Sunny Days, Baseball and The Flip Camera
April 18, 2009 by Jason Bean
Filed under Computers
It’s that time of year again. Time to spend some hours at the park watching your kids play baseball and other sports right? That’s exactly what I did today and it was absolutely gorgeous here in Indianapolis. This is the second season my son will be playing baseball, but it’s the first year I’ve been able to get video of him and his team playing on my Flip Ultra video camera.

Image: TheFlip.com
It’s absolutely perfect for this kind of stuff and came in really handy today. I was able to quickly get clips of each of his team members batting that I’m sure their families will enjoy seeing once I get them posted to Vimeo, my preferred online sharing location for video. The quality is just so much better than what you get on YouTube.
The Flip is just handy for pulling out of your pocket and grabbing a quick video of something you’d like to remember or share with others. In my opinion it’s even handier than my digital camera most of the time. It’s almost single button operation allows you to quickly pull it out, turn it on and almost immediately start recording.
One area I think it could be improved on though is the ability to choose more locations to upload your video from the Flip software you use to manage the files. Vimeo isn’t one of the locations currently specified, so I have to do stuff a bit manually.
Afraid of Breaking out that Bike?
Love the look. Love the name. Love the “power on demand” feature that could be so beneficial to people who are too out-of-shape to get regular exercise on their own.
OHMcycles manufactures hybrid bicycles in either “urban” or “sporty” styles.
Urban styles comes standard with fenders, rear carry racks, chain guards and kickstands, while both variety come with front and rear lights. They’re built more for comfort, and leisurely pace.

Sport varieties have larger batteries, offer more power, and are suited to rough terrain.
Both go up to 20 miles per hour (32 km per hour) and charge in 3 to 4 hours. Depending on how much power you demand from the bike, a charge can provide for 19 to 74 miles with 500 complete charges finishing up a battery’s life.
The bikes are available at retailers throughout North America and Europe, an easy to use search can be found at their website.
Image: OHM


![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=f45e210f-1b77-4e78-8e81-4eaf711df000)























