Posts Tagged T Test

Fireworks Is Affirming, Inspiring And Sounds Amazing

Posted by on Thursday, 6 January, 2011

It’s the considerably-heralded return of Katy Perry’s multi-talented rack! Refreshing from squirting out whipped cream on the set of California Gurls, she returns spurting pyrotechnics for Firework and manages to heal the entire world. Don’t test this at household, children. Allow me get this straight. I adoreKaty Perry Firework mp3 download. It’s euphoric, life-affirming, inspiring and sounds incredible yelled out drunk in moments of extreme happiness. I fully assume it to develop into one particular of those songs that will get overplayed at American graduations, considerably like Natasha Bedingfield’s Unwritten, and I don’t care if Perry sings it like she’s straining from her final breath.

Yes, it’s nice to see Perry in fact sporting garments for a change, and rather fetching she looks also, even if we’re worried about the scorching triggered by the firework-shooting chest Micro Niche Finder. And yes, Budapest looks lovely with bangers going off all about the spot and it helps make a pleasant change to see anything in a video clip that is not a soundstage or America. But please, do we really think performing a card trick is going to scare off a bunch of muggers?

Elsewhere, we see a chubbster stripping off and jumping in a pool, a cancer-ridden child wandering bare-foot all-around the grounds of a hospital SEO Forum and a woman perpetuating the horror of childbirth by seemingly giving birth to explosives. It’s all cliched, manipulative, heartstring-tugging things and it appears to be to be operating offered how a lot of people are apparently bursting into tears at the sight of it.

But right here at Teen nowadays, we’re sadly produced of a lot more cynical, steely-eyed things and our only damp eye was triggered by the imagined of there being loads a lot more fascinating footage of dancers in Budapest left on the cutting area floor (you know we’re suckers for a tremendously-choreographed dance program).

So while we nevertheless adore Firework, in spite of that ‘boom boom boom/moon’ rhyme, the video clip isn’t performing anything for us. Forgive us for preferring music movies that glimpse a lot more like music movies and less like charity campaigns. But experience totally free to let us know how heartless we are in the feedback under.


Littlemp3 Did Follow Through :)

Posted by on Saturday, 8 May, 2010

Littlemp3 Did Follow Through :)
I couldn’t test what littlemp3 said while at work, so I hoped all was good. I guess they responded without checking to be sure someone changed the code. I emailed them again to let them know someone did not follow through. Sorry bout that folks! Didn’t mean to give you false hope. Guess what? It’s ready! Re: Player not showing when embeding From: Little Mp3 Ok, try now. So sorry …

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Our 2009 12-City 3G Data Mega Test: AT&T Won

Posted by on Monday, 21 December, 2009

Given carrier reputation and our own iPhone call drops, we were pretty surprised to discover, through careful testing in 12 markets, that AT&T’s has pretty consistently the fastest 3G network nationwide, followed closely—in downloads at least—by Verizon Wireless.

Let’s get this straight right away: We didn’t test dropped voice calls, we didn’t test customer service, and we didn’t test map coverage by wandering around in the boonies. We tested the ability of the networks to deliver 3G data in and around cities, including both concrete canyons and picket-fenced ‘burbs. And while every 3G network gave us troubles on occasion, AT&T’s wasn’t measurably more or less reliable than Verizon’s.

It was measurably faster, however, download-wise, in 6 of the 12 markets where we tested, and held a significantly higher national average than the other carriers. Only Verizon came close, winning 4 of the 12 markets. For downloads, AT&T and Verizon came in first or second in nine markets, and in whatever location we tested, both AT&T and Verizon 3G were consistently present. If you’re wondering about upload speeds, AT&T swept the contest, winning 12 for 12.

The Cities

Last year, we did an 8-city coast-to-coast test, and called Sprint the big winner. This year, we have results from 11 cities coast-to-coast, and even got to test (during what was otherwise vacation time) on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Also, unlike last year, we were able to test T-Mobile’s new 3G network, active in all the markets we visited (except, at the time, Maui). For being such a latecomer, T-Mo did well, and the numbers show even more promise from them.

We tried to spread the love around this year, geographically, hitting cities we didn’t get to last year (at the cost of losing a few from ’08). Besides Maui, we hit Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, Phoenix, Portland, Seattle, San Francisco/Bay Area and Tampa.

