Monday, December 26, 2011

Designs



Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

I love it


Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Website Design


Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Xbox Kinect On Sale Now


Xbox Kinect On Sale Now 




- There are a lot of futuristic things we're still waiting on: jet packs for the entire family, self-driving cars and time-travel, to name a few. But one new, pretty darn amazing bit of technology has finally come to fruition, thanks to the folks at Microsoft.


The Kinect system, on sale beginning Thursday for the Xbox 360 game console, offers controller-free control of living room entertainment and aptly delivers a groundbreaking piece of technology.

It's part game controller, part fitness guru and part "Minority Report," the movie where Tom Cruise famously interacts with a multi-touch interface by making rapid motions with his hands. Instead of gripping a physical controller to play games and movies on your Xbox 360, Kinect allows you to simply move your body - hands, feet, hips - to do everything.

Kinect is a hybrid video camera and motion sensor that sits just above or below your television display. It looks like an extra wide webcam and connects to the Xbox 360 - even older models - through the USB port. Kinect sells for $150 and comes with one game; you can buy it bundled with a low-end Xbox 360 for $300, saving $50 on the package.

Activating and configuring Kinect was easy enough, though it does require a system update.

Kinect calibrated itself by testing the ambient light in my room, the background noise and my own voice. Kinect then asked me to get used to performing my moves in a fairly large rectangular space about 8 feet in front of the television.

The 46-inch LCD display from Sceptre I used for my tests delivered the Kinect experience in tack-sharp high-definition. A larger-than-average display is ideal because it'll help you see the various digital versions of yourself more clearly, as captured by Kinect's camera and motion-sensing voodoo.


At the Xbox 360 main menu screen, a small dark box appeared at the lower right corner. Inside was a live view of my body, with my hands glowing at my sides. A quick wave of my right hand told Kinect I was ready to interact.

To select items on most menu screens, I simply held up my right hand at about shoulder height and guided an on-screen hand to an icon or word. In games, similar control takes place to select people and objects. Simply hover and grab.

Kinect also brings voice control to the Xbox 360, and you can launch movies and social media apps by saying something like "Xbox. Play." I had spotty success with that and found the hand guide technique more dependable.

The game that comes with Kinect is "Kinect Adventures," an outdoorsy jaunt into the world of whitewater rapids and antigravity. As I stood in front of my TV, I looked at my avatar's back, careening down a rushing river in an inflatable raft. As I instinctively stepped and leaned to the left, my character on-screen did so as well, steering the raft around rocks and obstacles.

In "Space Pop," I floated in a low-gravity room and waved my arms and legs to pop bubbles for points. These games were fine for a warm-up, but I was quickly ready for a more stern test.


The Kinect games now available all require the system to play them. Your physical Xbox 360 controller won't suffice. There will be Kinect-enhanced games available later that can be played both ways, but Microsoft Corp. says Kinect will give you a better experience.


I met my match with "Dance Central" ($50, MTV Games, rated "T"). This top-shelf title is essential for Kinect users. I mimicked the on-screen character's dance moves for high scores. I jumped and gyrated to songs from top artists such as Lady Gaga and Audio Push. I learned the moves individually, with a few restarts, then launched into a dance battle to string them together to the music.

A circle beneath my on-screen feet glowed green when I hit the moves correctly. It glowed red when I muffed the moves, indicating I had suddenly sprouted at least two left feet, if not more. The music on this title is fresh, and additional tracks can be purchased through the Xbox Live Marketplace.

One title that was a dud for me was "Kinect Joy Ride," a cartoonish driving game. Driving is one of those game genres that begs for a physical controller. I had trouble keeping my hands in an imaginary grip on an imaginary steering wheel to control my imaginary car. I crashed because I overcorrected my steering. My hands moved too freely because they weren't really holding on to anything.

My wife had better luck when I raced against her. She even found time to lean over and answer a real-world cell phone call while "driving," gently cradling the phone on her shoulder while gripping her nonexistent steering wheel.

