Category Archives: Lists

Report: Chinese companies sell 40% of all smartphones


Global smartphone shipments totaled 1.167 billion units in 2014.


Chinese companies accounted for nearly 40% of global smartphone sales and represent six of the top 10 smartphone brands worldwide in 2014, according to a new report from TrendForce.

trendforce

“2014 was definitely an impressive year for Chinese brands as they gained more share of the global market,” explained Avril Wu, TrendForce Global Smartphone Analyst. Total worldwide shipments totaled 1.167 billion units last year, with combined shipments of Chinese brands surpassing 453 million units. 

Atop the list of vendors was Samsung who lead the pack with 28% market share, with Apple not far behind at 16.4%. Lenovo, with Motorola under its wing, ranked third after shipping over 90 million smartphone last year. LG, Huawei and Xiaomi followed with 6.0%, 5.9% and 5.2% market share, respectively.

xiaomi_mi4_1406095622

TrendForce notes that Xiaomi has had a particularly strong showing in recent years, having doubled in growth YoY since 2011. “As for the smartphone makers with the best cost-performance products, the title goes to Xiaomi. Its flagship models cost around $300 to $350, but they match their high-end counterparts from international vendors in hardware specs.”

Other notable names rounding out the list included Coolpad, Sony, ZTE and TCL. By 2015, TrendForce projects that three of the top five companies will be Chinese.

What were the worst passwords of 2014?


Watch these people give Jimmy Kimmel their passwords on national TV.


Undoubtedly, cybersecurity stole the headlines of 2014. It seemed every week, there was another high-profile breach, whether the aftermath of Target and Home Depot, attacks against big-box retailers like Michaels and Neiman Marcus, or the massive incidents around JPMorgan Chase and Sony. However, even at its most rudimentary level, we’re finding that a majority of people fail to abide by common login best practices when accessing their personal data.

Worst Passwords of 2014

According to SplashData’s annual list of the worst passwords, compiled from more than 3.3 million leaked codes throughout the web during the past year, many of us aren’t too concerned about our digital security… at least when it comes to sign-in credentials. And apparently, some of us are more than happy to share them national television. Jimmy Kimmel’s producers recently went around the streets of Los Angeles to assess people’s password security.

Surely enough, the Jimmy Kimmel Live cast was able to get those passing by to reveal their “secret” credentials directly into the mic. Don’t believe us? Watch it below! 

So what were some of 2014’s top passwords?

1. 123456
2. password
3. 12345
4. 12345678
5. qwerty
6. 123456789
7. 1234
8. baseball
9. dragon
10. football
11. 1234567
12. monkey
13. letmein
14. abc123
15. 111111
16. mustang
17. access
18. shadow
19. master
20. michael
21. superman
22. 696969
23. 123123
24. batman
25. trustno1

 

Xiaomi launches sensors to help create a smarter home


The low-cost Chinese smartphone maker plans to start testing four new smart home products.


As Xiaomi looks to broaden its range of devices for the Internet of Things, the Chinese smartphone maker has unveiled a new plan for a suite of four new smart home modules that will offer enhanced security features. In a recent GeekPark Innovation Festival presentation, Xiaomi President Bin Lin revealed that the company will begin consumer testing on January 26. Bloomberg notes that the components comprising the Smart Home Suite will be a motion sensor, an open/close sensor, a connected module for home appliances and a hub to connect these devices.

(Source: Tech in Asia)

(Source: Tech in Asia)

Each of these modules will be capable of measuring things such as light, sound, temperature, and movement, while relaying information to other smart gadgets throughout the house. For instance, the tiny motion sensor can be placed anywhere and can detect a moving object with a 170-degree angle. Meanwhile, door and window sensors will provide homeowners will real-time, remote monitoring.

(Source: Tech in Asia)

(Source: Tech in Asia)

“In the past, motion sensors were very complicated and large in size, so that if you wanted a system you needed professional installation,” Lin told attendees. “For this suite, there is not a single nail or wire. These components are all very simple.”

