DYLAN TWENEY
Dylan Tweney

Dylan Tweney

2006 posts
Rough Drafts

New chips transform photography, video.

While I was on vacation, a feature story I wrote earlier in the month got published on Wired. It’s about the technological progress in CMOS imaging chips, and why the tech is making it possible, for the first time, to record video on a digital single-lens reflex camera. Photographers are really exci
Dylan Tweney 2 min read
Wired

New Chips Poised to Revolutionize Photography, Film

For the first time, professional-grade single-lens reflex cameras are gaining the ability to record high-definition video. That capability, photographers say, has the potential to transform both still photography and moviemaking — and it’s largely thanks to advances in the semiconductor technology u
Dylan Tweney 6 min read
Rough Drafts

Where’s my freaking bailout?

I’m angry enough about the prospect of a stupidly conceived financial industry bailout that I wrote the following letter to my state Representative, Jackie Speier, as well as Senators Dianne Feinstein, Barbara Boxer, Barack Obama and John McCain. I would have sent a copy to Rep. Barney Frank as well
Dylan Tweney 1 min read
Rough Drafts

What Google needs to do now to save Android.

Today’s debut of the T-Mobile G1 is the first public appearance of an almost fully-baked consumer "Googlephone" — a phone based on Google’s Android operating system. There’s just one problem: There is no Googlephone. And that’s something Google must fix, and fast, if it wants its mobile operating sy
Dylan Tweney 2 min read
Wired

How Google Can Save Android From Certain Failure

Today’s debut of the T-Mobile G1 is the first public appearance of an almost fully-baked consumer "Googlephone" — a phone based on Google’s Android operating system. There’s just one problem: There is no Googlephone*. And that’s something Google must fix, and fast, if it wants its mobile operating s
Dylan Tweney 4 min read
Rough Drafts

Mobile industry presents huge opportunities for startups.

The mobile industry offers enormous opportunity right now for entrepreneurs who can create excellent user experiences. And doing that doesn’t require a degree in rocket science or access to high-end technology. Startups like Jaiku and Twitter have created huge communities of excited, engaged followe
Dylan Tweney 1 min read
Rough Drafts

Bigfoot hunters fail to produce corpse.

This was one of the more absurd assignments I’ve volunteered for recently: I covered a press conference in Palo Alto today where a trio of men claimed to have found a Bigfoot corpse, and produced blurry photos in an effort to substantiate their claim. What’s worse, my own photos of the press confere
Dylan Tweney
Wired

Bigfoot Hunters Fail to Produce Creature’s Corpse

PALO ALTO, California — Georgia residents Matthew Whitton and Rick Dyer say they’ve found Bigfoot — and not only that, they say they have his body. They just didn’t happen to have the creature’s corpse with them for their press conference Friday. At the well-attended gathering, Dyer and Whitton, tog
Dylan Tweney 4 min read
Media Appearances

Big Ideas for a Small Planet.

The Sundance Channel has a show called “Big Ideas for a Small Planet.” Awhile back they interviewed me for that show, and now it appears that the episode — which is about “green gadgets” — is out. It’s a $2 purchase in iTunes. It seems that they also put me in the free, 30-second preview […]
Dylan Tweney 1 min read
Wired

First Look: iPhone 3G Fires on (Almost) Every Cylinder

It’s not the groundbreaking, industry-changing event that the original iPhone was. But the iPhone 3G is a worthy upgrade to Apple’s smartphone, and fixes a few flaws that kept many people from buying the first version. The addition of fast 3G wireless data, GPS and a more flexible, extensible operat
Dylan Tweney 4 min read
Wired

Nanotubes Hold Promise for Next-Generation Computing

Carbon nanotubes grown on silicon wafers go in all directions (right), whilenanotubes grown on crystalline quartz are much more orderly, mostly growingin straight rows (left).Image: Stanford University Department of Electrical Engineering Carbon nanotubes have been around for more than a decade, but
Dylan Tweney 4 min read

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