Shawn and I talk about BBQ grills, naming products with a Y in place of an `i` and turning tablets into laptops.
Year: 2012
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‘More to Discover on Our Latest iPhone, Android Apps’
From the Twitter blog on the latest iOS/Android app update:
>Lastly, we’ve added push notifications for Interactions, so you can know immediately when your Tweets have been retweeted or favorited, or when somebody new follows your account.Who would want this? Worse yet: these new notifications are on by default, even though I only updated the app. That alone should be a criminal offense.
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Pop, Soda, Coke
Samuel Arbesman:
>One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise).Neat map.
[via Next Draft] -
Tweet of the Day: Dave Pell
Every page with web comments should be sponsored by antidepressants.— Dave Pell (@davepell) April 26, 2012 -
The Privacy Concerns of Google Drive
Nilay Patel breaking down the privacy implications of cloud storage services:
>In the end, though, the actual wording of these documents doesn’t reveal much — they all set out to do the same thing, and they all accomplish their goals. What’s most important is how much trust you’re willing to give companies like Google, Microsoft, Apple, and Dropbox as more and more of your data moves to the cloud.[via The Loop] -
‘The iPad as Gateway Drug’
For all the talk of the iPad being priced too high, it sure is funny that, as Philip Elmer-DeWitt reports:
>Now, according to a new NPD survey, their first Apple (AAPL) product is more likely to be an iPhone or, increasingly, an iPad.
The iPad is selling like crazy, but I am not so sure it is going to have as large of a halo effect on Macs as the iPhone does — for one, it can do much more than an iPhone and many think of the iPad as a computer and not a complimentary device to a computer.
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TSA Jacks $300 from a 95 Year Old Man
Marney Rich Keenan:
>”Can you imagine an 85-year-old lady and 95-year-old retired Air Force Major in wheelchairs being treated like terrorists?” Petti asked recently sitting in the kitchen of the Bloomfield Township home he shares with Woodward.I can’t imagine it, but apparently the TSA can.
And later, after TSA jacked $300 and a police report was filed:
>Nobody, he says, is giving him a straight answer. “The police said they went and reviewed the videotapes but they were too blurry,” Petti says. Petti’s son Bill, who is helping his father, doubts that. “You can bet if my father were a terrorist, those videos would not be too blurry.”
Ugh.
[via reader Stuart R.] -
Kaspersky: “Fair” and “Balanced” “Analysis”
Steve Evans reporting:
>”I think they [Macs] are ten years behind Microsoft in terms of security,” Kaspersky told CBR.Not quoted were the direct links, prices, and features of the [Mac based security software](http://usa.kaspersky.com/products-services/home-computer-security/anti-virus-for-mac) that Kaspersky sells.
[via Cult of Mac] -
Obama Shuts Down the TSA
Oh wait, nope that’s him on a late night comedy show, but I’m sure he is all over the TSA incompetence.
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TSA Agents Accused Of Taking Bribes To Let Drugs Through LAX Checkpoints
Chris Morran:
>Last night and this morning, authorities arrested two current and two former screeners at Los Angeles International Airport for allegedly taking bribes to not notice that travelers were secreting stashes of coke, meth and pot in their suitcases.
Imagine what I would find if I even tried to find stories about TSA stupidity…
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The Devaluation of Everything: The Perils of Panflation
The Economist:
>Estimates by The Economist suggest that the average British size 14 pair of women’s trousers is now more than four inches wider at the waist than it was in the 1970s. In other words, today’s size 14 is really what used to be labelled a size 18; a size 10 is really a size 14. -
‘On the Meaning of “Settle”’
Spot on analysis by Matt Drance.
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‘How Far Do Google Drive’s Terms Go in ‘Owning’ Your Files?’
I really tried to keep from reading about Google Drive, but so many of you sent me stuff about the TOS for Google Drive that I couldn’t ignore it. Zack Whittaker does a nice job breaking it down and compares what Google is asking for versus other services, the money quote:
>Simply put: there’s no definitive boundary that keeps Google from using what it likes from what you upload to its service.I am sure you are *shocked*.