There is one title that literally left me breathless, but for all the right reasons. "Your Shape: Fitness Evolved" is a masterpiece. The exercise game talks and walks you through precise movements to improve your cardio and work out your muscles.

I began by standing in front of my TV and letting Kinect measure my body size and structure. I then used a hand-motion menu to enter my age, weight and exercise habits so the game would learn not to overexert me too soon.


Within minutes I was following along with the Tai chi and yoga moves of an on-screen instructor, with my on-screen mat placed just behind and to the right of her. She led me through the movements, and at the end of each routine I was given a score for my performance, based on how well I stayed in rhythm and mimicked her deep knee bends.

I would have never thought that the most impressive game title for Microsoft's foray into motion-sensor gaming would involve me invoking the phrase "Namaste" instead of "activate plasma rifle."

Motion-sensor gaming has now hit all three major gaming platforms. Nintendo Co.'s Wii arrived first. Sony Corp.'s Move for PlayStation 3 added more realistic games, graphics and highly acute player control.

Microsoft Kinect may lack the fine character control of the Move, but it adds the promise of an expanded breadth of activities in front of the gaming console. The possibilities for Kinect are rich, and I will forever more feel a touch guilty while sitting in that well-worn corner of my couch to play a video game.

Four stars out of four.

By RON HARRIS





Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

Some MacBook Air screens flickering, freezing


Some MacBook Air screens flickering, freezing






Users report horizontal, vertical lines appearing across screen


Some of Apple's new 11- and 13-inch MacBook Air notebooks have been suffering from screen problems, including horizontal and vertical lines appearing across the screen, color changes, and blank and gray screen crashes. Others have reported odd kernel problems (essentially the Blue Screen of Death). So far the only Band-Aid for the screen defects is a CPU reboot.

Apple has internally acknowledged these problems, according to Boy Genius Report, but has yet to address it publicly. Is another iPhone 4-esque apology coming?

There's a lot of noise on Apple's support discussion forums, ignited by poster DanRyb, who wrote, "Every so often while using [the MacBook Air], the screen has a ton of weird colors in vertical lines (extends the whole display) and the entire laptop has frozen. I have to force it off with the power button and reboot it. It happens at random times."

Other users (including Macworld) experienced identical issues, their frustration accentuated with exclamation points and sad faces. Even installing the MacBook Air (Late 2010) Software Update 1.0 didn't work, which makes sense, given that this is likely a hardware problem, like the iPhone 4's wonky antenna.

Apple's current solution: store associates shrugging their shoulders and handing out replacement laptops.

"Apple's internal support system includes suggestions for interim fixes in each of these cases, but no permanent fixes are available at this time," BGR's source said.

Apple's latest MacBook Air came with decent price cut, but it's still expensive, and, apparently, pretty broken. This issue, paired with the iPhone 4's hardware problem, sends a message: Apple isn't perfect despite the high regard many hold for the company.
by  Brennon Slattery





Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

3D Holograms Coming To A Screen Near You

3D Holograms Coming To 

A Screen Near You




University of Arizona develops three-dimensional motion hologram that is viewable on all sides without special glasses.


If you thought 3D TVs was the next great wave in entertainment, think again. Developments in holographic three-dimensional technology, introduced in the mainstream in 1977 in the science-fiction movie “Star Wars,” may take off before 3D can make a splash.

Researchers at the University of Arizona this week announced they have developed the fastest 3D motion hologram. Unlike regular flat 3D, a holographic display presents an image that is viewable on all sides, projected in front of the viewer without the need for special glasses. Refresh rates have been the issue with the technology, with one image changing every few minutes. However, the rates have now been increased to a view change every two seconds. The research team used 16 cameras to create a 45-degree view of a 3D image.


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"Holographic telepresence means we can record a three-dimensional image in one location and show it in another location, in real-time, anywhere in the world," Nasser Peyghambarian, an optical sciences professor, who led the research effort, said in a statement.