(Source: Tech in Asia)

(Source: Tech in Asia)

The new products will also be equipped with a wireless switching device for appliances, as well as a multi-functional gateway that wirelessly connects the components with other devices, enabling control with the press of a smartphone. The soon-to-be launched lineup will join previously announced home products from the company including an air purifier that sends pollution readings to mobile phones and alerts users when its filter is dirty and a light bulb that can change colors by remote control. Tech in Asia reveals that the devices will communicate using the ZigBee protocol.

(Source: Tech in Asia)

(Source: Tech in Asia)

This announcement comes with little surprise, in the wake of a rather “smart” CES 2015 and a number of optimistic IoT reports. One in particular, IDC estimates that the market for Internet-enabled devices will grow to $7.1 trillion by 2020, up from merely $1.9 trillion in 2014.

“Xiaomi is well-positioned to take on this market, as it already has the cloud infrastructure, a hardware background, a huge fan following, and several devices at its disposal,” Tech in Asia concludes.

In the end, the electronics company is hoping that consumers will be able to use their smartphones to link all the smart devices together and control each of their appliances with a Xiaomi developed app on their smartphone — like the highly-popular, mXT641T powered Mi4.

These 40 throwback ads show how far computers have come


As we enter an era of ubiquitous computing and the Internet of Things, it’s crazy to think about how far we’ve come. 


It wasn’t too long ago that consumers were fascinated by the endless possibilities of computers, and these ads surely do prove it. If you really want to get a good sense of just how far technology has come over the last couple of decades, browse through the list below.

The hard disk you’ve been waiting for… only $3,398!

hardisk-waiting-for

Hey, it adds 15 million characters of storage!

18iwj0u6hfxzsjpg

If a Commodore is good enough for Star Trek’s Captain Kirk, then it’s good enough for you.

18iwj4mbq6lcujpg

“Radio Shack’s TRS-80 Computer Is the Smartest Way to Write,” says Isaac Asimov.

18iwj7ey5ycv1jpg

16K RAM turns your computer to a working giant.

For the record, that 1977 “giant” is actually 256,000 times smaller than today’s 4GB.

16k-ram-card

Ultimate mobility? The 1976 equivalent of a modern-day laptop.

18iwjjkz7mw33jpg

300 Mbytes for the price of a Honda Civic? Luckily, our hard disks don’t cost as much today.

disks-system-within-30-days

Computers are a beautiful thing.

penril-modem-1

Unlimited vocabulary? Geewizbang!

18iwlxgsmlod6jpg

There’s nothing like your first video game.

Atari

Speaking of joysticks…

keystick_large

If the price doesn’t scare you, try looking at that original Apple logo.

apple-1-ad

Long before the days of Amazon.

18iwm9osf8npbjpg

Did you know apples make great carrots?

apple-makes-great-carrots

Well, because two bytes are better than one…

2-bytes-better-than-1

What the heck is electronic mail?

electronic-mail

Look, it’s a small (9-pounded) miracle!

3033974-slide-s-computer-ads-04

Based on that rate, it looks like today’s 4GB would cost you $85,899,345.92.

2-cents-a-byte

Now that’s ‘surfing’ the web.

Microfever

Complete with write protection and all!

extensys

We said a flip flop, the flippie to the flippie, the flip flip a flop, you don’t stop.

1-2-3-Advertisement

So that’s how you write music?

Borge-Specifies-Verbatim

Remember the Logitech HiREZ Mouse?

logitechhirezmouse-byte8807a-1

Or this one? This gem would become the blueprint of future mice.

microsoft-first-mouse

What do you get when you combine a calculator and intercom?

zx80

A far cry from Apple’s uber-thin Macbook Air today.

apple-2-advertising

So that’s the original use for an Apple?

apple-2-adam

We imagine our lives were never the same.

the-imagination-machine

Apple has always had a way with celebs, even those from more two centuries ago.

Kevin Costner, Jeff Goldblum, Tony Hawk, Will Ferrell… Thomas Jefferson?

apple-2-and-3

If you were to carry that Osborne model today, you’d probably the same reaction.

Osborne-Computer

Extraordinary… in size and price.

ibm-5510-1

It was the ’70s, what can we say?

enhanced-buzz-23382-1299522569-21

Doesn’t seem too mobile. Por-table, maybe.

