April 25, 2008

AVI ‘08

Filed under: Life, Mac, Technical — Joey @ 2:54 pm

I’m headed to Advanced Visual Interfaces ‘08 this summer in Naples, Italy to present the work Josh and I did on VCode + VData regarding video coding tools. I’m really proud, as it’s my first first-author!

You can download VCode and get more info about it on the Social website.

Enjoy!

VCode Main Window

April 19, 2008

Blu-Ray Laser Pointer

Filed under: Electronics, Laserist, Technical — Joey @ 10:46 pm

I was sitting in the basement of the Siebel Center one day when Matt Sparks mentioned the Blu-Ray Laser Phaser project, made possible by the Sony Blu-Ray replacement drive assembly for the PS3. I impulsively purchased one such module on eBay and set out to build the best possible Blu-Ray Laser Pointer.

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Home-built Blu-Ray Laser Pointer

I focused on building a high quality device. I am really happy with the size and quality of the case, and current-limited power supply, as opposed to the simple resistor based design some other designs suggest. I also opted for rechargeable Li-Ion batteries for great performance and size. This necessitated the installation of a charging jack on the back of the pointer as well.

Parts:

  • Sony KES-400a replacement Blu-Ray drive module for PlayStation 3
  • Pomona Electronics Size “B” Die Cast Aluminum Box with Cover, Baked Blue Enamel finish, Model# 2417
    as seen on page 53 of their catalog. All of their other products are great too. Highly Recommended.
  • 650nm 5mw 12X30mm laser module from Aixiz. This company, on the other hand, is as sketchy as you get, but I’ve always had great services, so, if you need cheap lasers, it works.
  • (2) AAA Li-Ion cells with solder tabs.
  • Protection Circuit Module for Li-Ion cells.

You’ll need some other items as well, such as a jack for charging the device, wires, a breadboard PCB, and various components for the power supply. You can pick those out from the schematic below though.

There’s lots of great info regarding the Blu-Ray diode on a page at Sam’s Laser FAQ. This was the source of the power supply circuit, and information about the amount of current that could be run through the diode. Unfortunately, the construction quality of the power supply isn’t the greatest, and I find the case design for the pointer at the bottom rather wasteful. The circuit is, however, of sound design.

It is only somewhat difficult to fit the power supply on to a suitably small breadboard to fit in the case. I think a smaller package version of the LM317 would be better suited than the TO-220 packaged one I chose.

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All parts ready for assembly / Power Supply


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Aperture / Operational

More pictures in the Album.

The experience using the Blu-Ray laser pointer is rather interesting. It is clearly extremely bright, and for this reason I must underscore the importance of being extremely careful to avoid eye exposure. However bright it is, sometimes it appears quite dim because the color is very near UV and normally much more deep violet than it appears in the photo above. On paper and bleached targets it does appear very blue, or even white on orange fluorescent surfaces. Occasionally there is even some eye-strain associated with looking at the beam incident on a light colored surface.

In a completely dark room it is even possible to see the beam in air, which is rather interesting, because the dot appears less bright than a cheap 5mw red laser pointer might in a well-lit room. I don’t have the appropriate equipment to properly measure light output, but I have chosen not to run it at maximum current in order to prolong diode life. It is plenty bright at it’s current level of ~30-40ma.

Soon I hope to label the box with appropriate warnings and specifications for the charging port on the back, but I need to prepare appropriate stencils for painting first. I think it is built such that I can expect many years of service before needing to service it.

I’d love to hear if you’re building one or have any questions about mine.

April 16, 2008

YouTube in MP4 via QuickTime Plugin!

Filed under: Technical, Web — Joey @ 4:09 pm

Today I saw this link on Daring Fireball that presents a bookmarklet to add a link to the YouTube page to download a (higher quality) MP4 version of the video you’re viewing. This is great, but I dislike flash in general, so I’d rather not even watch the embedded version to begin with. I’ve crafted the following bookmarklet to replace the existing flash player with an embedded QuickTime player for the MP4 file. Go try it out on YouTube.

To install the bookmarklet, simply drag it to your Bookmarks Bar (in Firefox, Safari):



This has only been tested on a Mac. I expect it won’t work on some other OSes because it uses the <embed> tag rather than the <object> tag. I encourage someone fix up this bookmarklet to work on other platforms by using the <object> tag, and condense it a little–because it is rather long. I’d be happy to post an updated version if someone improves it. Additionally, a GreaseKit script would be great too.

Enjoy!

Update:
Seems to work in Firefox on Windows.

Update:
Comment from Kris below provides a Greasemonkey/GreaseKit Userscript.
Userscript

Update:
Comment from Jean below suggests enlarging the size of the video to accommodate the new wider YouTube format. I’ve done this to the link above, but kept the format at “18″, as “22″ is still not widely available.

Update:
Jean was also kind enough to let me host this very informative chart (pdf) of precisely the file sizes, quality, and formats of all downloading format numbers that he made. Lots of info here!

Update:
See ClickToFlash 1.4+ supports H.264 loading to automatically load H.264 video for YouTube.

Update:
A reader has come up with a Safari 5 Extension that replaces the functionality of this bookmarklet. If you are using Safari 5, please consider using the plugin instead: FlashToHTML5.

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