Top Posts


Recent Articles

  • That’s Not Enough

    [Thomas Brand](http://eggfreckles.net/notes/preliminary-results/): >My friends Merri and Stephen Hackett have to be strong now. They just got the preliminary results back from their son Josiah’s brain scan, and the diagnosis is frightening. The Cancer is back. It never went away. But now it is growing. >I am not a parent yet, and I cannot imagine the…

    [Thomas Brand](http://eggfreckles.net/notes/preliminary-results/):

    >My friends Merri and Stephen Hackett have to be strong now. They just got the preliminary results back from their son Josiah’s brain scan, and the diagnosis is frightening. The Cancer is back. It never went away. But now it is growing.
    >I am not a parent yet, and I cannot imagine the fear they are feeling right now. Knowing their child might have to go through another sixteen rounds of Chemotherapy. But they have to be strong. If not for Josiah, then for themselves, their daughter Allison Mae, and the rest of their family.

    [He’s raising money for his charity run](http://fundraising.stjude.org/site/TR?px=2008576&fr_id=4820&pg=personal), he needed $2,500, but he is well passed that goal. It’s still not enough, so donate if you can. ((Let me know if you need a refund for your membership here so you *can* donate — I’d be happy to do it.))

  • ‘France in the NSA’s Crosshair’

    Jacques Follorou et Glenn Greenwald for Le Monde: > Amongst the thousands of documents extracted from the NSA by its ex-employee there is a graph which describes the extent of telephone monitoring and tapping (DNR – Dial Number Recognition) carried out in France. It can be seen that over a period of thirty days –…

    Jacques Follorou et Glenn Greenwald for Le Monde:

    > Amongst the thousands of documents extracted from the NSA by its ex-employee there is a graph which describes the extent of telephone monitoring and tapping (DNR – Dial Number Recognition) carried out in France. It can be seen that over a period of thirty days – from 10 December 2012 to 8 January 2013, 70,3 million recordings of French citizens’ telephone data were made by the NSA.

    At this point it would be *far* more surprising if the NSA was *not* recording phone calls in a country — *any* country. (I bet Madagascar is safe…)

  • In Praise of One of the Greatest Concluding Lines Ever Written

    Jens Glüsing, Laura Poitras, Marcel Rosenbach and Holger Stark reporting for SPIEGEL ONLINE on the NSA hack of the email, text messages, and other communication means of the President of Mexico, concludes: >In response to an inquiry from SPIEGEL concerning the latest revelations, Mexico’s Foreign Ministry replied with an email condemning any form of espionage…

    Jens Glüsing, Laura Poitras, Marcel Rosenbach and Holger Stark reporting for SPIEGEL ONLINE on the NSA hack of the email, text messages, and other communication means of the President of Mexico, concludes:

    >In response to an inquiry from SPIEGEL concerning the latest revelations, Mexico’s Foreign Ministry replied with an email condemning any form of espionage on Mexican citizens, saying such surveillance violates international law. “That is all the government has to say on the matter,” stated a spokesperson for Peña Nieto.
    >Presumably, that email could be read at the NSA’s Texas location at the same time.

    *Boom.*

    The part of the article that I think will be far more interesting (and less political) to watch:

    > Brazil now plans to introduce a law that will force companies such as Google and Facebook to store their data inside Brazil’s borders, rather than on servers in the US, making these international companies subject to Brazilian data privacy laws.

    [BlackBerry had to do this to allow *other* governments access](http://crackberry.com/rim-installs-blackberry-server-mumbai) to BlackBerry data back in the day and this is something worth paying attention too.

  • Android Headed Away from ‘Open’

    An [excellent post about how closed Android really is](http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/10/googles-iron-grip-on-android-controlling-open-source-by-any-means-necessary/), and is trying to be, by Ron Amadeo. Amedeo concludes: > While Android is open, it’s more of a “look but don’t touch” kind of open. You’re allowed to contribute to Android and allowed to use it for little hobbies, but in nearly every area, the…

    An [excellent post about how closed Android really is](http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/10/googles-iron-grip-on-android-controlling-open-source-by-any-means-necessary/), and is trying to be, by Ron Amadeo. Amedeo concludes:

    > While Android is open, it’s more of a “look but don’t touch” kind of open. You’re allowed to contribute to Android and allowed to use it for little hobbies, but in nearly every area, the deck is stacked against anyone trying to use Android without Google’s blessing. The second you try to take Android and do something that Google doesn’t approve of, it will bring the world crashing down upon you.