Also, is that a kitchen table?

trs-80

Did anyone else know they had computers way back when?

man-owns-his-pc

Ironically, some may say this question still holds true today.

Commodore-64-advertisement

Cut and paste!

Safe to say, we couldn’t have done this article without that function!

cut-paste-1

To think, this was at one time the smallest analog computer ever.

enhanced-buzz-23385-1299523210-22

Hey girl, you want me to hold that computer for you?

enhanced-buzz-23385-1299522756-20

Sir, you forgot your laptop bag.

retro-computer-ads-14

Before the days of Atmel’s maXStylus…

enhanced-buzz-23382-1299522659-23

Whoosh!

enhanced-buzz-23381-1299523554-16


And, we couldn’t help ourselves. After having recently celebrated our 30th birthday, here’s a blast from the past with a few old-school Atmel ads…

10 years later and they’re still ’sticking’ with us.

B635hRwCQAARYmH-1

Some things never change.

AVF

Affordable then, affordable now.

B635OsjCIAAO4aj

 

CNN gets FAA clearance for drone journalism


Looks like Back to the Future II was right again, drones may soon be used for news-gathering. 


CNN has announced that in a first program of its kind, the news giant is working with the FAA to advance its efforts in launching camera-equipped drones for journalism and reporting purposes.

BTTF_Drone

Since last year, the cable news network has been studying the use of drones for news-gathering by teaming up with researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology, who has played an integral role in collecting data. The FAA said it will analyze that information to develop rules and acceptable regulations around these unmanned aerial vehicles.

“Our aim is to get beyond hobby-grade equipment and to establish what options are available and workable to produce high quality video journalism,” urged David Vigilante, CNN’s Senior Vice President of Legal.

While earlier efforts have been in the works, CNN’s new announcement signifies that the media company has made substantial progress and that the FAA will seek to accelerate the work required to commercialize the technology.

Most recently, FAA had allocated a couple of largely uninhabited regions across the U.S. to test the commercial use of drones. At the moment, the federal agency only allows certain lightweight drones for flights of up to 400 feet. However, as CNN reports, the FAA is expected to downgrade a few of the laws this year, as drone tech is becoming more ubiquitous — which was clearly evident at CES 2015.

130409181529-t-drones-mini-fleets-00002925-620x348

Aside from journalism, drones offer a number of advantageous real-world applications, ranging from disaster relief and farming to filmmaking and real estate. Several other companies are also making significant investments in UAVs as well, including Facebook, Amazon and Google, which will surely help spur the movement.

“Unmanned aircraft offer news organizations significant opportunities. We hope this agreement with CNN and the work we are doing with other news organizations and associations will help safely integrate unmanned news gathering technology and operating procedures into the National Airspace System,” explained FAA Administrator Michael Huerta.

The Internet of Things is getting a congressional caucus


The IoT is headed to D.C.


Congresswoman Suzan DelBene (D-WA) and Congressman Darrell Issa (R-CA) are launching the Congressional Caucus on the Internet of Things (IoT) to help educate people on the development of web-connected products.

capitol-building-1

The IoT refers to a world where products, or “things” other than mobile devices and computers, are web-enabled and typically controlled through an accompanying app. This ranges from smart thermostats and cooking equipment to fitness trackers and vehicles. Ultimately, these gadgets will come together to collect and analyze data with regards to use, habits and often times, provide feedback for improvement.

With billions of connections expected in the next five years, a number of questions linger around security, policies and laws related to the IoT era, and the newly-formed caucus aspires to address them.

“As someone with a long career in the technology industry and as an entrepreneur, I know firsthand how quickly technologies have developed to become critical to our daily lives. Policymakers will need to be engaged and educated on how we can best protect consumers while also enabling these new technologies to thrive. It’s important that our laws keep up with technology and I look forward to co-chairing the IoT caucus,” explained DelBene.

BqWo_-CCQAAedhQ

The IoT Caucus will focus on educating members on the development of innovative technology and public policy in this space, while also informing them about upcoming opportunities and challenges in health, transportation, home and the enterprise, as these embedded devices take advantage of network connectivity to create new value.