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TSA Has No Idea How to Screen a 7-Year-Old With Cerebral Palsy
Chris Morran reporting for The Consumerist:
>”[T]he woman started screaming at me and cursing me and threatening me,” the father recalls.He’s talking about a TSA officer. What’s particularly funny is the TSA statement to the site, which makes no mention of action taken against rude employees. What a bunch of assholes.
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Macs, Malware, and Anti-virus Software
Lucian Constantin reporting on malware for Macs:
>Sophos collected malware detection statistics from 100,000 Mac computers that run its free antivirus product and found that 20 percent of them contained one or more types of Windows malware.I don’t care what Sophos found, because I don’t trust Sophos, but what I find interesting is the above number: 100,000. Does that number mean that Sophos only has convinced 100,000 Mac users that their free anti-virus software is worth it?
And is an anti-virus customer the best yard stick for Mac users if only a fraction of Mac users actually have anti-virus software? I think not.
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Amazon Item of the Week: Aden + Anais Muslin Swaddle Blanket
These were given to us as a gift and they are hands down our favorite blankets to swaddle our daughter in — we don’t even bother with all the other swaddle blankets people bought us. So, you know, if you are in the market…
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‘The Slow Decay of the Microsoft Consumer’
MG Siegler:
>To me right now, Microsoft’s consumer business feels like Nokia’s smartphone business a few years ago: the numbers look fine, and in some cases even good, but the world is quickly changing.Good comparison.
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TSA pats down 4-year-old after she hugs grandmother
Rebecca Ruiz:
>Brademeyer said that a TSO began yelling at her daughter, would not permit her to pass through the scanner again and said that a pat-down was necessary. Isabel, according to her mother, was wearing Mary Jane shoes, a short-sleeve shirt and leggings that did not have pockets.
>”It was implied, several times, that my mother, in their brief two-second embrace, had passed a handgun to my daughter,” Brademeyer said.Well done TSA.
[via Bill T., friend of the site] -
What You Are Worth to Facebook
Josh Constine:
>So if Facebook maintains its current revenue rate, it would make between $4.69 and $4.81 on each of its 901 million users each year.
Impressive.
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The Nest
I bought the [Nest](http://www.nest.com/), despite [knowing that it may completely suck](http://www.marco.org/2011/12/17/nest-incompatibility-without-c-wire) and I waited excitedly for it to arrive knowing that I may be setting myself up for the biggest let down I have ever faced ((Not a joke.)) .
I actually have quite a bit of knowledge about thermostats (unfortunately) since my day job is that of a property manager. I would say that during the summer the most common phone call I get is: “The A/C isn’t working right”. By my estimations 60% of the time it is user error — people not knowing how to work a thermostat. Therefore I need to know how to program just about any thermostat I come into contact with — and I can (sadly).
So I feel perfectly confident in claiming that all thermostats suck, including the Nest. Don’t just stop here though, because while the Nest still sucks it has two things going for it:
1. It sucks less than everything else.
2. With each software update it sucks less.So it’s conceivable that the next software update could make it move from the suck category to the “hey, alright” category. But I’m not holding my breath.
### The Non-Nest Thermostat
For the most part you can break down non-Nest thermostats into two categories:
1. Static
2. Programmable.Static thermostats are often just a dial that you set to your desired temperature and they heat to that temp — pretty simple. As you can guess with programmable thermostats, you can program them to change your desired temperature based on the day and time of the day. Again, pretty simple.
So what’s the problem with the current slate of thermostats, well there are two issues:
1. They are all, almost completely, hideous — yet they are an item that must be in a visible and easily accessible place in your home. Making the fact that they are hideous a bit of a head scratcher.
2. The second issue is that they all assume that you operate on the same schedule everyday, or at least that you have a set weekly schedule. This works pretty damned well for businesses, but borders on absurd for most American’s home lives.What the Nest claims to be is a “learning” thermostat, but truthfully I think a more accurate description is that it is a “self-programming” thermostat. More on this in a bit, first let’s dive into the Nest hardware.
### Design, Touch, Installation
First things first, the Nest is the most Apple-like product you will ever handle that isn’t made by Apple (no surprise here). The packaging is not quite as simple, but it is very well done.