    Well worth reading the entire post to see just how locked in Google is trying to make handset makers and developers. I’m not damning Google for this, it’s an incredibly smart move, I just wish Google would drop the ‘open’ propaganda.

  • An Additional Thought on iMessage

    [John Gruber has a very agreeable post ](http://daringfireball.net/2013/10/imessage_encryption) about iMessage security, but I was not sure of his side note: > My understanding is that Apple does not permanently store iMessage message content on its servers. Even in encrypted form, iMessage data is only in Apple’s hands while in transit. Once delivered, it’s gone. Gruber…

    [John Gruber has a very agreeable post ](http://daringfireball.net/2013/10/imessage_encryption) about iMessage security, but I was not sure of his side note:

    > My understanding is that Apple does not permanently store iMessage message content on its servers. Even in encrypted form, iMessage data is only in Apple’s hands while in transit. Once delivered, it’s gone.

    Gruber later updated to clarify the messages probably are held for a short time. I wasn’t sure I bought this idea, as I thought that the load more messages contradicted the idea. (If you scroll to the top of an iMessage thread you can load more messages.) If Gruber is correct all messages are on the device, but if he is not correct then Apple is keeping a copy for this feature to work — easy enough to test.

    My unscientific testing seems to confirm what Gruber is saying. If you delete a thread off of your iPad, but it is still on your iPhone, then you create a new message to that contact on the iPad, there seems to be no way to load in old messages from the device that deleted the thread. This would seem to ‘prove’ that Gruber is likely correct.

    (The best test would be to wipe a device and set it up as new. If any *old* iMessages are on the device, then Apple is keeping them on a server. That’s just a bit more testing than I want to do on a Sunday.) It would seem, though, that Gruber is correct and no old iMessages are stored on Apple servers. This is good news.

    UPDATE: Based on many readers that tested this out, your iMessages don’t carry over if you wipe to your iOS device and don’t restore from a backup. Additionally, if you have a new device and send and receive iMessages, and then restore from backup, you will lose the new messages. Seems pretty conclusive that Apple isn’t storing messages for anything longer than “hours”.

  • iMessage Privacy

    [This is a very interesting white paper][1] on the security built into iMessage. The outcome of which, [as summarized by Ars Technica][2], is that Apple theoretically *could* engineer iMessage in a way that it captures messages. [Not surprisingly Apple has responded to AllThingsD][3]: > “iMessage is not architected to allow Apple to read messages,” said…

    [This is a very interesting white paper][1] on the security built into iMessage. The outcome of which, [as summarized by Ars Technica][2], is that Apple theoretically *could* engineer iMessage in a way that it captures messages.

    [Not surprisingly Apple has responded to AllThingsD][3]:

    > “iMessage is not architected to allow Apple to read messages,” said Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller in a statement to **AllThingsD**. “The research discussed theoretical vulnerabilities that would require Apple to re-engineer the iMessage system to exploit it, and Apple has no plans or intentions to do so.”

    Once again, this all comes down to trust of the company. Do you trust Apple to evade pressures from, say, the NSA for Apple to thwart this? For as big as Apple is, I trust them to do just that — flip off the NSA. Why? There’s lots of reasons I have, none of them particularly good, or worth sharing.

    I do want to point out, that Apple’s argument sounds a lot like [Ladar Levison of Lavabits][4] argument. The “yeah, we *could* do that, but it ain’t gonna happen” argument.

    [1]: http://blog.quarkslab.com/imessage-privacy.html
    [2]: http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/10/contrary-to-public-claims-apple-can-read-your-imessages/
    [3]: http://allthingsd.com/20131018/apple-no-we-cant-read-your-imessages/
    [4]: https://rally.org/lavabit

  • ‘Siri Response Times’

    [John Gruber][1]: > I think the single biggest improvement Apple could (and really must) make to Siri is to make it faster. And that’s exactly the sort of thing Apple has never really shown the chops for. I agree with the idea that Siri needs to be a lot faster, but it is the last…

    [John Gruber][1]:

    > I think the single biggest improvement Apple could (and really must) make to Siri is to make it faster. And that’s exactly the sort of thing Apple has never really shown the chops for.