This announcement comes just days after President Obama himself emphasized the significance of cybersecurity, in the wake of recent attacks against Sony and the Pentagon’s Central Command. The proposal would allow increased sharing of information on cyber threats from the private sector with protection from liability, and subsequently, would criminalize the sale of stolen financial data, and require companies to notify consumers about data breaches.

Obama

“If we’re going to be connected, then we need to be protected,” the President stated.

At Atmel, the IoT is already at the heart of what we do. We started preparing for this smarter world nearly a decade ago, and now offer the industry’s most comprehensive, highly-integrated IoT solutions, which include hardware-based security.

The 30 “smartest” things we saw at CES 2015

Thousands of jam-packed booths, several tech-filled halls, five days, one incredible event. Over the years, CES has become a breeding ground for the wackiest, the wildest and most importantly, the smartest electronic devices to hit the market. And, with the emergence of the Internet of Things, 2015 proved to be no different with the debut of countless new connected products.

While we recently highlighted a few pre-show gizmos, here are some other exciting and eye-catching gadgets we came across over the last week in Vegas.


Motorola Scout 5000 is a connected dog collar with built-in video, GPS and Wi-Fi.

motorola-scout-5000


Edyn Garden Sensor lets you know when to water your plants.

B63sgz7IgAAR67z


Gogoro is a smart scooter that runs on swappable electric batteries.

B60eEowIgAATvNv


IO HAWK is a smart skateboard that will change the way you get around.

skateboard


Sleep Number’s new smart bed for kids can adjust as they grow.

B63KrYmCUAACEps


RAYBOT is a water-free solar panel cleaning robot.

Windows


Fogo is a smart flashlight that will pack everything from GPS to Bluetooth.

B622d4DCcAAhn46


Panasonic’s smart mirror can analyze your skin and preview new makeup styles.

B68M6OlCcAAKqcm


Sengled LED lightbulbs can also serve as a home security system.

Snap


LifeQ is using the human body as a sensor to integrate with wearables.

LifeQ


Tao Chair lets you burn calories while sitting in the living room.

B6yN-L_IAAASNqk


Honeywell’s Lyric system is bringing security to the smart home.

B6sZBH9CMAAASjM


Whirlpool’s Top Load Washer is making cleaning laundry easier than ever before.

B63Z5K6CIAArywT.jpg-large


Parrot’s Smart Pot will make sure you never kill your house plants again.

Plant


XelfleX technology can be used to create smarter clothes.

B6yEPpTCQAAZmmx


Sensoria smart socks can track your run or workout.

B7AVY63IAAA1OSr


Baby GlGl is a smart bottle to keep babies from getting colicky.

B6-GfInIAAAO59h


Secure Communicator is a smartphone built inside a watch.

B6_TZ2cIAAICn0C


Ebove’s smart bike system allows you to cycle anywhere.

B68yHhACAAAs8D9


Anova’s Wi-Fi sous vide cooker enables you to precisely set temps remotely.

B6x9APqCIAAQkR2


Digitsole’s smart insoles can track your steps while heating your feet.

B6vnUZgCMAAyk8t


Ring is a Wi-Fi-enabled, HD video doorbell.

B6ykGXeCIAE5oqY


PicoBrew is a connected home-brewing machine for your own craft beer.

B65yQ57CMAE_NEt


Bionic Bird is a mechanical bird that can be controlled via your smartphone.

BionicBird


Toshiba’s ChihiraAico is an incredibly life-like robot.

B63rndiCcAAtQ3P


Keen Home’s smart vent lets you customize and direct heat to specific rooms.

B6s4UkaCQAA7UIC.jpg-large


Edwin is a smart rubber duckie that makes bath time even more fun.

Edwin


Cooki is an automated robotic chef for your countertop.

Cooki


Raticator is a mesh-networked rodent trap that uses infrared beams to detect rodents.

Raticator


JINS smart glasses can tell when your eyes are fatigued.

B68MVoMCYAA3Lyp


What were some of your favorite things from CES 2015? Share with us!