The Methodology

Our testing regimen was based on the same scheme as last year: We picked five locations in each city, including at least one “downtown” location that was considered a suburb. The selections were arbitrary, or fixed but logical—landmarks, residences, etc. (Note: Due to timing constraints, Chicago and Maui only had three test locations.)

Our hardware consisted of two identical stripped-down Acer Timeline laptops running Windows Vista, and four 3G wireless modems requested from the carriers. We allowed them to make the choice of hardware, simply asking for their “best performing” model. Once up and running, here are the tests we ran:

• Bandwidth & Latency: Speedtest.net – Reports upload and download bandwidth in megabits per second, as well as ping latency in milliseconds. We performed this test five times at each location on each modem.

• Pageload: Hubble images at Wikimedia – A 4.42MB web page with 200 4KB thumbnails, it was fully reloaded three times, and timed using the Firefox plug-in YSlow. The three time readings were averaged.

• Download: Wikimedia’s Abell 2667 galaxy cluster photo – This single 7.48MB JPEG is a clear test of how fast you can download stuff from the cloud, and again, we hard refreshed this file three times, and measured time using YSlow for an accurate human-error-free reading.

This was a test of 3G performance. Even though Sprint and its tech partner Clearwire have intrepidly released 4G networks in half of the tested markets—Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas, Maui, Portland and Seattle—we only tested Sprint’s 3G network. The reason should be obvious: While we performed the test with laptop cards on PCs, it’s supposed to serve as a test of the network’s ability to deliver service to all devices, including smartphones, dumbphones and laptops. Show us a Palm Pre WiMax edition—better yet, sell 100,000 of them—and then we’ll switch it up. And while you may argue that this 3G test still doesn’t adequately reflect your experience with your iPhone, at least it’s the same network, and may serve to rule out AT&T’s data pipe as the independent cause for all those infamous dropped calls.

(On a side note, when multiple carriers release 4G networks, we’ll definitely conduct a comparative test of them all, using new parameters, and focused around laptop use.)

The Results

Now that you know how we ran the test, here are the top finishers in each market, plus some pretty bar graphs showing you how bandwidth compares.

Though we tested for uploads and downloads, we focused our additional tests on the downstream, as it’s the more important direction, in the minds of most consumers and most carriers. The anomaly there is AT&T, which has dramatically good upload bandwidth, even when its download bandwidth doesn’t keep up. Fast uploads are a priority for AT&T, and will soon be for T-Mobile, which recently turned on faster uploading in NYC, which you can see in our test results. Meanwhile, although Verizon technically came in second in uploads as well as downloads, it doesn’t seem to treat this as a major priority.

When it came to downloads, though, the competition was markedly stiffer:

Atlanta – AT&T, followed by Verizon
Bay Area/San Francisco – AT&T, followed by Verizon
Chicago – AT&T, followed by Verizon then Sprint
Denver – AT&T, followed by Verizon
Las Vegas – Verizon, followed by AT&T
Los Angeles – AT&T, followed by Sprint
Maui – Verizon, followed by AT&T
New York – AT&T, followed by T-Mobile
Phoenix – Verizon, followed by T-Mobile
Portland – T-Mobile, followed by Verizon
Seattle – Verizon, followed by T-Mobile
Tampa – Sprint, followed by AT&T

Is That The End?

No. We’ve compiled the following gallery with all the data from each test location in the 12 markets, so you can see on a neighborhood-by-neighborhood level who won what. This also includes latency, pageload and download numbers, so you can track the performance in several ways. (The data above is bandwidth, though as you’ll see, that was generally representative of the overall performance. If a carrier was tops in bandwidth, it was usually tops in download time.) These tests are all just “snapshots in time,” as the carriers like to say, so feel free to bitch about where your experience doesn’t reflect our results. We stand by them, but acknowledge that network performance is changing all the time, and experiences very regular hiccups.

Regarding latency, you’ll notice it didn’t appear to affect actual user experience—3G isn’t really up for Modern Warfare 2, if that’s what you’re thinking—we will gladly show you latency averages, as well as pageload and file download averages, broken out for every market on the test.

Special thanks to all of the excellent testers we enlisted, Mark Wilson, Chris Mascari, John Herrman, Kyle VanHemert, Dan Nosowitz, Matt Buchanan and Rosa Golijan from our own team, along with Tamara Chadima and the indefatigable Dennis Tarwood. You guys were troopers, and I’m pretty sure FedEx either loves you or hates you. Thanks to John Mahoney for helping develop the initial tests that we’ve continually refined, to Chris Jacob for mapping all the locations, and to Don Nguyen for the mad number crunching—you truly are a spreadsheet pimp.