    I agree with the idea that Siri needs to be a lot faster, but it is the last sentence that I find odd. Because it seems to me that long-time Apple fans are incredibly skeptical that Apple will *ever* be able to have good “cloud” offerings (e.g. Siri, iCloud, sync, file storage, etc.) for the same reasons the Wall Street is skeptical of long-term Apple success.

    These Apple-fans tend to point to past Apple failings as evidence of Apple will likely have future failings in cloud offerings — while at the same time these Apple-fans are mocking others that point to past Apple failings as indications of likely future failures in, well, anything. ((Notwithstanding the fact that I admit that .Mac and MobileMe were pretty crappy by general web standards.))

    Seems a bit *off* to me.

    [1]: http://daringfireball.net/linked/2013/10/17/siri-response-times

  • ‘Twitter’s Theoretically Temporary URL Messaging Ban Due to Massive Wave of DM Spam’

    This is simply an amazing bit of customer hate, as reported by [Matthew ‘The Panzer’ Panzarino at TechCrunch.][1] As I mentioned, Twitter is now rolling out the ability to DM people that don’t follow you. This, sounds like it is an unrelated problem, but proves my point that Twitter is *going* to have a DM…

    This is simply an amazing bit of customer hate, as reported by [Matthew ‘The Panzer’ Panzarino at TechCrunch.][1] As I mentioned, Twitter is now rolling out the ability to DM people that don’t follow you. This, sounds like it is an unrelated problem, but proves my point that Twitter is *going* to have a DM Spam problem. What arose last night is a bunch of “hacked” accounts sending spam via DMs containing URLs.

    Any smart service would have taken user reports and been all over this like white on delicious steamed sushi rice, but according to The Panzer, this is how it played out:

    > What we’re hearing is that the rise in DM spam ended up garnering attention inside Twitter up to the point where an executive inside Twitter’s C-suite got DM spammed. Hence the abrupt ban on URLs inside DMs until the issue can be sorted out.

    To many that seems reasonable. But here’s how I read this: Twitter wasn’t overly concerned about DM spam in the higher ups, until one of the higher ups received the spam. Then they squashed it by banning URLs in DMs. That’s not really a company working in the user best interest, but rather self-serving. It makes you wonder: if that executive hadn’t been spammed, would Twitter have done anything?

    “Ok, Ben, but you are reaching here.”

    Am I?

    > The inconsistencies that we noticed with regards to the sending and receiving of URLs is due to the fact that Verified users and advertisers are exempted from the ban on sending links in DMs. This would impede, of course, the efforts of marketers using Twitter’s legitimate advertising platform to send DMs {…}

    It makes sense to allow verified users to keep sending them, but advertisers? That’s just self-serving — advertisers (granted non-paying ones) were the ones sending the spam. Here’s what we have learned (or been reminded of):

    1. Twitter addresses the problems that bug them first.
    2. While “average” users will suffer from sweeping changes, verified “celebrities” and *braaaaands* won’t suffer, ever. EVAR.

    Enjoy that.

    [1]: http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/17/twitters-theoretically-temporary-url-messaging-ban-due-to-massive-wave-of-dm-spam/

  • ‘Calorie burner: How much better is standing up than sitting?’

    BBC: >We wanted to see what would happen if we took a group of people who normally spend their day sitting in an office and ask them to spend a few hours a day on their feet instead. More fodder for my pro-standing agenda.

    BBC:

    >We wanted to see what would happen if we took a group of people who normally spend their day sitting in an office and ask them to spend a few hours a day on their feet instead.

    More fodder for my pro-standing agenda.

  • ‘Receive direct messages from anyone, even those not following you, on Twitter’

    Luke Edwards: > On the plus side this could be really helpful for companies to converse on specific problems with the public. Or, more sceptically, it allows them to deal privately with problems, taking away the user’s power t publicly embarrass them when an issue arises. Of course the option to talk publicly is there…

    Luke Edwards:

    > On the plus side this could be really helpful for companies to converse on specific problems with the public. Or, more sceptically, it allows them to deal privately with problems, taking away the user’s power t publicly embarrass them when an issue arises. Of course the option to talk publicly is there too.

