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  • Fast Lanes for Web Traffic

    Edward Wyatt for the New York Times: Those earlier rules effectively barred Internet service providers from making deals with services like Amazon or Netflix to allow those companies to pay to stream their products to viewers through a faster, express lane on the web. The court said that because the Internet is not considered a…

    Edward Wyatt for the New York Times:

    Those earlier rules effectively barred Internet service providers from making deals with services like Amazon or Netflix to allow those companies to pay to stream their products to viewers through a faster, express lane on the web. The court said that because the Internet is not considered a utility under federal law, it was not subject to that sort of regulation.

    ISPs have a lot of money, and what they are doing now in their anti-net-neutrallity fight is a two part struggle:

    1. They are fighting to be able to charge big companies a lot of money.
    2. They are fighting to not become a “dumb pipe”.

    I think the second point is the biggest motivation — and the same fight cell phone carriers are facing — where you simply do not want your service to be relegated to a service agnostic pipe.

    I think of it like cable TV, where it reality you should be able to pay one price and get all 10,000 channels, but that’s not the case. Instead you pay extra for HBO, Showtime, etc — that annoyance is effectively what ISPs want to do to the Internet. Except, instead of blocking content from you (which would be wrong, obviously), ISPs just want to make non-paying content a bit slower than the other content.

    I can see a future where Netflix pays Comcast to get faster service to users and users also pay Comcast to get faster Netflix service — a double profit for Comcast. Yuck.

  • Hello, Net Discrimination

    Tim Wu, in The New Yorker, on a response President Obama gave in 2007: “The answer is yes,” Obama replied. “I am a strong supporter of net neutrality.” Explaining, he said, “What you’ve been seeing is some lobbying that says that the servers and the various portals through which you’re getting information over the Internet…

    Tim Wu, in The New Yorker, on a response President Obama gave in 2007:

    “The answer is yes,” Obama replied. “I am a strong supporter of net neutrality.” Explaining, he said, “What you’ve been seeing is some lobbying that says that the servers and the various portals through which you’re getting information over the Internet should be able to be gatekeepers and to charge different rates to different Web sites…. And that I think destroys one of the best things about the Internet—which is that there is this incredible equality there.”

    It is within Obama’s power to tell the FCC they fucked up, but don’t hold your breath — it would seem if it cannot be cured by a drone strike, then it cannot be cured by this administration. ((Or that’s how it feels.))

  • Anti-Net-Neutrality

    Marco Arment on the FCC’s (and Obama for that matter) bullshit: It’s ostensibly the FCC’s job to see through this bullshit language and do what’s right for the country and the people, but only the fool who believed that ISPs are trying to build something beneficial here would believe that the FCC gives a damn…

    Marco Arment on the FCC’s (and Obama for that matter) bullshit:

    It’s ostensibly the FCC’s job to see through this bullshit language and do what’s right for the country and the people, but only the fool who believed that ISPs are trying to build something beneficial here would believe that the FCC gives a damn about what’s best for American citizens.

  • FCC To The Internet: “F Off”

    Kottke on this bullshit: The hell with that. Yep. Kottke has a good summary of what’s going on (as always).

    Kottke on this bullshit:

    The hell with that.

    Yep. Kottke has a good summary of what’s going on (as always).

  • 1Password for Mac Keyboard Shortcut Tips

    Good keyboard shortcut tips for 1Password, didn't know a few of these.

    Good keyboard shortcut tips for 1Password, didn't know a few of these.

  • Which Cities Sleep in

    Fantastic information.

    Fantastic information.

  • Lytro Unveils the Illum

    The original Lytro was a cool gadget, but this looks like a cool camera. The distinction between the two is going to be huge.

    The original Lytro was a cool gadget, but this looks like a cool camera. The distinction between the two is going to be huge.

  • Google Screwed Up Google Glass Launch

    Gene Marks: Yes, it’s getting attention. But only as a creepy gimmick which, I’m sure, is not the kind of attention that Google intended when they initially introduced it. As cool as it is, let’s admit that Google Glass will go down in the annals of bad product launches. And it will do so because…

    Gene Marks:

    Yes, it’s getting attention. But only as a creepy gimmick which, I’m sure, is not the kind of attention that Google intended when they initially introduced it. As cool as it is, let’s admit that Google Glass will go down in the annals of bad product launches. And it will do so because of these reasons.

    I cannot believe the article went any further than saying: “Robert Scoble, because of Robert Scoble. In the shower. Scoble. Shower. Your Product. Marketing 101.”