Rewind: The vintage tech and trends of CES

Long before becoming the world’s largest consumer electronics show, the first CES took place in New York City back in June of 1967. The debut event, which originally began as spinoff from the Chicago Music Show, had attracted just about 17,500 attendees and 100 exhibitors. Since then, attendance has risen to over 160,000 visitors along with 3,600-plus exhibitors and countless new product releases. While the smart home, wearables and virtual reality may be the focus of CES 2015, once upon a time devices like VCRs and Nintendo consoles stole the spotlight.

With this year’s show in full swing, let’s take a quick look at the most noteworthy gizmos, gadgets and trends from the show since its 1967 inauguration.


Videocassette Recorders (VCRs), 1970

780px-VCR-N1500


Laserdisc Players, 1974

1024px-Magnavox_Laserdisc_player


Camcorders, 1981

jvc_camcorder-1


Compact Disc Players, 1981

4057003-sony-cdp-101


Nintendo, 1985

Nintendo NES main_clip_image002


Digital Audio Technology, 1990

Dat_cartridge


Compact Disc Interactive, 1991

philips_cdi


Digital Satellite Systems, 1994

hqdefault


Digital Versatile Discs (DVDs), 1996

25_1iV4LjVY5


High-Definition Televisions (HDTVs), 1998

hdtvgallery4


Digital Video Recorders (DVRs), 1999

Series_2_tivo_back


Microsoft Xbox, 2001

Xbox-Console-Set


Plasma TVs, 2001

0207


HD Radios, 2003

sony_hd_radio


Blu-ray Discs, 2003

blu-ray


HDTV PVRs, 2003

hauppauge_B0018LX0DY-02-lg


IPTV, 2005

iptv3


OLED TVs, 2008

OLED_EarlyProduct


Netbooks, 2010

4387


Tablets, 2010

TSL-012014_CES.Emergin-Electronics_CAPTION-Tablets-2010


Drones, 2010

800px-Ardrone-img5-front


3D TVs, 2011

Sony_3D_TV


Smart Appliances, 2011

0


4G Phones, 2011

LG-Front-630x418


Ultrabooks, 2012

Ultrabooks1


3D OLED, 2012

sony-24-5-inch-glasses-free-oled-tv


Fitness Bands, 2013

fitbit-flex-ces


Atmel XSense, 2013

Atmel-XSense_touchsensor-film


Flexible OLED, 2013

LG-Display-5-inch-flexible-OLED-prototype-sid-2013


Smart Glasses, 2014

1024px-A_Google_Glass_wearer


Smart Lights, 2014

hue-121029


4K TVs, 2014

Samsung-curved-4k


Driverless Cars, 2014

8c691697-263c-4daa-82dd-5e06ac5683c2-620x372


Futuristic Car Center Consoles, 2014

aant

Rewind: 30 breathtaking drone videos of 2014

For many, the term “drone” seems to conjure images of military use and war weaponry. As a result, the mere thought of these futuristic flying devices tend to pose security and privacy concerns to several people. When, however, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) used for defense purposes and those that may one day may buzz around the skies are quite different, and indeed, may change the world — for the better.

Amid recent security concerns, bans throughout U.S. national parks and ongoing regulation woes, these gadgets — some of which powered by Atmel 8 and 32-bit AVR microcontrollers —  have managed to capture stunning birds-eye views that would’ve otherwise been inconceivable a few years ago. Before the days of drone videos, filmmakers had to rely upon helicopters for such aerial shots; however, these ‘copters aren’t nearly as agile and inexpensive as UAVs. That said, there’s certainly no shortage of UAV footage.

Below, we’ve compiled just some of the most breathtaking videos taken over the last 12 months.

