Sunday, October 24, 2010

Save the manuals?

I am an avid reader of "car and driver" and recently noticed their campaign called "Save the manuals". "Car and Driver" writers/contributors are concerned that manual transmissions are going away for good and that as drivers we are going to miss not having manuals.

This campaign immediately reminded me of the old schoolers who were complaining about ABS. They were in favor of pumping the brake pedal if more braking power was needed. They even claimed that ABS is not any safer and may cause more accidents. Well now ABS is every where I consider it a must in any modern car.

The idea of modern dual clutch transmissions replacing 5spd or 6spd manual transmission should be welcomed. Dual clutch transmissions bring the best out of both automatic and manual transmissions. They provide fully automatic modes when you are stuck in traffic and give you the ability to engage the gear of your choice in a blink of an eye.

For years I have driven manual car and will chose to do so over conventional automatic transmissions. By conventional automatic transmissions I refer to the torque converter based automatic transmissions. These transmissions not only sap power out of your engine, they also do not provide you with the ability to hold on to a gear when you are in a turn or when you are climbing a hill among many other situations. Depending on the implementation logic, many of these transmissions are focused on fuel economy rather than any driving thrill.

DSG or dual clutch transmissions change that all. It provides you with the ability to :

- Select your own gear and hold on to it as engine is hitting the redline, that is no automatic upshift
- blazing fast gear shifts by using two different clutches to select your next gear while you are in your current gear
- provides comfortable and mostly clunk free automatic mode to get you through the traffic
- blips throttle to match engine revs
- better launch control system (just check Porsche's PDK)
- even provides better fuel economy (sometimes)

So why I would still want to get a manual transmission car if the DSC equipped one provided me with all these features at a negligible price hike beats me. Granted, I will miss the mechanical feel that comes from shifting gears through well spaced shift gates and the satisfaction of being able to rev match on downshifts. In the real world, the benefits of DSGs simply overrun the fun factor of a manual transmission.

So I say, lets embrace the technology like many car manufactures (Lamborghini, Ferrari, Porsche, Audi, VW, BMW to name a few) and welcome DSGs. Many of the modern high performance cars do not even have the option of a manual transmission. DSGs are the future of automobile transmission and they are here to stay. Good bye manual transmission, you will be missed ...

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Turbo RWD coupe anyone?

While youtubing (I am sure this will become a verb soon) I stumbled upon a review of the humble Pontiac Solstice GXP coupe. I had kind of forgotten about that car. Initial review of the Solstice (vs the Miata/MX5) had put a bad rep on it. Reviewer pointed out to it's lack of steering feel, ho hum ride quality and so so chassis. GM might have taken those reviews seriously and came up with the Solstice GXP with their gem of an engine, the turbo ecotec 2.0. The recipy is perfect, a simple RWD coupe with solid chassis, suspension and a torquey little 4 banger.

For years, I had craved for a such a car. Pontiac seemed to have hit the nail on the spot. Interestingly, buyers didn't came too much for the GXP and with Pontiac's sudden demise it was killed off.

Looking at the current product line of all major automakers, I don't see a single roadster based turbo car offering. The only two that come close are 1) Hyundai's Genesis 2.0T coupe and 2) BMW's z4 sDrive335IS.

The Genesis is in a different category and although the BMW is a roadster (a bulky one) it's way too expensive. So there is a huge void in this type of sub 3000lb 2 door turbo coupe/roadster with hardtop niche market. Granted the economy has not been favorable for the introduction of such cars.

Given the current emphasis in fuel efficiency and thirst for power, I hope to see more cars like the Pontiac Solstice GXP which cater to customer's like me. Just in case anyone is listening, here is what I am looking for: :D

- sub 3k lb gross weight
- hardtop (retractable or not)
- RWD
- turbo 4 with at least 260ft-lb torque
- 6speed with a long overdrive on 6th
- sub 30k price range
- 7000-7500 rpm redline

It seems Toyota's FT86 is coming to fruition and it meets most of the above criteria. For the time being I will try to stay satisfied with my VQ35HR powered Nissan RWD coupe.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

So I bought a Macbook Pro!

After years of staying away from Macs I finally gave in and got myself a Macbook pro. My philosophy is that whatever I would want to do in a Mac I can do in a Linux machine (which is my primary choice of OS). For the most part it is true, except that Iphone SDK + xCode does not install in a Linux machine. I want to get into iPhone app development badly!

Macs are expensive, there is no denying that. They are well built and prior to the OSX becoming available, I thought of them as appliances that my grandma might use to check her emails. Simply put, macs are built for simplicity. I necessarily do not look for simplicity when I am using a computer, I like to challenge myself with difficulty that a Linux machine makes you go through. So the high price and the maturity of recent Linux distros (Ubuntu for example) I stuck to my DIY pcs and old dell for my computing.