    Another great move by Twitter to help braaaaaands and spammers. App.net was setup like this from day one, never had or heard of any abuse. I doubt that is going to be the case for Twitter users.

  • Weather Line

    You are likely to hear a lot about a new weather app called [Weather Line][1] today. It’s making the rounds and a lot of people (rightfully) love it. I was one of the people that can brag that they got early access — though I think I may have been the last one added, doesn’t…

    You are likely to hear a lot about a new weather app called [Weather Line][1] today. It’s making the rounds and a lot of people (rightfully) love it. I was one of the people that can brag that they got early access — though I think I may have been the last one added, doesn’t matter.

    I’m personally still a bit undecided about the app. I like many things about it, but I have yet to have that moment where I feel the “yep, this is it”. That said here’s a few general thoughts on the app:

    1. My sentiments are pretty closely reflected by what [Shawn Blanc said about the app][2]: “So, is Weather Line the best new general purpose weather app you can buy? I don’t think so (because of its lack of radar). But it is a fantastic app nonetheless.” (Great photo on his review too, if I do say so myself. And I do.)
    2. Truly fantastic icon.
    3. The more I use the app, the more annoying I find looking at other weather apps that don’t show hourly forecasts as pretty lines on a graph. That said, I am not sold on these pretty lines being the best way to display *current* weather conditions. When I want to check the weather right now, I just want to glance at the screen and that is hard to do with Weather Lines.

    Overall, this is a solid weather app. I personally think it is more geared to weather nerds than, say, my parents.

    [1]: http://weatherlineapp.com/
    [2]: http://shawnblanc.net/2013/10/weather-line/

  • Quote of the Day: Ian Bogost

    “If anything, Google’s motto seems to have largely succeeded at reframing “evil” to exclude all actions performed by Google.” — Ian Bogost

    “If anything, Google’s motto seems to have largely succeeded at reframing “evil” to exclude all actions performed by Google.”
  • GoDaddy Buys Media Temple

    [Ingrid Lunden for TechCrunch][1]: > Domain registration and hosting company GoDaddy is continuing on its acquisitions roll, with the announcement today that it acquired Media Temple, a premium domain hosting and website services company based out of Los Angeles that targets website development professionals. Financial terms are not being disclosed. [From the Media Temple FAQ…

    [Ingrid Lunden for TechCrunch][1]:

    > Domain registration and hosting company GoDaddy is continuing on its acquisitions roll, with the announcement today that it acquired Media Temple, a premium domain hosting and website services company based out of Los Angeles that targets website development professionals. Financial terms are not being disclosed.

    [From the Media Temple FAQ on the acquisition][2]:

    > **Will you be sharing my personal & financial information with GoDaddy?**
    > Your personal and financial information stays securely in our system. No third-party vendors will ever have access to it, which has always been our practice.

    Translation: yes.

    Media Temple *used* to be such a great company.

    [1]: http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/15/godaddy-buys-media-temple-to-build-up-its-business-with-web-professionals/
    [2]: http://weblog.mediatemple.net/2013/10/15/faqs-about-the-godaddy-acquisition/?utm_source=mtemail&utm_medium=text&utm_content=faq&utm_campaign=gd

  • ‘What Stuck and What Didn’t?’

    Shawn Blanc: > Well, over the past three days I went through every single review and recommendation I’ve written in the past 6 years in order to take inventory of which products I still use and which I don’t. I don’t agree with him on a few of these picks, but that doesn’t mean they…

    Shawn Blanc:

    > Well, over the past three days I went through every single review and recommendation I’ve written in the past 6 years in order to take inventory of which products I still use and which I don’t.

    I don’t agree with him on a few of these picks, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t great apps/tools.

  • ‘NSA Collects Millions of E-Mail Address Books Globally’

    [New report from the Snowden leaks by Barton Gellman and Ashkan Soltani][1]. The main points are: > During a single day last year, the NSA’s Special Source Operations branch collected 444,743 e-mail address books from Yahoo, 105,068 from Hotmail, 82,857 from Facebook, 33,697 from Gmail and 22,881 from unspecified other providers, according to an internal…

    [New report from the Snowden leaks by Barton Gellman and Ashkan Soltani][1]. The main points are:

    > During a single day last year, the NSA’s Special Source Operations branch collected 444,743 e-mail address books from Yahoo, 105,068 from Hotmail, 82,857 from Facebook, 33,697 from Gmail and 22,881 from unspecified other providers, according to an internal NSA PowerPoint presentation. Those figures, described as a typical daily intake in the document, correspond to a rate of more than 250 million per year.