Christmas Spectacle


Necker Island


Alaskan Ice Cave


4th of July Fireworks


San Diego Yacht Fire


Lima, Peru


Erupting Volcano at Tanna Island


Burning Man


Seattle Space Needle


Above the Clouds in the Netherlands


Apple 2 Campus


Catching Waves in the Mentawai Islands


Dolphins at Dana Point


Niagara Falls


Beijing, China


Scaling the World’s Tallest Building in Dubai


Rockfall in Northern Italy


OK Go’s Music Video


Whale Watching in Maui


The Beauty of Baltimore


LA Love


Hong Kong Protests


The High Arctic


Serengeti Safari


The Big Apple


Chernobyl


Winter Wonderland


Iceland


Aerial Cape Town, South Africa


The Northern Roads of Oregon


Koh Yao Noi

 

 

 

 

Scan all your books for a dollar each

I just used 1DollarScan in San Jose to scan a bunch of old yearbooks, text books, and manuals from General Motors I have kept for 35 years. There is no “catch,” it really is a dollar a book, but there are some conditions. To be fair, their definition of a book is 100 pages. So if you have a 101 page book, then its two dollars. If it’s a 199 page book, its still two dollars. A 1001 page book is 11 dollars. It is still the best deal you will ever see. Heck, the Post Office makes more than 1DollarScan if you have to ship the books.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Hiroshi Nakano at 1DollarScan will make high-quality pdf files or jpegs of all your books.

You can use media mail, however, and get a really cheap rate. I like the flat-rate Post Office boxes, and there is always UPS and FedEx ground. If you have a pallet of books maybe freight is the cheapest way. For folks like me that live in Silicon Valley, you can just drop the books off.

Now, if the books are copyrighted, 1DollarScan intends to dispose of them after they scan them, so that there is no copyright issues. You just changed the form of the copyrighted material you already paid for, and the Supreme Court has decided that issue decades ago. If the material is your own, or something like a high-school yearbook, 1DollarScan can return the material, if you pay for the shipping.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

I had two big bags of books for 1DollarScan.

Since they count 100 pages as a “set” and every book is at least one “set” it did not take long for me to see that I had over 67 sets. I just stopped counting, since they have a 100-dollar a month platinum deal, where several premium services are included free.

So I want to point out the downsides since you are engineers and analytical. But first, rest easy, because Hiroshi Nakano, the founder of 1DollarScan is also an engineer. He came to Silicon Valley working for a big corporation. After a few years, he returned to Japan. There he noticed similar scanning services growing in popularity, since space is at such a premium in Tokyo. So Nakano returned to Silicon Valley and started 1DollarScan. As you would expect from a fellow engineer, the pricing is rational, the website is clear and it works great, and everything seems too good to be true.

As to those downsides? Well, since he uses very light compression on the pdf files, they are huge. My General Motors Institute yearbook came in at 350MB. That was 242 pages of high-res and mostly images. Because I sprung for the 100-dollar a month deal, the file was named with the title of the book and I can use their “tune up” online service to make smaller pdfs suited for phones or tablets, Kindles or other devices. Alternatively I believe they will provide you with the raw jpeg files, and for an extra dollar, they can do 600dpi jpegs. For me, the pdfs just make more sense, and hundreds of separate jpeg files are too unwieldy to handle.

The only other downside is the OCR (optical character recognition) was not perfect. I had 1DollarScan scan in a big 1960s magazine from the Cleveland Plain Dealer called “Cleveland, a city grows to greatness.” The preface has a small biography of the two authors. The type was tiny and the magazine was 50 years old. The page image is perfect, and you can’t see the OCR errors until you highlight and cut-and-paste the text into a notepad or some other editor. Here is what the OCR produced:

George J. Barmann, coculhor of l{ris work, has been on lhe staff of ihe Plain Dealer since epfember, 1942. He came lo the paper {rom the lllinoir State Journal, in Springfield, where he had gone affergraduation from flre University of lllinoir, in !937. On the Plain Dealer, Barmann spent some time in writing about education. After thal, he did general asignmenf reporting. whish meanr covering almoct the whole range of stories that daily come acro3r the City De*. Barmann, in recenl years, has done chiefly feafurer for the Plain Decler, including a greal many inierview with headline peronaliiies and people of the fheafer. Also, he ha; writlen feature stories aboul lhe Civil War. He lraveled through the Deep South, from New Orleans to Charleston, S.C., and wrole a series of arlicle: on whaf Southerners were thinling in tfii: l00th anniver:ary of ilrat wer. A nalive of Chillicolhe, Ohio, Barmann al*ended Miami Univer:ity ai Orford, O. before lramfering to iournalirm ai lhe Universify of lllinois.