I got the mac from micro center as I looked for the best deal. After agreeing to buy the mac, the store manager showed up with a smiling face and greeted me, as if I am royalty! With a broad smile he was like, thanks for buying a mac and we want to make sure you enjoy it fully; out came a business card.

I enjoy using the Mac primarily for it's elegant look and the overall build quality. There is something special about holding a solid piece of aluminum holding your computing machinery! It has a premium feel to it that I can compare with the feeling I had when I drove my Audi!

Overall I am happy with it and it's hard to get back to using a different keyboard after using the Mac. It makes my old dell feel completely worthless!

So will I buy a mac again sure, but not in next 3-4 yrs! Oh btw, I forgot to mention, I do think at 1.1k 13.3" macbook pro is totally worth the money. The 15"+ plus are still outrageously priced...

Intertech Rocks!

So my employer (who is great but shall remain anonymous) sent me for Spring 2.5/3.0 training recently. Company has relation with a local in town (read suburbian) company that provides Spring training. BTW, I am talking about Spring framework of course. I have worked with Spring for a number of years, but the saying goes, "If you taught yourself something you only learned half of it" (I paraphrased this from our VP's recent speech).

Intertech is a small compnay with an interesting history (their website does a great job of going into that). I have been to many training sessions/classes through out my 5 yr career and something stood out about this company! Their training materials were fantastically arranged. Everything had a touch of care to it. From the way the secretary's greetings to the way the binders were arranged immediately impressed me. To put icing on the top of my first impression, they served fabulous coffee (caribou I believe) and had great assortment of breakfast pasty. It seemed, that the company employees are allowed to dig into those as well but I digress!

The trainer was a 20+ yr veteran of the tech industry and was one of the partner/director of the company. He was very knowledgeable yet down to earth guy. Training had a good pace and gave us ample opportunity to put the training into practice with the exercises they had after each chapter.

The equipments (pains me to utter this word, I am a huge computer geek) at the training facility were great and had a nice image based system management which wiped the pcs clean after each training session. All the files and folders were in sync with the presentation material unlike many other places I had been before for training.

I was there for two days and all in all it was a great experience. I highly recommend Intertech if you are looking to get training in the twin cities area (or if you are one of the few fortunate to travel out of town for training). Its a great company with a great environment and I can see them going far.

PS: I am claiming their $10 caribou card for putting their logo in my blog, but no they did not pay me to write this review!

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Say movie buff!

So my hobby recently took a turn towards setting up a home theater! It's quite interesting as I live in an apartment. Fortunately the rooms are large and are perfect for setting up large screen viewing.

I went into my usual buying spree and ended up buying 4 projectors - three HD projectors of various brand and one LED SVGA projector. I also ended up buying 4 sets of surround speakers and 4 receivers. I also ended up buying 2 bluray players and an upconverting DVD player supporting DIVX, XVID etc. The end result is two large screen setup that I like to call HT. One in the living room and one in the bedroom.

I like the end result though it may not be what you will see at an elegant celebrity home theater. The experience of watching HD movie in 120+ inch screen makes me want to re-watch movies that I enjoyed before. I am however finding that I am quickly going through the bluray collection Netflix and Blockbuster offer!

Some may argue that HT lacks the experience of going to a movie. Recently I found this post in the AVS forum that I thought was hilarious.

I am quoting Cryofax from one of this thread:

"If you've got an HTPC you can simulate the theatre experience. On mine I have a 15 minute pre-movie "slide-show" I cobbled together myself using trivia slides off a movie slide supply website, and in between I post funny pictures found off "comedy" websites. People love it. Then my home theatre intro, then a couple of the latest previews (downloaded off the net), and to the movie... Not to mention IR turns down the lights at the proper moment etc etc.

I even leave the theatre in the middle of the movie, go upstairs and call down to my wife's cel phone just to simulate a real theatre. Then I come back and sit behind one of my guests and kick his seat for a while, throw popcorn in his/her hair, and finally pinch my 2-year old so she'll cry throughout the film. Ahhh the movies...

- Cryo"


Now that's real funny! That's all for this morning. Time to go to work ....

Saturday, November 21, 2009

One of the best racing videos I have seen lately

This is one of the best racing videos I have seen lately. It was the final race of the ALMS 2009 season:

Split your desktop in Windows XP

For my Windows Operating system needs (Ubuntu is my primary OS), I am still stuck with using Windows XP. So recently when I saw a Windows 7 ad showing how to split your desktop in half (vertically) I wanted to find out if Windows XP had that option. To be honest, I was looking to find an application that would enable that feature. Turns out, XP did have this feature out of the box. Here is a link to an article/blog post that shows how this can be achieved in XP: Split desktop in Windows XP

I guess I will be sticking with good ole XP for some time.