Super short episode and the first recorded with us in the same room.
Brought to you by: [Verses](http://kepner.me/versesapp).
Super short episode and the first recorded with us in the same room.
Brought to you by: [Verses](http://kepner.me/versesapp).
Tim Bray has an interesting post on cellphone screen size, where he says:
>I noticed right from the start that I was always using the bigger one whenever there was a choice […]
He carries one work phone and one personal phone, but they are different sizes and he likes the bigger screen. Again, Bray:
>Yeah, there are a few occasions where I have to wiggle the phone around in my hand to reach some part of the screen. But the huge display and the soft buttons just make the Nexus S feel dinky and stupid and clumsy.
That’s the part I find interesting because I read that as: “Yes the larger phone is more cumbersome to use, but I like that.” I get one phone dwarfing another, but is wiggling a phone around in your hand really the less clumsy option?
Bray again:
>But unless I’m weird, big-screen phones are going to be appealing to lots of people.
Define “lots”…
Speaking of MG Siegler he has a great post up about Motorola’s performance in Q4.
MG Siegler on Apple’s financial results:
>A new iPhone plus holiday shopping season is apparently like gasoline on a fire.
That’s why my bet is that Apple keeps this ‘new’ release schedule of a new iPhone every fall.
Marco Arment on the reliability of Siri:
>Anecdotally, I’ve had about a 50% failure rate recently.
Same here and what’s more is that Siri not being ‘available’ is far more frustrating than Siri not understanding you.
Jim Dalrymple on the iBooks EULA:
>That doesn’t mean Apple owns the content of the book. You are free to sell the content of the book on Amazon or any other digital bookstore — you just can’t use Apple’s tools to build the book.
If *The Beard* says it is so, then I believe it.
Matt Drance:
>Hollywood continues to completely ignore that lesson. It continues to punish the people who play by the rules with an insufferable customer experience. This is the sole reason piracy is up and profits are down: because *doing it right totally sucks*.
Sarah Lacy:
>Put another way, is Google moving from being a company that organizes the world’s information to one that organizes the information of “your” world?
Yes. And I don’t think that’s good — it’s certainly not what I want.
A short hello video shot at Macworld.
From left to right in the video it is: [Brett Kelly](http://nerdgap.com), [Stephen Hackett](http://512pixels.net), me, and [Shawn Blanc](http://shawnblanc.net).
An interesting point from Dan Frommer:
>If the next generation of Microsoft’s Xbox gaming system will be designed to bring us well beyond 2020, why would it still rely on last century’s technology – spinning discs – for games?
Of course the challenge, as Frommer points out, is the increasing size of games. It will be interesting to see how video games consoles cope with the instant demand that iOS users have when they want games as the games keep getting bigger.
Brian Lam:
>Happiness is the most important metric in personal technology. If it improves lives, it is important. I’ve always suspected that sitting around on the internet was a sort of rot, but I had no proof until I read this piece on the Stanford study. I just don’t know why this research isn’t getting as much attention from reporters as new iPads, CEO changes, earnings reports, acquisitions, and other bullshit that only affects the greedy.
A powerful essay and one I highly recommend you read.
Nice overview from Federico Viticci. I downloaded the app this morning and it really does look nice. The iCloud sync alone could be fantastic.
Dave Winer:
>DuckDuckGo could be that, except for this one problem. Imho, it’s inexorably on the same path that Google was on. That means they’re going to spend years of our time pretending that they are still on our side, until one day it’ll be blatantly obvious that we just wasted years waiting for them to give take us somewhere we’d want to go
A very similar thought had crossed my mind when I moved over to DuckDuckGo, but I am going to give them the benefit of the doubt. I gave the same to Google until it became obvious that they gave up on being on the “user” side of things.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt after analyzing predictions by “Street analysts” and non-analysts(?) concludes:
>Once again, the Street blew it. And although even the most bullish independents were surprised by the strength of Apple’s Q1 2012 results, at least they were in the ball park.
Just look at the spreadsheet he put together — amazing how bad people that get paid to guess are at, erm, guessing.
Nick Douglas:
>Daring Fireball: You know three ways to tell Helvetica from Arial.
I’d add: *at least*.
[This article](http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/google-tracks-consumers-across-products-users-cant-opt-out/2012/01/24/gIQArgJHOQ_story.html), or versions like it, have been getting emailed and sent to me all day long. There’s three important things that you need to know from this article:
1. Google is changing its privacy policy.
2. The change allows Google to share your information with itself so that it can integrate it’s own products.
3. Those changes happen March 1st and you can’t opt-out.
These changes aren’t bad, they are actually good, and Google is going about them the right way. Google didn’t just plop the changes on everyone, they are changing the necessary documents first and giving people a heads up.
>Google said it would notify its hundreds of millions of users of the change through an e-mail and a message on its Web sites. It will apply to all of its services except for Google Wallet, the Chrome browser and Google Books.
Google isn’t trying to sell off your data to other people.
So the scary thing about this is: more targeted ads with the data being pulled from all the a google properties.
> If someone watches an NBA clip online and lives in Washington, the firm could advertise Washington Wizards tickets in that person’s Gmail account.
That is scary, but a smart user already knows that Google has that information and all this change does is formally allows them to better tailor the ads to you. This is a fact of life with Google products. If you can’t accept that then you really shouldn’t be using Google products to begin with.
The part I think is worth focusing on (that others aren’t) is that this is not an “evil” move by Google. At least I don’t think it is in the same way that the Search+ changes are.
There is certainly a monetary reason for Google to do this,but more than that: this change will substantially improve Google’s services from the perspective of the user.
>Consumers could also benefit, the company said. When someone is searching for the word “jaguar,” Google would have a better idea of whether the person was interested in the animal or the car. Or the firm might suggest e-mailing contacts in New York when it learns you are planning a trip there.
This move has the potential to not only help Google’s bottom line, but to help Google’s users. When’s the last time Google did that?
These services should have never been sandboxed to begin with, but they are. Google wants to change that. There’s good and bad with it, but I for one ((Not a Google lover.)) think there is far more good than bad here.
From the West Seattle Blog:
>$1.35 million = projected total cost of storm response
There’s *still* snow on the ground in some areas.
MG Siegler:
>Every single Android phone that Verizon sells — dozens of models — combined could not outsell the iPhone last quarter.
[Like I said](https://brooksreview.net/2012/01/if-i-were-ceo/), when are these non-Apple companies going to start making compelling devices?
Joshua Goodwin has a simple solution for WordPress users that doesn’t use the iFrame method for adding DuckDuckGo site search.