history was going down.
One day, I’ll tell my son that he had actually participated in one of JetBlue’s last flights operating under the old draconian PED restrictions.
(I’m sure that will really impress him when he’s 10.)

Be Careful What You Wish For
So as our JetBlue plane began to taxi across the runway, I decided to kick back…
(seat still in its upright position)
…and do a little web surfing.

And what did I find?
Amazon had just cut a deal with the state of Connecticut to start charging sales tax for Connecticut shoppers.

What?!!
My gut reaction was to feel both patriotic and rebellious simultaneously.
(maybe a bit more rebellious)

The Marketplace Fairness Act may be stuck in Congress, but some states have taken matters into their own hands to get their piece of Amazon’s revenue.
(Massachusetts has also started receiving its cut of Amazon’s pie as of November 1.)

And with my wallet suddenly feeling 6.35% lighter, I decided to put my iPhone back in my pocket and get my head out of the clouds.
Instead it was time to marvel at some real clouds with my son.

I turned to him, but his eyes were already glued to the video monitor.
(like father, like son?)

I pointed out our window to break the multimedia trance.

“Look at that giant plane next to us!”

“Oooooh!!!”

The journey continues…