Other fonts came out much better, this was the worse OCR of anything that got scanned. But there is a solution to both the big file size and the OCR accuracy. Based on the advice of analog engineer Walt Jung, I had purchased a copy of ABBYY Finereader 11. I am pretty sure it was under 100 dollars. I used ABBYY to scan in all my loose papers and tax records. I find it far better than TextBridge and other OCR programs, which I also own. ABBYY will take in a pdf file, and re-recognize the text, and save it with much higher compression. So I ran the 1DollarScan pdf into ABBYY and made another pdf file. That file of a 64-page ledger-size book was 9MB instead of 120MB. Here is the ABBYY OCR result of the Cleveland book:

G e o r g e J. Barmann, co­author of this work, has been on the staff of the Plain Dealer since September, 1942. H e came to the paper from the Illinois State Journal, in Springfield, where he had gone after gradua­tion from the University of Illinois, in 1937. O n the Plain Dealer, Bar­mann spent some time in writing about education. A fte r that, he did general assignment reporting, which means covering almost the whole range of stories that d a ily come across the C it y Desk. Barmann, in recent years, has done chiefly features for the Plain Dealer, including a great many interviews with headline personalities and people of the theater. Also, he has written feature stories about the C iv il W a r . H e traveled through the Deep South, from New Orlea ns to Charleston, S.C., and wrote a series of articles on what Southerners were thinking in this 100th anniversary of that war. A native of Chillicothe, Ohio, Barmann attended M ia m i University at Oxford, O., before transferring to journalism at the University of Illinois.

You can see ABBYY was much more accurate, but its problem is that it peppers extraneous spaces in the text. If you searched Google for George Barmann, it would find the 1DollarScan pdf but not the ABBYY pdf. This is because it is trying to line up the highlighted hidden OCR to the image of the text on top of the OCR. Since the font is a bit funky, is hand-typeset and has kerning, ABBYY breaks up words when it adds needless spaces. Both OCR results were a bunch of separate lines that I concatenated above so they would fit this post. Where the ABBYY version has hyphens, those are correct, there were line breaks there. Oh, I know, I can take a screen shot of the pdf images, here:

1DollarScan-OCR-sample

The 120MB 1DollarScan screenshot has way less image compression, if you click on the image you can see the author’s eyes much more clearly that the image below.

ABBYY-OCR-sample

The 1DollarScan 120MB pdf run through and re-recognized by ABBYY Finereader 11 is only 9MB, and the text quality is nearly as good. The ABBYY image quality suffers from the higher compression, so you should not erase the original 1DollarScan files.

You can see that the 9MB ABBYY is almost as good for text as the 120MB 1DollarScan pdf, but the image in the 1DollarScan pdf is clearly better. So for things like a yearbook, I definitely will keep the larger 1DollarScan file, and maybe make a ABBYY pdf out of that to send around or post online. I looked into the extraneous spaces in ABBYY and there seems to be no “cure”. I tried making a “tagged” pdf in ABBYY and it is just much bigger and even worse OCR.

OK, so you can see that 1DollarScan is the real deal, here is a photo montage.

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Hiroshi Nakano examines the books dropped off for scanning at 1DollarScan.

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One side of the warehouse at 1DollarScan is for books waiting to be scanned. Lead times are only a week or two.

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Hiroshi Nakano uses this guillotine stack paper cutter to remove the bindings of your books.

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Hiroshi Nakano shows the spine of a book that he has cut off with the guillotine stack paper cutter at 1DollarScan.

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Here is the workstation where an employee at 1DollarScan feeds several scanners and once, while tending to paper jams and insuring you get the perfect scan.

I should mention that I asked Hiroshi Nakano if I should not show the heart of his operation above with the multiple scanners being fed by his employee. I told him that someone might see it and try to compete with him. Nakano smiled and said, “Nobody can compete with me.” I love the precision and factual nature of my fellow engineers, don’t you? Lets face it, a dollar to scan 100 pages with OCR is pretty remarkable.

