I think it's great how companies today put manuals online for their products. I can't tell you how many times that I've lost the manual for something and gone to the well that is the Web to find some information.
That said, there is a right way and wrong way to publish information to the Web. The wrong way has been clearly illustrated by those vacuum geniuses, Dyson. Check out the link: Dyson PDF Mistake.
Now, I don't know how many of you would really care about this error, but it doesn't look good (on many levels) to have a print-ready copy of a PDF with full bleeds and crop marks on your website for the average customer to run into. Sure, you could go to any printing house and make your own suave looking copy of the manual (in bulk, no one-offs for trimming) with that PDF, but that one "benefit" really outweighs how much of a turn-off this is. If I try to print that out from my home computer, the information that I want will be reduced in size because of all of that extra bleed/trim. It would be an incredibly easy thing to correct. Ugly, just ugly carelessness. Tsk Tsk, Dyson.
Friday, January 25, 2008
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Headphone Review - Ultimate Ears Super Fi 3

The Super Fi 3 are essentially earplugs with speakers. Because they are earplugs first: you get better ambient noise canceling than larger headphones designed for the task, the noise canceling is passive, they are much smaller than the larger variety of over-the-ear noise canceling headphones so when you wear them you don't look like you're going as a cross-gender Princess Leia to an office work party. Once upon a time though, these types of aural pleasures were reserved strictly for performing musicians, but the price of these types of headphones has come down in recent years. To attest to their inside start, the Ultimte Ears company was actually the brainchild of a monitor engineer for Van Halen.
The Ultimate Ears Super Fi 3 retail for $99, but I got them for about $78 shipped from EarPhoneSolutions.com.
I picked them up for the following reasons:
- Headphone.com includes them in their Mobile Entry-fi package ($289), and I highly respect their opinion. I would have bought directly from them, but the extra five dollars in total cost… I got really cheap when it came time to submit my CC and I mitigated the damage to my conscience by purchasing from another small, specialized dealer (earphonesolutions.com).
- Headphone.com gave them a decent value rating.
- Cnet gave them a 7.7 rating (very good).
- Cnet hammered away on the comfort and quality seal of these canalphones, and comfort was very important to me.
- They came with five different types of in-ear adapters, so I was assured a quality fit somewhere in that spectrum.
After using them now, for probably about five hours a week (at least) for the past six months, I can say that I really do like them. They fit my budget and my requirements perfectly. I use them while doing housework, traveling on an airplane, or working out in the gym. An excellent "bang for the buck" purchase.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)