Saturday, October 18, 2008

FIOS Update

So as soon as Rob moves out of the country, Verizon brings FIOS to Mar Vista. He just missed it! No worries as Japan is supposed to lead the world in internet speeds.

As for myself, I just upgraded to the Extreme HD package, which gives me a lot more HD channels that what I used to have. Basically it's what's been satellite companies like DirecTV/Dish have been offering for the past year, but it's nice to have Disney Channel HD now (despite the fact they currently have little HD programming).

Since I'm in a new tier, they also bumped up my internet speeds to 20 Mbit/sec download (I used to have 10 Mbit/sec) but honestly I can't really tell the difference.

Friday, October 03, 2008

BD-Live

The other week Sony provided a firmware update for my Blu-ray player that added BD-Live functionality. Coupled with a 1GB USB flash drive, I would technically have a Profile 2.0 player.

Normally I would jump all over this however I was a bit gun shy on upgrading since Sony mysteriously pulled the update off its website a day later. A few days later it reappeared without any explaination, so I'll be upgrading tonight. Gotta test that new Iron Man BD-Live feature that caused so many issues the first day the title was available...

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Hash Demo

A few years ago at Siggraph I was amazed at a demo of Martin Hash's Animation Master. What impressed me most was the awesome presentations skills of the guy running the demo. This guy was so good, I almost bought the product!

Turns out his name was Greg Rostami and was the main Hash A/M demo guy for 15 years until he quit in 2006. Although he no longer works for Hash, you still can see him on his website or MetaCafe doing magic tricks as apparently he does this on the side.

When Rob and I went to Siggraph this year, I was sad to see that Hash was no longer an exhibitor, but apparently Greg was still showing off his demo skills the last two years for a company called Topaz Labs. I must have missed it since I was hanging out at the International Lounge all day.

I found this on the AMA forums on why Greg left...

Greg left in late Spring 2006. In recent years the attendance and sales at tradeshows has steadily dropped, even when Greg was still with Hash. Greg left on his own to demo for Supercam. When that didn't work out, he wanted to return, but Martin decided not to do that and have James be the main demonstrator instead. It all came down to money.

Hash benefited greatly from Greg's demos over the years. At a busy show, his demo really boosted sales. At a slow show, it made much less of a difference because you have to have a minimum number of people in the crowd (or a crowd at all) to get the excitement going. The last few shows I did with Greg were sparsely attended and sales were low. Paying the extra money for Greg didn't pay off in those situations. Unfortunately, there are very few big sales shows left, it's mostly small shows now.

Greg's still got it though. He almost had me getting my wallet out.