Note: Some of you may have noticed that San Diego is among the cities highlighted on the top illustration—and that Maui is not. The reason is that while we did testing in three great San Diego locations, one of the locations didn’t get any Sprint or T-Mobile service, and the already fairly thin dataset was rendered too compromised for any kind of usable report. As for Maui’s absence, Maui’s just too far out in the Pacific to make for a pretty map shot.


PETMAN robot walks like a human

Posted by on Tuesday, 27 October, 2009

If that BigDog robot from Boston Dynamics didn’t amaze and/or horrify you, maybe its human-like big brother “PETMAN” will catch your attention.

I, for one, like that the torso section of PETMAN looks like a sweet boom box and I hope that someday Boston Dynamics sees fit to let the robot loose in the business district of a small town, just walking around and taking in the scenery while pumping out some old-school rap.

And I mean really old-school, like the kind they used to use for break dancing. All the townspeople would be like, “Hey, check out that walking boom box! It has red shoes! Try to push it over! You can’t! Why is it walking towards me?! Nice boom box! Niiice boom box!”

According to the company, PETMAN will be used to test chemical protection clothing for the U.S. Army – not for scaring various townspeople:

“PETMAN is an anthropomorphic robot for testing chemical protection clothing used by the US Army. Unlike previous suit testers, which had to be supported mechanically and had a limited repertoire of motion, PETMAN will balance itself and move freely; walking, crawling and doing a variety of suit-stressing calisthenics during exposure to chemical warfare agents. PETMAN will also simulate human physiology within the protective suit by controlling temperature, humidity and sweating when necessary, all to provide realistic test conditions.”

Let’s be honest, though. There’s no reason you couldn’t test chemical protection clothing AND walk around the town square blasting some Grandmaster Flash. Oh, except for the whole “exposure to chemical warfare agents” part. You know what? Forget the boom box thing.

PETMAN – BigDog gets a Big Brother [Boston Dynamics via Geekologie]



Sync contacts between Thunderbird, Google

Posted by on Tuesday, 11 August, 2009

A couple of weeks ago, I described how to sync contacts between Outlook, Gmail, and your iPhone. The program missing from this contacts mega-merge was Thunderbird (download for Windows | Mac), and for good reason. Mozilla’s free e-mail program is not particularly contact-friendly.

The first time I attempted to use Mozilla Thunderbird’s import function to bring my Gmail contacts into the client e-mail application, I was seriously disappointed with the results. Most of the contact information was squished into a single nondescript field for each record. The few fields that did make the conversion were incomplete. The entire process was pretty worthless, overall.

Then I found the free Zindus add-on for Thunderbird. The program brings a subset of contact fields from Google and Zimbra into Mozilla’s free e-mail program. For Google, the fields imported include the contact’s name, primary and secondary e-mail addresses, phone numbers, IM names, company, title, and notes. (I didn’t test the program with Zimbra.)

After you download and install Zindus, a “Zindus” option is added to Thunderbird’s Tools menu. Clicking it opens the Zindus Configuration Settings dialog box where you’re presented with a handful of contact-sync options, including a Sync Now button.

Zindus Configuration Settings dialog

The Zindus Configuration Settings dialog lets you reset your sync options.

(Credit: Zindus)

Originally posted at Workers’ Edge


No it’s not fancy, but the Barnes and Noble e-book reader works a-okay

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 July, 2009

ebn1

So I just bought House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, by William D. Cohen, from the just-launched Barnes and Noble e-book store. Long story short, it works pretty well, but there sure as heck isn’t a hint of polish on this thing.

So here’s how it worked. I went to barnesandnoble.com, typed in the name “William Cohen,” then clicked “Read Now,” indicating that I wanted to buy the e-book version. It downloaded to my Desktop (well, Downloads folder). Then I had to download and install the reader software.

ebn2

Nothing too hard. From the reader software, I then navigated to the .pdb file. A little window popped up asking me to enter my name and credit card number to unlock the file. And now I’m reading about Wall Street’s excess!

I even tried reading the file offline and it worked fine. So if you’re trying to read an e-book on the commuter rail on your laptop, without any Internet access, you should be OK.

ebn3

For the thousandth time, I don’t have an iPhone, nor do I have any intention to, so I couldn’t test that. But, as far as the Mac version goes, it’s not too different from reading a PDF. And that’s not a bad thing.