    And:

    > The NSA has not been authorized by Congress or the special intelligence court that oversees foreign surveillance to collect contact lists in bulk, and senior intelligence officials said it would be illegal to do so from facilities in the United States. The agency avoids the restrictions in the [Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act][2] by intercepting contact lists from access points “all over the world,” one official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a classified program. “None of those are on U.S. territory.”

    They want the contact lists so that they can do network analysis, as they do with PRISM collection. What’s interesting is that this is a bulk sweep that is rather indiscriminate and only approved by the President. Not even a faux-court here, just the office of the President.

    At the very least, the NSA could take care of the SPAM problem for all of us:

    > Spam has proven to be a significant problem for NSA — clogging databases with data that holds no foreign intelligence value. The majority of all e-mails, one NSA document says, “are SPAM from ‘fake’ addresses and never ‘delivered’ to targets.”

    They took out a nuclear reactor with code, and they can’t take out the fucking spammers for us?

    [1]: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-collects-millions-of-e-mail-address-books-globally/2013/10/14/8e58b5be-34f9-11e3-80c6-7e6dd8d22d8f_story.html
    [2]: https://www.fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fisa/

  • Review: The CODE Keyboard

    I am, decidedly, not a keyboard geek. I don’t know anything about the different switches used in keyboards. And up and until the past few years I would have thought it a joke for anyone to prefer a mechanical keyboard. This, then, is not the review that a keyboard nerd wants to read about a…

    I am, decidedly, not a keyboard geek. I don’t know anything about the different switches used in keyboards. And up and until the past few years I would have thought it a joke for anyone to prefer a mechanical keyboard. This, then, is not the review that a keyboard nerd wants to read about a hot new mechanical keyboard. This is the review for those that just don’t understand what all the hubbub is about — which is exactly where we begin this review.

    What’s the big deal with Cherry MX Blue/Red/Pink/Purple/White/Clear switches?

    In the past I experimented with the Matias Laptop Pro keyboard and [concluded][1]:

    > The Matias made me a worse typist, with a worse looking desk. That’s the worst.
    > Maybe I’m just not nerdy enough for a mechanical keyboard, so I typed this on one of my six Apple Wireless keyboards instead.

    Then I vowed not to try another mechanical keyboard because I simply cannot stand cords. This is not solved with the [CODE keyboard from WASD Keyboards](http://codekeyboards.com), but there was something about the way this keyboard was marketed that hooked me. Maybe it’s the backlight, maybe the removable cord, maybe it’s the DIP switches for changing settings, or maybe I’m not as happy with the Apple Wireless keyboard as I thought. I don’t know the reason, but I wanted to try it.

    With the Matias I became a worse typist. After a substantial amount of time using the keyboard at my office I was still missing keys, making errors and feeling fatigued after typing. It drove me nuts. I have been typing most of my life, I should not have to “learn” a keyboard.

    When I first plugged in the CODE I typed my complex, lengthy OS X password and, to my surprise, nailed it on the first try. There has certainly been an adjustment period but as I write this sentence, two days into my testing, I feel comfortable using the keyboard. I’m currently typing below my normal speed, however, I don’t feel that the keyboard’s design is forcing me to make errors.

    ##### Fast-Forward A Week

    I’ve now had the CODE for about a week, and I like this keyboard even more. In fact I like it so much that I often bring it home with me after work — I just don’t want to use another keyboard.

    And then, as I finished typing that sentence I picked up the keyboard to adjust it and the USB cable came loose. Upon inspection, the port itself had come unsoldered from the board.

    Crap.

    ***

    ##### While We Wait

    While I waited for a replacement to the CODE, I went back to the trusty old Apple Wireless. I immediately hated it. The key travel was too short, and everything started to bug me. So I went ahead and grabbed a [DAS model S Professional from Amazon][2].

    This section of my CODE review will be about the DAS, while we wait in “real time” for the replacement CODE to arrive.

