Zune | The VidZone Network Blog

August 21, 2009

“Squircle” is not the sound it makes when you touch it


Image credit: RussellHeimlich.com

I recently upgraded from my original Zune 30 to a Zune 80 thanks to a phenomenal sale price online. I love its smaller body, longer battery life, and of course the more than doubled capacity.

Aside from non-tactile feedback, I also dislike touch-based controls on portable devices due the the additional battery drain the technology introduces.

After trying out the new touch-sensitive, swipable squircle for a while, I ultimately turned it off in favor of sticking with traditional 5-way d-pad control. I operate the MP3 player blindly in the car, tracking forward and backwards in songs and skipping tracks. I didn’t want to inadvertently jump around or alter the volume level just by keeping my thumb on the squircle.

I was experiencing some unresponsiveness and unintentional (often opposite) behavior sometimes. Why won’t it read my clicks? Why is the volume raising instead of skipping a track? Why’s the track restarting instead of skipping forward?

I’ve since figured out the mystery. It turns out the Zune Pad’s touch setting only deactivates swipe gestures. Otherwise the touch-sensitivity is still active, and in fact determines the action taken when the squircle is depressed. In fact, I don’t it’s a traditional 5-way d-pad at all; I believe there’s a single microswitch under the big button. The Zune uses it’s touch sensor to determine whether your finger is in the up/down/left/right/center zone when the button is depressed. If you press any direction with a fingernail, nothing happens since there’s no skin contact to send electrical signals. And if you put a finger on one direction but press the opposite direction with a fingernail, the action activated is the one where your skin is making contact with the pad.

Clever implementation…but sometimes annoying. Fortunately, my battery life is phenomenal, though I haven’t put the unit through a multi-day endurance trial yet.

Carl @ 5:42 pm
Filed under: Gadgets,Techniques — Tags: , ,

May 28, 2009

The alphabet X to Z

Or, rather, Z to X, as the case may be.

Alongside the announcement of the Zune HD (to take on the iPod Touch), Microsoft has announced that the Zune video marketplace will supplant the current Xbox Live Video Marketplace on the console. No word on if the music store will follow or if Xbox-related videos will now be downloadable to through Zune’s PC software.

I think this integration has been a long time coming. Consider that ever since the Zune launched, it shared the same servers as Xbox Live content, shared the same “gamertag,” and used Microsoft Points from the same pool. (The last point makes Nintendo’s division of Wii-only points and DSi-only points an odd decision.) J Allard and many of Microsoft’s Entertainment & Devices group went from working on the Xbox to the Zune. It’s always all been in the same family with what seems to me minimal political hiccups getting in the way of synergy between the two brands.

The justification I’ve been using to explain that lack of cross-over was in the licensing terms. I’d figured that maybe some time early on when the umbrella terms were drafted, they called for media playback specifically only on the Xbox 360, not taking into consideration portability to other devices.

With the video store, it’s possible, though hopefully unlikely, to have purchased the same video on both the Zune and Xbox Live Video Marketplace. The smart user with a network would have only bought from the Zune storefront and streamed the video to their Xbox 360.

Personally, I’m hoping that I’ll be able to download all the gaming videos from the Xbox Live Video Marketplace to my PC, where hard drive space is more plentiful. I have a 120GB hard drive on my console, and it is chock full of gigs upon gigs of trailers, developer’s diaries, press conferences, and concerts. I need to regularly delete older demos just to make room for a new one, and there have been occasions I didn’t even have enough space to download a new Rock Band/Guitar Hero song.

Carl @ 2:41 am
Filed under: Gadgets — Tags: , ,