Month: August 2010

  • 11 Famous Sony Products, Ranked From Worst Failure to Biggest Success

    I don’t agree with all the rankings, but he isn’t too far off. Great list and some great memories.

  • The Secret History of Apple’s Command Symbol (and others)

    Bryan Gardiner:

    Alternately known as the Gorgon loop, the splat, the infinite loop, and, in the Unicode standard, a “place of interest sign,” the command symbol has remained a mainstay on Apple keyboards to this day.

  • Fuck you, Money

    Antonio from Adgrok:

    Crunching more realistic numbers, ‘fuck-you money’ is about $4.2MM for a 30 year old guy who plans on dying at 70 and wants to make $200K/year. Well within the payout picture of a fortunate startup founder whose company is acquired.

    This is one of the best articles I have read in a long time, truly fantastic and a must read for anyone thinking about starting a company.

  • PadPressed – WordPress Optimized for the iPad

    If you have an iPad visit the site, it is an impressive plug-in and I am seriously considering buying it for this site ($49.99). I don’t use WPTouch to optimize because I think it looks like crap – this though looks pretty nice.

    [Updated: 8/16/10 at 2:37 PM] I now have PadPressed up and running on this site – iPad users please check it out and let me know what you think.

  • News on Why HP Fired Hurd – A He Said Board Said Accounting

    Sounds like the bottom line was that Hurd and the Board of HP did not get along.

  • Apple’s New iAds Platform Is a Power Struggle

    Everybody is making this out to sound like Apple is shooting themselves in the foot and trying to control yet another industry. I however would like to offer this to you: Apple is trying to make mobile advertising not look like crap, and that takes time. More than time it takes changing the hearts and minds of advertisers – advertisers always think they know best.

  • Michael Lopp on Geeks at work

    Lopp (aka Rands):

    I did a lot of research into figuring out the difference between nerd and geek. There really isn’t one. The Venn diagram completely intersects. For every great definition of nerd, you can find the same definition of geek.

  • Technology Saved This Hikers Ass

    In no uncertain terms technology (and Verizon) saved me from being on the news as a lost hiker this weekend. I went for a hike this past Saturday at Tonga Ridge located in the Mt. Baker National Forest two and a half hours north-east of Seattle. My wife had bailed on Friday evening, so that left me and a buddy to hike – on a day when the weather was set to be in the low 90s.

    On the way out to the trail we jokingly went over all the survival gear we had for an absolute emergency – we had plenty to weather for a few days (assuming we could forage for some food). My buddy, let’s call him Steve, was showing off some of the apps that he adjust got for his brand new HTC Incredible (Verizon Android phone).

    We set off on a six mile round trip hike that started at an elevation of 4400 feet and moved up to 4800 feet. We quickly covered the three miles in, as the weather was still very cool. Upon hitting the three mile mark we were presented with three different trails we could take for side hikes, only one of which was marked. We knew ahead of time that we wanted to try and make it to Fisher Lake, so we could cool off before hiking back. Not knowing which trail to take I pulled out my iPhone to see if I had internet reception and much to my surprise I had two bars on the Edge network (slow ass AT&T network). We decided to take the trail marked Bear Creek even though the iPhone said it appeared to head in the wrong direction, away from the lake. We wanted to stick to a marked trail and it seemed the best bet at the time.

    Wrong Choice

    Fifteen minutes into the trail Steve and I decided we were off course and turned around. Getting back we checked both of our phones and our compasses and decided on the trail heading due south, as that was the direction of the lake. Fifteen minutes in it looked like we were off course, using the compasses on our phones we checked our heading, still due south. At this point we bumped into a group of women hiking who seemed confident we were on the right trail, and told us when they had done it before explaining that you had to hike up over the ridge ahead.

    The Ridge

    Hiking along the trail became very difficult to follow as it wound through a forest and up a ridge. We scrambled (sometimes on our hands) to climb about 700 feet in less than a mile. An exhausting climb, one that we hoped we did not have to go back down. Exhausted we reached the top of the ridge – no lake in sight. We checked the compass and Google Maps (only the Incredible had reception at this point) to confirm where we were in relation to the lake. We were no where close, still about a half mile away.

    After much exploring and finding a couple other trails we admitted defeat and called it quits. We turned back and hiked out, never reaching out destination and exerting more energy than we needed too.

    The Ass Saving Part

    As I sit here a day later on my balcony writing this I realize just how important our phones were to us in that situation. Had we not had reception we may still be on that ridge thinking we were just moments away from seeing the lake. Knowing where you are in relation to where you want to go with the precision and fool-proofness of GPS is nothing short of amazing. Had we only had a map and compass I am sure we would have gotten lost, or worse believed we where closer than we were. Map reading is easy, map reading to determine your location in the middle of the forest takes a lot of skill. Hitting a button on your phone tell you your exact location and direction you are facing takes no skill.

    We turned around because the Incredible told us with 100% certainty that we had made very little progress while expending tons of energy doing it. We turned around because we knew we were not getting to that lake, and we knew that because of GPS, and the robust Verizon network. A map would have not shown us the same, it would have allowed us to question where we really were.