    There’s three things you immediately notice about the DAS that doesn’t stand out on a keyboard like the CODE:

    1. It’s huge. With the ten key off to the side this keyboard is substantially wider. Add to that the overall bulkier look and you feel like your mouse hand is reaching off to China.
    2. It’s really loud. I’ve only ever tried the “silent” version of clicky keyboards, but man is this DAS loud. The part the gets me is that the sound is more treble than bass and I am not sure I will be able to stand it while I wait for a new CODE.
    3. The lettering on the keycaps is quite different. I’ve yet to decide if it is different good, or different bad.

    The real question is how does the CODE compare to the DAS. In that respect the CODE blows the DAS out of the water. There is a lot to like about the DAS, but the added noise is just too much for me, the pigtail USB port is ugly and cumbersome, and the overall size of the DAS is obscene.

    I think the DAS is a solid keyboard, but had I started part two of my journey into mechanical keyboards with the DAS, I don’t think I would have become a convert.

    ***

    ##### Return of the Code

    WASD keyboards repaired my CODE (they are currently running 4–12 months on backorders for them) by replacing the dislodged port and sent it back to me looking perfect. The repair took about a week with shipping times.

    ##### Noise

    Now that the CODE is back I can run the test that a ton of people have been asking me about: noise. A lot of you asked that I record the noise from the CODE and the other keyboards I have, but I don’t get why. The reason being: you can turn the volume up and down on a sound file.

    Instead I put a decibel meter to each keyboard. Actually, I downloaded a decibel meter app on my iPhone 5S, taped my iPhone to the shock mount of my podcast mic, and stationed the iPhone microphone 16 inches above they keyboards and recorded the peak dB reading. ((The test was typing the same sentence three times in a row on each keyboard.)) Here are the results:

    – CODE: 99 dB at peak
    – DAS: 104 dB at peak (Cherry MX Red switches)
    – Apple Wireless: 90 db at peak

    In other words the CODE is 10% louder than the Apple keyboard, while the DAS is 15.5% louder. (The DAS is 5% louder than the CODE for those not wanting to grab a calculator.)

    Update: Sorry, I was not aware decibels are measured on a logarithmic scale, and thus my math above was not correct — not even close.

    For the most part, the Apple Wireless keyboard is silent in an office. The CODE can be heard, but I don’t think it’s an annoying sound. The keystrokes are more bass than treble and they sound solid.

    The DAS, however, has a much louder, higher pitched sound than the CODE. The sound of the DAS sounds a bit cheap if you ask me, almost plasticky. I find the DAS sound annoying but after a couple of days I got used it enough and was no longer bothered.

    While I prefer a nice and silent keyboard, the sound of the CODE isn’t enough to dissuade me from using it. The DAS is likely to annoy people around you if are in remotely close proximity.

    ##### The End

    Of the keyboards I tested recently: the DAS, that crappy Microsoft thing Marco likes, the Apple Wireless Keyboard, and the CODE, the only keyboard I absolutely adore is the CODE. It’s unfortunate that they are on back order because I’d like to have two of them.

    [Here’s what WASD said on `9/24/13` about the order status][3]:

    > More CODE keyboards will be available in approximately 4-6 months. Our next batch will include Cherry MX Blue, Brown, and Green switches. We do have Clear switches on order, but due to long lead times from Cherry, we do not expect another batch of Clear CODE keyboards for another 12-14 months.

    A YEAR OUT! Crap.

    The Apple Wireless will still be my go-to when I need a keyboard for the iPad. For everything else, I’d be very sad to type on anything except the CODE.

    Very sad, indeed.

    [1]: https://brooksreview.net/2013/04/mechanical-keyboards/
    [2]: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B003ZG9T62/ref=nosim&tag=brooksreview-20
    [3]: http://codekeyboards.com

  • ‘Why I Think Google’s Shared Endorsements Are a Good Thing for Social Media, Influencers and Consumers’

    [Thomas Hawk has lost, something, sanity? Maybe. This post is so ridiculous that I am forced to walk you through almost the entire thing.][1] Now, it is fair to say that I am predisposed to disagree with people that would think this is a good idea, but Hawk’s argument is so thin that it’s just…

    [Thomas Hawk has lost, something, sanity? Maybe. This post is so ridiculous that I am forced to walk you through almost the entire thing.][1] Now, it is fair to say that I am predisposed to disagree with people that would think this is a good idea, but Hawk’s argument is so thin that it’s just ridiculous.