  • Barham on Checkmark 2

    Nate Barham on Checkmark 2: Next is Checkmark’s most impressive feature. Location-based reminders. Regardless of the rest of the app, and the rest of this review, no other app I’ve used even comes close here. In fact, were Apple to add the same functionality to its own reminders app, I can think of no greater…

    Nate Barham on Checkmark 2:

    Next is Checkmark’s most impressive feature. Location-based reminders. Regardless of the rest of the app, and the rest of this review, no other app I’ve used even comes close here. In fact, were Apple to add the same functionality to its own reminders app, I can think of no greater single way that they could improve it.

    His thoughts are pretty spot on.

  • OmniOutliner 4

    I really like the apps that the OmniGroup puts out there, despite my sketpicism about the direction that OmniFocus is taking, the work is some of the best work on OS X. I’ve long been an OmniOutliner fan, having used version 3 extensively, and keeping the iPad version on my iPad home screen. When version…

    I really like the apps that the OmniGroup puts out there, despite my sketpicism about the direction that OmniFocus is taking, the work is some of the best work on OS X.

    I’ve long been an OmniOutliner fan, having used version 3 extensively, and keeping the iPad version on my iPad home screen. When version 4 came out, I hesititated and ended up not upgrading.

    Because of that OmniOutliner began to collect dust in my app folder. Just last week I picked version 4 up, as I really needed a strong tool to get caught up on a bunch of work, and man am I impressed.

    OmniOutliner 4 is a heck of a tool, and really ‘modern’ when compared to version 3. I’m excited to learn the app more.

  • Out of the Park Baseball 15

    I’ve played this Baseball sim every year now, and it really is addictive. It’s all about making the trades and setting the rosters, love it.

    I’ve played this Baseball sim every year now, and it really is addictive. It’s all about making the trades and setting the rosters, love it.

  • Sketch 3

    Last week Sketch 3 was released. I’ve long owned Sketch, but never really used it — I didn’t get. I own Acorn, Photoshop CC, Pixelmator, and Sketch — and I have to say while most of these apps seem to be the same thing, Sketch is different. I’ve been consulting on more apps lately and…

    Last week Sketch 3 was released. I’ve long owned Sketch, but never really used it — I didn’t get. I own Acorn, Photoshop CC, Pixelmator, and Sketch — and I have to say while most of these apps seem to be the same thing, Sketch is different.

    I’ve been consulting on more apps lately and that often necessitates me ‘sketching’ out an idea of how the app should look. It’s just hard to describe things in words, when a mockup can state everything more clearly. This used to take me a lot of time to do in Acorn/Pixelmator/Photoshop, but with Sketch I am have been firing them out like it’s nothing.

    I am loving Sketch.

    One thing I will note, is that like all the apps listed (save Photoshop), Sketch offers very limited control of typography. I really wish that weren’t the case, but sadly it is.

    Sketch is $79 on the Mac App Store.

  • Nest and Privacy

    Interesting tidbit in this Forbes article from Parmy Olson: Crucial to Nest’s pitch to utilities: its thermostat learns a household’s activity over time through multiple sensors that detect things like temperature and movement, and automatically changes the temperature accordingly. Honeywell’s thermostats don’t detect movement, relying more on customer programming. Also, while Honeywell funnels all user…

    Interesting tidbit in this Forbes article from Parmy Olson:

    Crucial to Nest’s pitch to utilities: its thermostat learns a household’s activity over time through multiple sensors that detect things like temperature and movement, and automatically changes the temperature accordingly. Honeywell’s thermostats don’t detect movement, relying more on customer programming. Also, while Honeywell funnels all user data to utilities, Nest takes over the difficult job of parsing it and managing consumption.
    “We don’t let utilities control the thermostat. We don’t share the data with the utility. We won’t work with them if they don’t agree,” says Nest cofounder Matt Rogers.

    If I read this correctly Nest partners with utility companies to better help with load on power companies, and make things more energy efficient. They don’t seem to sell the user data to utilities, but they are certainly profiting directly from your personal data.

    That’s a fine line to walk.

  • For a Smile Today

    One of my favorite blogs on the web.

    One of my favorite blogs on the web.

  • Thoughts on Project Collaboration Apps

    Jared Sinclair’s post today about Glassboard got me to thinking about this type of app in general. I call them project collaboration apps because they deal more with discussions than planning. (Whereas project management apps deal more with planning than discussion.) The best project collaboration apps I have found are: Glassboard Quip Slack Basecamp The…

    Jared Sinclair’s post today about Glassboard got me to thinking about this type of app in general. I call them project collaboration apps because they deal more with discussions than planning. (Whereas project management apps deal more with planning than discussion.)