The most impressive part about the Nest is that everything you need to get up and running is in the Nest box (with exception of wire strippers and cutters, should your thermostat wiring have been installed by an idiot, like mine was). They give you a cute little screwdriver, that is all but worthless for anything other than installing a Nest, the mounting bracket has a built in level, and so on.
Installation is a piece of cake — I really think my Mom could have figured it out.
The cleverest bit about the Nest is that, once installed, you immediately fall in love with it — and I really mean this. The Nest looks simply gorgeous on the walls. Once you stop staring and touch the Nest you are met with a well honed tactile feedback — it’s almost perfect. The dial turns smoothly, but a little too easily for my liking.
Everything about the Nest hardware seems perfect when compared to any other thermostat. The only hardware I have that has a better fit and finish are made by Apple or cost well beyond $1000.
### Software, Where the Bugs Wait
My Nest wasn’t on the 1.0 version of the software, but the next version up (and later updated itself), but even with that there are two horrendous bugs that I found right off the bat.
#### WiFi
Connecting to WiFi (almost required for the Nest) was a huge pain in the ass. Not only is my WiFi password complicated, but it just would not work. I even tried changing it to get it going, but nothing. I initially had to set it up without WiFi so I could get the heat back on.
When I tried later on, the WiFi just worked — I changed nothing — very odd. I don’t know what changed for the Nest, but it was beyond frustrating to have to spend 30 minutes just trying to get a WiFi connection.
#### Heating / Turning on the Furnace
I am not sure what kind of quirk exists between my furnace and the Nest, but occasionally (once a week after we manually adjust the temp) the Nest will fail to get the furnace started. This is not the same issue Marco had with the battery needing a charge and pulsing the furnace — no this is the Nest just not talking right, because it was trying to turn on the heat and not charge.
This alone makes me really leery leaving my home for a week with no one there. I simply don’t trust the Nest to always work — which is kind of something rather basic for a thermostat.
Aside from those two bugs, everything has been ok, but those two bugs are pretty annoying.
#### The Purpose of the Nest
The purpose of the Nest is that you need not ever program it: just change the heat when you are cold or warm and it will adjust. I thought that this meant the Nest would work in a dynamic nature, sadly that’s not the case.
With the most recent Nest update you can view and edit the schedule the Nest makes on your iPhone — and when you go to do that you see a shocking screen: the same programming info you would put into a regular thermostat. That’s why I say that the Nest isn’t really learning, as much as it is just self-programming. This really bums me out.
The Nest could be so much more, but instead it is just a fancy GUI in front of a “normal” thermostat.
One very neat feature the Nest has going for it is the auto-away setting. The Nest has a motion sensor and when it doesn’t detect movement it will drop the heat down to the pre-determined minimum that you set. The thinking here is that you save money by the Nest turning off when you decide to spend a Saturday away instead of at home — like normal (or normal for me). This feature (amazingly) actually works really well. Note: you should disable this feature if your Nest is not in an area you regularly walk by.
Update: In the original post I stated some information about how cool you should let your house get. This seems that it maybe in accurate and I have removed the section until I can research more.
### Improvements
Beyond all those items, the Nest still needs one major improvement — the Nest needs to be made proactive. My home only has heat, so the Nest can’t cool my home, but the Nest also knows this so shouldn’t it be able to take that into account?
As of right now the Nest basically is a ‘heat-to’ gauge for me. Meaning: continue to heat my house until X degrees and when temp drops below that, then go ahead and re-heat my home to X degrees. This is standard stuff for any thermostat, but the Nest should be (and can be) better.
The Nest is connected to the Internet, and therefore can get weather data — proven by the fact that the iOS app shows the outside temp. So why can’t the Nest determine that every time it is 75° outside, my home heats up to 71° so in order to keep my home at the desired 70° the Nest should be careful not to heat my house fully to 70° when the temp outside is starting to close in on 75°?
That is I want the Nest to take into account weather forecasts to properly adjust for the temperature fluctuations in my home — and really why shouldn’t it?
### To Buy or Not
Ok enough, I need answers.
Is the Nest revolutionary? No.
Is the Nest the best thermostat you can buy? Yes.
Should I buy the Nest? Only if you think your current thermostat is ugly, or you have a $250 desire to change the temp from your iPhone. I like the Nest, but I mostly like it for its looks and the hope that one day it will be really awesome.