    He begins (after a brief intro):

    > Because Google gives everyone an opportunity to opt out of shared endorsements, it’s easy to dismiss a lot of the criticism by simply pointing folks to how easy opting out is.

    No, we could dismiss it if it was opt-in, but turning something on after people sign up, and are not expecting it, is a douchebag move plain and simple.

    > Some people are very anti-advertising though and certainly this new advertising channel will naturally be met by some with healthy skepticism. It’s also worth noting that these ads are not going to appear on Google+. Google+ will remain ad free. The new ads simply will use Google+ data to advertise in places where Google is already advertising, like search.

    Oh, well shit, if they aren’t on Google+ then *no one* has anything to worry about. It’s not like Google Search has more traffic than Google+ — oh it does? So Google is pulling your endorsements from Google+ and *not* showing those endorsements on Google+, instead showing them where the *rest* of the world looks *every* day? Nothing to worry about there.

    > Personally speaking, for myself, I embrace change. In general I’d rather see more change, than less. I think change represents innovation (usually) and I probably tend to look for the positive in change rather than the negative. I’m a glass half full sort of guy when it comes to change.

    Here Hawk is really saying: you are only against this if you are a negative person. To disagree with Hawk’s points must prove you to be a nasty negative person, because Hawk *is* an “glass half full sort of guy”. Me? I’m a *flask* half full sort of guy.

    > I think most of us see how today’s announced change in the TOS is good for businesses who advertise. Personal endorsements by our friends are incredibly powerful motivators. Ads which feature personal endorsements by people we know, trust and respect, will be far more effective than other ads that an advertiser might come up with.

    I don’t think anyone disagrees with this.

    > I think we can also see where this new product would be good for Google.

    Ok, but why is this good for the user? We all get it is good for advertisers and for the people that make money off those ads, we get that. No dispute here.

    *(Skipping a bit of redundant shit.)*

    > Social media is the future. By increasing the value of our possible endorsements through advertising buys, companies will spend more time, effort and money to court social influencers.

    Right, but *most* users, like more than 90%, don’t fit that category of “social influencers”. So why is this good for them?

    *(Fast forward through some crap that he loves and want’s to be paid for loving.)*

    > If you consider yourself a social media type, this will be one more important reason why you’ll want to devote time to building out your presence on G+.

    Uhh, what now?

    > There will be a risk of course that some influencers will be bought off by brands for positive endorsements, but I think most of the time this stuff is pretty easy to sniff out.

    Bullshit. Utter bullshit. They absolutely *will* be bought off — that’s the entire premise of linking an “influencer” with a *braaand*.

    > It’s the true, authentic, natural posts (available for purchase after the fact as ads) that will be most valuable.

    He’s kidding, right? There’s no such thing of true/authentic posts in an environment where people know they *could* get paid after the fact for that post. That leads to more favorable posts. It’s why most large media companies separate the writers from the people selling ad spots. Bias would be rampant otherwise.

    > I bet brands spend more time showing us their cool new tech and products as the value of these ads become apparent and more of their budgets are spent on promoting products to G+ users.

    I forget, do they try *not* to show use cool new products right now?

    That was all just point one, here we go on point two.

    *(Skip some stuff that is filler.)*

    > One of the reasons why I never change my avatar is that I believe having a strong avatar that is consistent over the years with your brand helps you build recognition.

    Uhh, ok?

    *(Skip some stuff about Robert “Ego” Scoble.)*

    > For about 2 months every time I logged into Facebook, I was seeing another brand that Robert liked. Were the brands paying Facebook for that? Probably. But it also constantly reminded me of a good friend and also linked back to him in the like. I have to admit that I ended up liking a lot of the same brands Robert did, when it was something I really liked.

    Here’s the point Hawk is missing: did Robert like the brand because he likes the brand, or because he was paid *to* like the brand? Did Facebook take a like out of context, like perhaps because Scoble visited a page for those brands and by default “auto” liked those pages?

    In this type of setup, you never know the answer to these things because it is in the best interest of the brand and ad company to hide this truth and make it as favorable as possible.