    One last thing, when Steve and I realized that we were off course (i.e. Lost), Steve took down our latitude and longitude (i.e. our GPS coordinates) and texted them to his dad. Someone now knew where we were and could send a search party right to us if we didn’t return home that night. Smart.

    Technology and Brains

    Technology really did help us, but it is no substitute for playing it smart. We made the decision to turn around, we made the call that enough was enough and we were lost. The phones just gave us the information we needed to make that call. Hike smart, hike safe, take your phone with you always.

    (Also it doesn’t hurt to have phones on different carriers with you, thanks for the help Verizon. Also AT&T WTF?)

  • Study Reveals 75 Percent of Individuals Use Same Password for Social Networking and Email

    Don’t be stupid, get 1Password and make different complicated passwords for everything – do this now.

  • Jeffrey Zeldman: iPad Fonts Petition

    Zeldman:

    Please either add the ability to retain fonts (and all their settings) when importing Keynote, Pages, and Numbers documents from computer to iPad, or else please create a simple font management tool for the iPad that allows us to import reasonable subset of our fonts to the device.

    I second the motion.

  • Apple manager charged with taking kickbacks from suppliers

    Eric Bangeman:

    According to the indictment, Devine had the companies bidding to supply iPod and iPad components wire numerous small payments to a number of US and offshore bank accounts held by him and at least one shell company. Devine is currently in custody in California, while an IRS agent declined to tell the The Mercury News if Ang was in custody.

  • New iPad Bag – Booq Boa Push

    Just got my new iPad bag dropped off today – Booq Boa Push. Very small, very nice looking – review to come.

    Booq Boa Push for iPad

  • How Google routed around Sun’s IP-based licensing restrictions on Java ME

    This could be tricky for Google to get out the Oracle lawsuit without paying up something. Also be sure to check out this link with some more information about the lawsuit – apparently Oracle knew about the potential to sue and was a marketing factor in the sale of Sun.

  • Voogle Wireless

    An attempt to get Google to wake up.

  • Home Office De-Cluttered

    Thought I would post a quick shot of my home office where I have been working for the past couple of days. I love this setup and usually only work from home on Fridays, however my car has been in the shop since yesterday. I took some time to de-clutter it a bit and here is what it looks like now.

    Home Office De-Cluttered

    A couple of notes about the setup:

    The drawer on the left with the Apple sticker on it houses a USB hub (that is the USB cord you see plugged into the Macbook Pro) and four hard drives (backup and media drives). The MBP stand is from Raindesign and the iPad stand is from Griffin. The cord you see sticking up just above the black cabinet on the left is a charger for my bluetooth headset and Verizon MiFi. Under the desk is a large (huge) batter backup, a shredder and an always full garbage can.

  • Justin Blanton’s Magic Trackpad Review

    Justin Blanton:

    I think another reason I’m enjoying the Magic Trackpad is because it doesn’t require my hand to move very far to get to it. I’m a keyboard guy — if it can be done with a keyboard instead of a mouse, I use a keyboard. Always. Having the trackpad so close to the keyboard in my case, just a few inches to the right of it; much closer than my mouse makes it feel more like an extension of the keyboard, and less like a separate device.

    Just got back from the Apple store where I tried to pick one up for myself – none in stock. I hope to get one next week, from toting around with it in the store I can see how appealing it is.

  • Google Predictions

    Last night my wife and I were too tired to cook and didn’t want to spend time in a restaurant – so we walked over to the Taco Time that is a few hundred feet away. What follows is from a discussion I was having with my wife (whom I am sure was bored) about this Google hubbub.

    After explain the situation to her and toying with the idea of going Google-less in my life I came up with a few predictions about the future of Google.

    (Note that for the past year now I have had a strong feeling that Google would not be around in 5 years – that is they would be around in the sense that AOL is still around now).

    1. Come next Spring Eric Schmidt will no longer be CEO.
    2. Larry Page and Sergey Brin will take on the CEO role together. This will cause the media to fall in love with the company all over again.
    3. Google will get more ruthless in pushing Android phones.
    4. Google will start to make millions selling marketing research data (your data) to marketers over the next few years.
    5. We still won’t have Net-neutrality but Google will continue to flip-flop on the issue as it suits their needs.

    That about covers it.

  • CourseSmart eTextbooks for iPad and iPhone

    I wish they would have had this when I was a kid. The iPad is not light, but have you seen how heavy kids’ backpacks are these days?

  • Google, Just Cut The BS And Give The Gordon Gekko Speech Already

    MG Siegler:

    And I have to agree. Further, Google’s response to the backlash today stating the “facts” about their proposal with Verizon sort of pisses me off.

    and:

    Instead, Google’s intentions are much more transparent: greed. Greed also tends to have a negative connotation, but I’m of the Gordon Gekko mentality that “greed works.” It’s what drives this country. And as a public company, whether we want to admit it or not, it’s what drives Google.

    This is what I have been saying all along Google is getting greed. I do disagree with Siegler with respects to Google being ‘evil’ – no they are not a Bond villain – but by their own definition they seem to be teetering on the edge of evility (is that a word?).