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Once the books are scanned and the pdfs are posted for your download, 1DollarScan holds your books for two weeks, in case there were any problems. After that, the copyrighted books are recycled, or un-copyrighted materials are sent back to you if you pay shipping.

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Hiroshi Nakano from 1DollarScan patiently explained his operation to me and I was assured that it really is true that he can do high-quality scans of your books and magazines for a very low price.

There is real joy in being able to keep all my books in electronic form while dispensing with hundreds, maybe 1000 pounds of paper. Lets see if I can find a picture–

Paul-Rako-scanning

An engineers can collect a lot of paper. There were tax records for my business, project folders for jobs I worked on, letters from college girlfriends, owners manuals, and two big stacks of books you can barely see in the back right corner. The ammo boxes bottom right are full of pictures and negatives.

It took about six months, just scanning in all these loose papers. The hand-written letters from girlfriends I kept as 300dpi jpegs. Same for my hand-written printed notes, the OCR in ABBYY is pointless on handwriting anyway. For pictures, I scanned them at 600dpi, anything finer I could not see any difference on the 47-inch TV I use as a monitor. For negatives and slides I did 2400dpi, which is the same spatial resolution as doing the printed picture at 600dpi. I used ABBYY to make pdf files of any printed materials, including some booklets that I thought 1DollarScan might not want to do. But all the books, yearbooks, magazines, and manuals, well, it was just so nice to send those two big stacks to 1DollarScan and have it taken care of my by some diligent professionals. Lets face it, disk space is nearly free. I have a 2-Terabyte NAS (network-attached storage) at home that can hold all these files with room to spare.

Paul-Rako_scanning-desk

For scanning all my loose documents, I had a Canon laser MF 4890dw on the right. For 11×17 and oversize, a Brother MFC-J6710DW inkjet on the left. For pictures, slides and negatives a Canon CanoScan 8800F back-lit flatbed in the middle.

A standard desk would hold all three of my scanners, The laptop was driving my two TVs, and a wireless keyboard and mouse did the control. Lots of paper towels and Windex to keep the platens clean. It was a monumental job but now it is done. I will keep all my receipts and records on the NAS now. I back it up onto the laptops, and to a SSD (solid-state drive) I keep in the safety deposit box at the bank. I have auto titles and my birth certificate as paper, everything else is virtual. It is heaven. I gave away the two printer-scanners but kept the flatbed so I can do receipts and such as they come in. No more shoe boxes full of receipts for me.

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I made three runs to the Sunnyvale dump with the scanned paper. My pal said some companies will let you put your personal stuff in their shredder boxes. Either way, it is great to have all kinds of room, as long as I resist the temptation to fill it up with old test equipment or Sportster parts. And for getting rid of that stuff, you can use flea markets, Craigslist, and eBay.

Stock-engine-test_1969-Chevrolet-327-cu.in.-V-8-42p_ABBYY

Here is a link to a scan I had done by 1DollarScan and then ran through ABBYY Finereader. It went from 28MB to 2.7MB. The booklet a really cool engine test report I had from my student days at GMI. Since Mary Barra, the CEO of GM went to GMI too, hopefully she won’t sic a bunch of high-tone Detroit lawyers on me. I do note there is no copyright symbol on the document. Now the blocky shading on the title is due to the compression in ABBYY. The 1DollarScan document does not have those artifacts. But it is 10 times bigger. Note how the scan is straight and note how they scanned the both sides of the back cover, even when there was no text. You want the whole booklet scanned, they do it. Now they do charge 2 dollars for magazines, and I am not sure they counted this booklet as a magazine or thin book. In any event, that was why it was worth it to get the premium membership for a month. Hiroshi Nakano thought I was being fair and I thought the same about him. More than fair. Part of the premium service is they give the pdf file the name of the book. In this case they carefully typed: Stock engine test, 1969 chevrolet 327 cu.in.v-8, 42p.pdf. Since I am putting it on a web server, I changed the name to my convention: Stock-engine-test_1969-Chevrolet-327-cu.in.-V-8-42p_ABBYY.pdf. When pals talk trash about GM, I whip out this 45-year-old engine test. General Motors knows more about cars and good engineering than all the congressmen and lawyers put together. I still miss being an auto engineer.