    Point three (two was a real dud):

    > Let’s say I’m in the market to buy a new filter for my camera. Wouldn’t it be a positive for me to know that another photographer I respect (like Joe Azure) seems to like his Lee Big Stop Filter? Isn’t that a lot better than just a generic ad? Especially if I see a lot of my friends endorsing one product, this may be a good signal to me that this product is worth checking out more than others.

    Now *this* is a strong point. However, if you are in the market, wouldn’t it be far more helpful to see that your pals like this product on the product page instead of an ad? If you are looking for a particular product, do you really look for it in ads?

    > I saw a report earlier today that said that by 2014 10-15% of online reviews will be fakes. With all the fake reviews and astroturfing out there, I’m more inclined to trust the word of a friend on a product or service, than a stranger.

    And how many Facebook/Google “likes” do you think are fake, or severely outdated?

    And lastly:

    > Oh, and by the way, if you were wondering whether or not those sea salt and vinegar chips in the dark blue bag by Kettle Chips were the BEST CHIPS IN THE ENTIRE WORLD? Yep, they pretty much are — and if Kettle Chips wants to send a few bags of those over to our place, my daughters and I would totally be down with that. 

    *Exactly…*

    What should we have expected from someone that has this on their sidebar: “Google+ is for WINNERS!”.

    I get that some people don’t mind this. That for “influencers”, brands, and Google this *will* be a good thing. But for the average user this will either be nothing of importance, or shitty. The idea that it would be good is laughable.

    [1]: http://thomashawk.com/2013/10/id-plus-one-that-why-i-think-googles-shared-endorsements-are-a-good-thing-for-social-media-influencers-and-consumers.html

  • ‘An Interesting iOS App Store Upgrade Example’

    [Gabe Weatherhead][1]: > So that seems normal, but it is a discounted price, as promised. FTP on the Go for iOS 7 is $10. This upgrade is $5. That seems pretty good, so I went with it. I use the app several times a week. If I get notified of a typo on this blog,…

    [Gabe Weatherhead][1]:

    > So that seems normal, but it is a discounted price, as promised. FTP on the Go for iOS 7 is $10. This upgrade is $5. That seems pretty good, so I went with it. I use the app several times a week. If I get notified of a typo on this blog, I usually fix it from my iPhone or iPad with their app. I’m happy to kick them a few extra bucks. But, what the hell is going on here?

    Very interesting solution to a tough problem. Ultimately I think it will work for them because their target market is very nerdy people who will not be confused by multiple versions (or more accurately who will *un*-confuse themselves easily). For most apps this would be a disaster. (I would guess, can you imagine three versions of something mainstream, like Angry Birds?)

    [1]: http://www.macdrifter.com/2013/10/an-interesting-ios-app-store-upgrade-example.html

  • ‘Run While You Have to, Stop When You Can’

    Brett Terpstra: > Maybe you haven’t been as lucky. Maybe you haven’t been as careless to begin with. Still, do me a favor and step back to appreciate that you get to be picky about your coffee, snobby about your beer and pretentious about your text editors.

    Brett Terpstra:

    > Maybe you haven’t been as lucky. Maybe you haven’t been as careless to begin with. Still, do me a favor and step back to appreciate that you get to be picky about your coffee, snobby about your beer and pretentious about your text editors.

  • ‘Why Microsoft Word Must Die’

    [Charlie Stross][1]: > Nor is Microsoft Word easy to use. Its interface is convoluted, baroque, making the easy difficult and the difficult nearly impossible to achieve. It guarantees job security for the guru, not transparency for the zen adept who wishes to focus on the task in hand, not the tool with which the task…

    [Charlie Stross][1]:

    > Nor is Microsoft Word easy to use. Its interface is convoluted, baroque, making the easy difficult and the difficult nearly impossible to achieve. It guarantees job security for the guru, not transparency for the zen adept who wishes to focus on the task in hand, not the tool with which the task is to be accomplished. It imposes its own concept of how a document should be structured upon the writer, a structure best suited to business letters and reports (the tasks for which it is used by the majority of its users). Its proofing tools and change tracking mechanisms are baroque, buggy, and inadequate for true collaborative document preparation; its outlining and tagging facilities are piteously primitive compared to those required by a novelist or thesis author: and the procrustean dictates of its grammar checker would merely be funny if the ploddingly sophomoric business writing style it mandates were not so widespread.

    Fantastic read.

    [1]: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/10/why-microsoft-word-must-die.html