Interesting ‘research’ project from the EFF that looks at how much data you are sending out just from web browsing.
Month: January 2014
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‘Quality photos’
Stoll mentions Manton Reece in his post, and Reece’s post is worth the short read:
> We were too cheap to buy a good camera at the time. Now I would pay any amount of money to go back in time and reshoot the photos with a better camera.
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Cameras as a Means to Create Long-form Photography
Conrad Stoll on [Craig Mod’s](http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/12/goodbye-cameras.html?currentPage=all) “Goodbye, Cameras”:
> I’m using the analogy with long-form and short-form writing intentionally, because it is commonly agreed that one is not better than the other. They simply serve different purposes, which is exactly how I feel about photography. Smartphone images are not bad images. They are artistic, emotional, provocative, engaging. All of the qualities of any good photograph taken in the last hundred years. But they serve a different purpose than the long-form version of photography where images are made with a purpose built camera.
What an excellent way to explain the shift. Short-form photography is something that we cannot only all enjoy, but that we can all easily create. Where long-form is something that only a handful of us will create, but that all will appreciate. Stoll’s post is a must read if you ask me.
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Writer Pro Survey
I have a contributing editor working on a post about Writer Pro’s Syntax Mode (not having to do with patents) and we would love to have your feedback. If you own Writer Pro and can take a couple minutes to answer some questions for us we would be grateful.
Click through to take it.
Thanks!
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Quote of the Day: Craig Mod
“Software ate the camera, but freed the photograph.” -
Selling My Canon Gear [Updated Pricing]
I have posted up all of my Canon dSLR lenses in a Canon Forum (you need to register to view them, didn’t know that when I originally posted this. I’ve added pictures here and can send you photos if you are interested.) — they are all for sale and include:– [Canon 50mm f/1.4](http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1353358) `$250`
– [Canon 17-40mm f/4 L](http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1353356) `$530`
– [Canon 80-200mm f/2.8 L](http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1353354) (old-school lens) `$575`
– [Canon 100mm f/2](http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1353353) `$330`*All prices include shipping within the US.*
The prices, details, and pictures can be found there. If I sell off all those lenses, then my Canon 5D classic will also be for sale. You need not join that forum, just get in touch with me if you are interested in picking any of them up. As an added bonus, any reader of this site that buys one gets a free membership (just let me know you want that).
*Note: I am selling off all of this gear to go micro four-thirds only, it’s just about the quality of my Canon and far more likely to be with me. I haven’t used most of my Canon gear regularly for a year and half.*
All sold. Thanks
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‘Root a Mac in 10 seconds or less’
Patrick Moscato:
This article was written to show the vulnerabilities of Macs without full disk encryption or locked EFI firmware.
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Hugging Lions [YouTube]
Meet Kevin Richardson, the man that naps and hugs lions. Like real lions. Crazy video and well worth the watch.
[via my Wife] -
‘Google will make it easy for strangers to email you’
Marco Arment:
Making Google+ succeed at all costs means exactly that. All previous rules are out the window. Google will eventually violate every formerly held principle if it might help Google+.
I agree with His entire post, though Marco clearly has a typo in here: “will eventually” really should be “has already”.
Not only is this opt-out, and therefore bullshit, but I don't see how it actually helps anyone but marketers. I can just picture this meeting: “How do we get the word out about our new app?”
“Why don't we just spam every blogger we can find on Google+, we will make it past span filters. We can't lose!”
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Shawn Blanc’s URL Schemes for Posting Links From His iPhone and iPad Using Poster
Some nice URL schemes here for bloggers.
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Zappos Says Goodbye to Bosses
[Jena McGregor writing on holacracy at Zappos](http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/on-leadership/wp/2014/01/03/zappos-gets-rid-of-all-managers/):
> In addition, there are no managers in the classically defined sense. Instead, there are people known as “lead links” who have the ability to assign employees to roles or remove them from them, but who are not in a position to actually tell people what to do. Decisions about what each role entails and how various teams should function are instead made by a governing process of people from each circle. Bunch does note, however, that at Zappos the broadest circles can to some extent tell sub-groups what they’re accountable for doing.
I had a hard time reading this post as it is so chocked full of
‘business consultant’ buzzwords that I couldn’t stop simultaneously giggling and rolling my eyes.I don’t know much about the holacracy business structure, and [Wikipedia has a rather vague look at it](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holacracy) so I am guessing a bit here and trusting the article — but what it sounds like to me is a way of ‘rebranding’ managers. Let’s not call them managers, let’s call them “leads”, or what have you.
It’ll be interesting to see if this works out, but I just don’t see it scaling well. I bet it will work, but I bet it won’t fit the model set out. ((Meaning I bet there will still be managers, they just won’t be called managers.))
What strikes me as most interesting though: why would anyone want to work at a company like this?