    The best project collaboration apps I have found are:

    • Glassboard
    • Quip
    • Slack
    • Basecamp

    The problem is that I simply cannot tell you which of these is the best because they all have issues and strengths. In short, here’s how I see these apps stacking up:

    • Glassboard: Designed around the one idea at a time approach. A users posts a new message and there is a thread of other users responding to that message. It’s best thought of as a thread on a message board. The obvious benefit being that threads are usually very on topic and to the point. The down side being that there is less room for a conversation around a general topic, as messages are designed to be more specific than that. Should you want to be more general you will quickly get lost in all the comments on messages.
    • Quip: Designed around files. Think of it like Editorially for Word documents. Quip is all about collaborating on documents, so if you are only sharing Word-like files, you cannot get anything better than Quip. It’s far better than track changes if you ask me.
    • Slack: Designed around conversation topics. The newest kid on the block is very well received (I use it multiple times a day). You create #channels that have set topics. Everything flows like a more natural conversation in those rooms — like in chat rooms. Files can also be uploaded into a room, where files then get a specific comments thread for each file. Overall Slack excels at water cooler talk, and general discussion. Where it lacks is focus. If you wanted to talk specifically about one design element of an app (like a button, instead of the app design in general), it is quick and easy for that to be derailed, and then hard to track the conversation about just one specific element.
    • Basecamp: The OG of this type of app is designed with a more traditional project management focus. Though, in recent updates, the app is slowly shifting to project collaboration. I’m of the opinion that Basecamp combines Quip and Glassboard, but doesn’t do either function better than those apps. Basecamp for the most part still lacks a freeform chat, which was previously built into the product with the help of Campfire. Basecamp excels at structure, but lacks in allowing structureless conversation.

    In a nut shell, each app has strong reasons to use it, but none of them are there yet — to me this is evidenced by the fact that I use all four of them weekly (if not everyday). I’ve been trying to think about what is missing from these apps, or what the perfect app would be, and I’ve come up with some core ideas that I think are missing (in some form) from some, or all, of these apps:

    1. Give me a way to have conversations around one central theme. Something somewhat general like ‘design’. Slack excels at this, and though you could do that with multiple boards in Glassboard, it’s not setup for free form conversation. Again, Slack is the perfect example of this. This type of loose conversation is ideal for brainstorming, and also perfect for roughing out where a project is. It’s the tool you want to keep to get the project off the ground, and then gives you a place to vent as the prject gets closer to completion.
    2. Allow me to define a specific topic within a conversation. This is where Glassboard and Basecamp excel, and Slack suffers. Going back to my earlier example, if I want to talk about button design within a ‘design’ conversation I should be able to track just that discussion without being sidetracked by side discussions. For that the Topic > Comment framework is ideal. While you could create more #channels in Slack, that’s a hack of a solution. I’d like these specific topics to be visible within a main conversation, but then to later be able to just view the specific conversation on a topic. This is critical once a project is under way, and all the way through completion.
    3. Commenting on files and images is crucial. Each of these apps handle this in some way, all different, but I think Basecamp handles this the best. I like that I can have a conversation on a topic in Basecamp and attach any file. In Slack you can do that, but then that file can have specific comments on just a file — which is confusing. If you are swapping mockups for one design element, it all needs to be maintained in the same thread — as Basecamp does. I should be able to upload a mockup, and each person responding should be able to comment on that, and upload iterations of that mockup all on the same ‘thread’. Again, crucial for most projects that are underway.
    4. I need to collaborate on text. Basecamp has a really poor implementation of collaborating on text, and it’s so bad I don’t want to talk about it any more. Quip, clearly, does the best job here, but the app is so niche it is hard to assimilate into a workflow. Every project invovles writing something at somepoint — it should be natural part of such an app.
    5. Private messages are a must, and Slack really does a good job at that. It’s nice to be able to talk directly to a team member in a private setting, but not be beeping their phone with each message. I want to be able to leave work when I leave work. I want to be able to use my comptuer without getting bugged by work. To that end, I want the private messages within the app, instead of IM or Text messages.
    6. Notifications need to be smart. The app should be able to tell me when things are directed at me, and what I have and have not read. Again, Slack does a very good job at this. I talked above about how Glassboard doesn’t handle this well, and I personally think the dashboard view of Basecamp doesn’t handle this well either. Slack needs to centralize these notifications, but does the best job of the lot. I also need to have quiet hours, to turn off the notifications, but get a summary when I get back to work.
    7. Bookmarks. Most of the apps have a way of bookmarking a topic, or message, but I always wish it went further. I’d love to be able to send different things within each topic/discussion to a reference folder of sorts. To be able to quickly cull together excellent ideas, tasks, and important notes in one place that is only visible to me. Something like a montage of important pits from all the things going on within the app.
    8. Allow me to get old stuff out of my face: a.k.a. give me an archive buttons that works. I still want to be able to see it if I need it, but I don’t want to see something that just isn’t active anymore. Once we design that button, I only need that conversation for posterity and not for active discussion. Remove the mental overhead of seeing that discussion when I login.
    9. Allow me to take any one message, or thread of messages (or files, etc) and turn it into a task for a team member. Most task systems ask you to create the task first, and then discuss it. I think that is backwards. I say, lets talk about the button design and then when we get it all figured out, assign the implementation to one person.