The hologram can refresh faster because of the use of a new type of plastic on a screen that reacts chemically to a laser shooting holographic pixels. The image is then stored on the screen and fades away naturally after a couple of minutes or seconds, depending on the parameters used. As more cameras are used, the final holographic image becomes refined, since each camera views the object from a different perspective, the research group said.


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A wide variety of applications could spawn from the technology, including entertainment, telemedicine, 3D maps that can be updated for the military and remote guidance during emergency situations, industry observers say.

The University of Arizona project involved a 10-inch screen, but the research group is also testing a 17-inch prototype and trying to find a way to show full color. The project made a landmark achievement that Peyghambarian’s group refers to as full parallax: the ability to see different perspectives when moving your head up and down or left and right. “This makes for a very life-like image,” he said. “Humans are used to seeing things in 3D.”

A full report on the project is detailed in the current issue of the science journal Nature.

In October, Toshiba announced it will release two 3D TVs that will be able to produce images without the need for special glasses.





Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.

Verizon Upgrade to Add Second App Store to Android

Verizon Upgrade to Add Second App Store to Android




Verizon said Thursday that a software update to the Droid Incredible available next week will add the V CAST Apps store to the phone, essentially adding a second, competing app store to the existing Android Market.

Developers will have the option to sell their apps either via the Android Market or the Verizon app store, with one key difference: billing.

While Google's app store allows refunds for a period of up to 24 hours after purchase, Verizon will only process refunds on a case-by-case basis, according to a Verizon representative. But Verizon will also bill the app's purchase price to the existing wireless bill, instead of forcing users to use Google Checkout.

The update (characterized as version 3.26.605.1/Baseband version: 2.15.00.07.28) also includes a number of enhancements, including an updated Flash player; improvements to the visual voicemail application, with removal of incorrect service messages; enhanced support for Yahoo IMAP email; an updated Slacker application; the ability to attach files that are larger than 5 MB; updates COX and Comcast POP3 mail; and various fixes, including rotating Google Maps between landscape and portrait view, and presenting the search key and other buttons in the correct order.

Verizon originally launched V CAST Apps on the RIM platform in July of 2009, and the company always planned to launch on the BlackBerry and then move to other platforms, a Verizon spokeswoman said. AT&T also offers a similar store for RIM devices, called the AT&T AppCenter. It does not, however, compete with the Apple App Store.

"We think of it as sort of complementary to the other marketplace out there," the Verizon spokeswoman said. "It gives consumers an opportunity for discovery and to choose."

But whether or not Google views the Verizon app store as complementary or competitive is not known. Google representatives did not respond to two requests for comment.

Apple, by contrast, offers a single app store, and Apple chief executive Steve Jobs has characterized the Google platform as "very fragmented," although he was referring to the variety in operating systems.

Many Android OEMs, including the two largest, HTC and Motorola, install proprietary user interfaces to differentiate themselves from the commodity Android experience," Jobs said, during a October conference call. "The user's left to figure it all out. Compare this with iPhone, where every handset works the same."

"The multiple hardware/software iterations presents developers with a daunting challenge," Jobs added. "Many Android apps work only on selected Android handsets, running selected Android versions. And this is for handsets that have been shipped less than 12 months ago. Compare this with iPhone, where there are two versions of the software, the current and the most recent predecessor, to test against."

While Google features specific apps in its App Store according to unknown criteria, Verizon said the advantage for developers to choose V CAST Apps will be because Verizon "has the opportunity to do marketing and merchandising". Verizon's Android phones also contain a dedicated Verizon channel inside the Android market, and "that will continue," the Verizon spokeswoman said. With V CAST, Verizon will also offer the same 70/30 revenue split that Google offers, she added.



Fivenson Studios is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, our graphic design team specializes in logo and webpage design, as well as marketing campaigns for social and print media. From flyers and brochures to targeted landing pages, we aim to bring your company into the spotlight and reach a greater range of potential customers.