If you worked at Zappos and wanted to apply for a job somewhere else — but you didn’t have a job title or management position — how in the world do you market yourself? “I was the circle lead for in-house development?”
What the fuck does that mean? ((Not that any job title anywhere makes any sense. “Senior Project Manager III”, huh?
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Quietnet
> Simple chat program using near ultrasonic frequencies. Works without Wifi or Bluetooth and won’t show up in a pcap.
*Woah.*
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‘Curmudgeonly’
Zac Szewczyk, writing about me in his Who to Follow 2014 post:
> Now, though, eleven months after that [The B&B Podcast] show ended, Ben has become much too curmudgeonly for my liking. I understand that this personality is part of his shtick, bit it has gone too far. His writing no longer has the polish it used to: instead of thoughtful pieces, his articles, as Harry Marks pointed out in a recent episode of The Menu Bar, read as a stream of conscience with just enough editing to remove the typos. Lately his writing looks less like a labor born of love, and more like an exercise in anger in vulgarity. Enough is enough; I am finished.
I just want to point out one thing: nothing I do here is for ‘shtick’.
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‘FBI Drops Law Enforcement as ‘Primary’ Mission’
This ‘change’ bugs me, but John Hudson summarizes the likely reason nicely:
> In many ways, the agency had no choice but to de-emphasize white-collar crime. Following the 9/11 attacks, the FBI picked up scores of new responsibilities related to terrorism and counterintelligence while maintaining a finite amount of resources. What’s not in question is that government agencies tend to benefit in numerous ways when considered critical to national security as opposed to law enforcement. “If you tie yourself to national security, you get funding and you get exemptions on disclosure cases,” said McClanahan. “You get all the wonderful arguments about how if you don’t get your way, buildings will blow up and the country will be less safe.”
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Why the TAO is Less of a Concern
Matt Blaze:
> For over a decade now, the NSA has been drowning in a sea of irrelevant data collected almost entirely about innocent people who would never be selected as targets or comprise part of any useful analysis. The implicit assumption has been that spying on everyone is the price we pay to be able to spy on the real bad guys. But the success of TAO demonstrates a viable alternative. And if the NSA has any legitimate role in intelligence gathering, targeted operations like TAO have the significant advantage that they leave the rest of us – and the systems we rely on – alone.
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Digital Ocean: We Don’t Shoot Elephants, But You Should Hate Us More than GoDaddy
Read the linked story and then try to justify to me that Digital Ocean is a good hosting provider. These guys are shit, run away from them.
(Note: I do think there was a wrong done by the blogger in not getting permission for posting the quote. I do not think that is a case for the hosting provider to be involved, as it is clearly a case for the courts to decide.)
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Please Punctuate Your Text Messages
John Gruber, in a link to something about using periods to end a sentence, ((Didn’t read it, don’t care to read it.)) remarks:
> I used to write more formally in texts and IMs, but as time goes on I’ve developed/accepted more of a dashed-off style, super terse, and without thinking about it, I do often omit the trailing period. Hitting “Send” feels like punctuation enough.
This is a pet-peeve of mine. I hate it when people don’t capitalize, and punctuate text messages because they are “just a text message”. I fully understand the logic, but I hate it.
I don’t care if you agree with me, but I do want to tell you something. I am an employer, and right or wrong I judge every correspondence you have with me. If you are misspelling shit and/or refusing to punctuate things in text messages, I strongly urge you not to fucking text message me.
Put another way: why would I want to promote you, or put you in higher paid positions, if every time you text me you can’t even be bothered to double-tap your space bar on the iPhone to put in a period.
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‘What are common activities people do wrong every day but don’t know it?’
If I see someone eating a cupcake like that I will publicly ridicule you. ((Douchebag.))
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‘The New York Times Embraces ‘Organic’ Ad Strategy’
Brian Morrissey:
> The “organic” approach resembles the way ads are presented on social platforms. Facebook weaves ads within its news feed, much as Twitter does with promoted tweets that appear in its stream. Older content sites have mostly relied on advertising that’s off to the side. At a time when every marketer fancies itself a publisher, advertising units are becoming more entwined with non-advertising content, like it or not. The current vogue for native advertising is a reflection of the need for publishers to rethink how they present ads, like it or not.
So the ‘new’ design revolves around putting shitty ads in the middle of all *ten* of the articles you are *permitted* to read on The New York Times each month — oh, sorry, “organic” ads. What was I thinking, my apologies for forgetting the new marketing words “we” are using to try and hide the fact that ads are still fucking ads.
Carry on.
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‘The Internet of Things Is Wildly Insecure — And Often Unpatchable’
Bruce Schneier:
> We’re at a crisis point now with regard to the security of embedded systems, where computing is embedded into the hardware itself — as with the Internet of Things. These embedded computers are riddled with vulnerabilities, and there’s no good way to patch them.
The problem is especially bad in routers — where people update/upgrade/replace them about as often as they do TVs.