I actually hate watching videos on my phone, or using it for much of anything 
that isn’t essential. It may have a relatively large screen (an LG V30) but 
it’s just too frigging small to view things comfortably for very long; and 
without earphones or something, I can barely hear it. (Why do speakers on 
mobile devices always point BACKWARDS? You have to be facing a wall to get a 
good reflection to hear the audio well.)

Being in my 60’s now, neither my eyesight nor my hearing are what they once 
were. Devices today seem to be optimized for people with “younger” sight and 
hearing. The rest of us have to compensate, and now look at all the crap I’ve 
got to take simply trying to do that! As I said earlier, people are wont to 
come up with all sorts of workarounds based on their own needs and assumptions, 
without giving much consideration of limitations others may be dealing with.

As I said, I have three tablets and one more on the way. Two Android, two iOS. 
I don’t like having to load content onto them first. I also have protective 
cases on ALL of them (including my phone) so plugging in/out a microSD card on 
the ones that allow it is extremely inconvenient. Plugging something into the 
USB port is also inconvenient b/c they all have different ways of accessing the 
media (and iOS is especially cumbersome!)

I just want to be able to pick up a device and quickly select and view 
something residing on my own storage medium, whichever device it may be, 
whenever, with the same “user experience”, and without having to think about it 
first and have to prepare. That’s supposed to be what the promises of WiFi and 
“the cloud" are all about, right?

Why is that so damn difficult for people to grasp?

And that also includes the Chrome PC dongle I’ve got plugged into my TV so I 
can surf the Internet, since these “Smart OS” TVs can’t do that on their own. 
(These so-called “Smart OS” TVs seem to be able to access any PAID service you 
can think of, but none of your own content without having to plug something in.)

To quote a famous guy about a new form of communications technology from the 
past: “What hath god wrought?”

WE (software developers) are the people who design this stuff, and inflict our 
often painful and limiting assumptions, reasonings, and expectations on an 
innocent user community who has to explain and cajole and STILL be dismissed!

Does anybody remember back to when you had to connect your computer to specific 
LANs, you had to figure out which interface box was being used, then download 
specific drivers, install them, and fight with DOS compatibility problems until 
you could get them to connect to the server? Imagine having to go through that 
every time you wanted to switch between WiFi networks today. 

And back then, I’m sure there were people saying, “I don’t want to have to deal 
with all of these different types of networks, I just want it to work!” while 
the geeks were giving excuses about, “Well, how can you expect to get an 
optimal connection without specific drivers?” and “why do you need to move your 
computer around?” and “you’d be better off just getting your employer to set up 
different computers at the different places you need to work so you don’t have 
to keep switching from one type of interface to another” and “Why don’t you get 
your employer to switch to 100% of the same interface boxes so this isn’t a 
problem?”. Remember having to deal with two or three different LANs in the same 
building? I remember hearing all of these excuses from people back then! They 
were essentially saying, “Why should the tehcnology adapt to poor business 
decisions?” Well, look where we are today. Some improvement, and yet the same 
arguments for technological limitations to accomdate user’s needs.

WiFi today — you just select one by name, enter a password, and viola! The need 
to worry about the interfaces being used is no longer an issue. The software 
now figures it out for you. 


If anybody is noticing, the memory contained in mobile devices is growing 
almost exponentially year-over-year, at the same time as vendors are tripping 
over themselves to migrate services into the Cloud. There’s a disconnect here.

I’ve never used more than 16GB of storage on ANY of my mobile devices. Why do I 
need 256GB? 

I want to be able to access ONE COPY of MY OWN CONTENT that lives in ONE PLACE, 
from ANY DEVICE, ANY TIME, ANY WHERE, without any advance preparation or 
thought.

There are three ways to make this happen: (1) clone all of my content to all of 
my devices transparently (ie., how Dropbox does it); (2) I’d have a device 
where I put my content and I can access it from anywhere at any time. It might 
sync with a cloud account to provide that as a global access point, but 
otherwise the content isn’t duplicated across all of my devices; or (3) 
physically plug a storage medium into each device I want to use to access 
things on it.

Option (1) is the dominant approach today. Option (3) is possible today, but is 
inconvenient, and probably won’t ever get much better. 

I believe (2) is the future, because it requires the least amount of 
involvement from end users. That’s the trend history shows things follow. And 
that’s what I’m looking for right now; it’s clearly not feasible yet, either in 
technical solutions or in terms of how technologists think yet.

Rusty, tell your student to keep refining that project, and maybe help turn it 
into a real product. It’ll be the dominant means of accessing media in 10 
years! Because it just won’t be very convenient if 90% of all data bandwidth is 
taken up syncing terabytes of individually managed user data among multiple 
devices per user.

-David Schwartz


> On Nov 16, 2018, at 2:38 PM, Carruth, Rusty <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Our mails passed in the ether.  I suggested an RPi, because I'm pretty sure 
> it can stream video, unless maybe you're thinking 4k at 120FPS or something...
> 
> A student of mine created a portable media server, with included video 
> camera, on an RPi, in a cute little box, very small.
> 
> And would a 8000mAH usb battery power it for long enough?  I don't know.
> 
> And, how big is your pocket? 
> 
> And I'm not sure how downloading direct to the phone counts as a change to a 
> work habit, as it sounded like you were trying to use your phone for this 
> anyway, but maybe I misunderstood.  No biggie, we're talking Pi right now 
> anyway
> 
> Rusty
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: PLUG-discuss [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
> Of David Schwartz
> 
> Thanks, but I’m looking for HARDWARE suggestions, not advice on how to 
> reinvent my work habits.
> 
> 
> I did find one thing that looks promising: Asus Travelair N Wireless 1TB Hard 
> Disk
> 
> Does anybody know if RPi's have enough horesepower to stream a video? Can I 
> fit one in a case with a battery that fits in your pocket?
> 
> -David Schwartz
> 
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