    That’s my quick and dirty list of things that need to be addressed in project collaboration tools. Perhaps you don’t think this is all that important — these are niche tools — but to think that seems to be sticking yourself with the idea that going into the office will always mean: going into a physical office where all your coworkers are. That’s changing, and changing fast, and these tools are becoming vital to that change.

    I hope they get better and get better faster than they are right now, because using four apps at once is tiring.

  • Friday App Design Review: Glassboard

    Jared Sinclair has a nice design review of Glassboard up today, but he misses the absolute worst part about Glassboard: knowing what is new. I only ever know when something is new by going into the notifications screen — otherwise I get lost. That should be the first thing fixed. To that end, Sinclair addresses…

    Jared Sinclair has a nice design review of Glassboard up today, but he misses the absolute worst part about Glassboard: knowing what is new. I only ever know when something is new by going into the notifications screen — otherwise I get lost.

    That should be the first thing fixed.

    To that end, Sinclair addresses the issue a little bit with his wireframe mockup by using tabs at the top to show unread stuff, which would be great.

    I don’t agree with many of the other items, but they are items I file under “to each his own”.

    More on this type of app in a bit.

  • Google’s Lack of Taste

    To me, this Google blog post about their new camera app “bokeh” feature epitomizes why Google struggles with “taste”. You need not look any further than the piss poor looking images used in the post. It doesn't even look like they tried to select decent images.

    To me, this Google blog post about their new camera app “bokeh” feature epitomizes why Google struggles with “taste”. You need not look any further than the piss poor looking images used in the post.

    It doesn't even look like they tried to select decent images.

  • Quote of the Day: David Pogue

    “In short, Samsung clearly has no problem coming up with stuff to put into its phones. The challenge, as Jobs once said, is ‘knowing what to leave out.’ “ — David Pogue

    “In short, Samsung clearly has no problem coming up with stuff to put into its phones. The challenge, as Jobs once said, is ‘knowing what to leave out.’ “
  • Misunderstanding Innovation

    John Moltz: Yet, the definition of the term when applied to Apple is delivering a product that completely redefines a market while with Samsung it’s providing the largest breadth of feature sets. These are not the same thing and if you’re an analyst who doesn’t know the difference then you’re not a very good analyst.…

    John Moltz:

    Yet, the definition of the term when applied to Apple is delivering a product that completely redefines a market while with Samsung it’s providing the largest breadth of feature sets. These are not the same thing and if you’re an analyst who doesn’t know the difference then you’re not a very good analyst.

    I’ll add: likewise you are not a very good analyst if you know this, but choose to ignore it.

  • Yahoo v. Google for iPhone Search

    Danny Sullivan: In the years since Yahoo last did search, the amount of information to comb through on the web has increased — meaning much more noise to draw signal from. Meanwhile, potential employees serious about web search have long ago decamped to Google and Bing. Both those companies have huge teams involved in running…

    Danny Sullivan:

    In the years since Yahoo last did search, the amount of information to comb through on the web has increased — meaning much more noise to draw signal from. Meanwhile, potential employees serious about web search have long ago decamped to Google and Bing. Both those companies have huge teams involved in running mature search operations. Despite some Yahoo hires, there’s been no signs the company is drawing anywhere near the staffing that Google or Bing has.
    Similarly, there’s been no signs that Yahoo is out busy crawling the web in order to build an index of all those pages — and that’s one of the things you want to do fairly soon, to ensure that you can not only store everything but also have good algorithms to pull the good stuff out in response to a search.

    Count me in on thinking it’s not a likely pick for Apple. But we do know from Siri that Apple respects other search tools, and so I have to wonder: what if Yahoo’s going to acquire their way back into the search game.

    What if Yahoo bought (or partnered with) Wolfram|Alpha and DuckDuckGo? What if the search tools Yahoo is building were meant to tie those to together instead of being a new search tool all together?

    If you presented Apple with a hybrid of DDG and W|A, well I think you could make a strong case for being the default search provider. Or at the very least not be laughed out of the room.