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  • Ridiculous Statements from the Tech Press Regarding the iPhone 5, After it was Announced

    I got bored during one of the software demos while reading live-blogs about the Apple iPhone 5 press event, so I checked in on my RSS feeds. Surprisingly (or not really) there were posts up about what the iPhone 5 means yadda yadda yadda — yet no one had touched it yet. So I’ve culled…

    I got bored during one of the software demos while reading live-blogs about the Apple iPhone 5 press event, so I checked in on my RSS feeds. Surprisingly (or not really) there were posts up about what the iPhone 5 means yadda yadda yadda — yet no one had touched it yet. So I’ve culled together stupid statements people are making maybe even some statements from those that have played with the iPhone 5, we can’t be sure with this level of “journalism”.

    Here we go, let’s start with Consumer Reports. [Mike Gikas](http://news.consumerreports.org/electronics/2012/09/apple-iphone-5-is-the-radical-makeover-that-apple-fans-needed.html):

    >Apple needed to go big this time, and it did.

    Why, because competitors have larger phones? If that’s your basis for this statement, then how do you back up the fact that Apple has not lost any sales by not having a bigger phone sooner — it’s not like this is a new trend? That is, iPhone sales were still excellent-to-industry-leading. So what is the basis for this ludicrous statement? There isn’t one — and who’s to even say that a bigger iPhone is actually better? I’m not convinced, but I am going to wait to have one before I put that down in ink.

    Next is [John Brandon, who writes a true gem for Inc.com](http://www.inc.com/john-brandon/apple-iphone-5-finally-ready-for-business.html), titled: “iPhone 5: Finally Ready for Business?” Well, is it? Brandon goes through a bunch of words, that put together amount to little more than a press release. Here’s a true gem of the article:

    >A new set of earbuds, called the EarPods, should make phone calls a little easier and clearer for business purposes–and maybe even reduce some background noise in the process.

    Did he just write about the new headphones being great “for business purposes” — wow, just wow. Maybe they will be great for music purposes too. Either way, do business people walk around with headphones on? Bluetooth, certainly, but earbuds? I think not.

    Brandon solidly concludes his article with:

    >Whether the business world adopts it as a standard phone for employees, or lets staff members “bring their own” is still undecided.

    Shocking conclusion there Brandon. He then cites an Inc.com poll showing consumers that read Inc.com want the iPhone 5, while his actual conclusion is the pricing info. I get putting a business spin on the article, but why not talk more about VPNs, encryption, security, and Exchange support? He touches on some of this, but that’s the heart of a business article about the iPhone — not the earbuds.

    The Consumerist’s, Chris Morran took to the argument we are likely to hear everyone talk about, [the new connector](http://consumerist.com/2012/09/is-there-anything-special-about-the-iphone-5.html). Morran thinks:

    >Sure to be of annoyance to some people is Apple’s decision to finally do away with the wide 30-pin connectors that have been associated with iOS devices for years.

    Good to know that, I guess. Of course it will make great claim chowder if it turns out to be the best new feature — I guess we will have to wait for actual consumers to use the device, you know, because assumptions are just that, assumptions. If you really wanted to damn this new connector why not talk about the obscene $29 that Apple charges for the adapter. Better yet, why not ask why Apple likes the $29 price point so much. As I said, the new connector is just as likely to be a hit as it is to be a miss, unless you need something to get riled up about before you know the answer.

    To recap:

    – Consumer Reports thinks this is something that will right the iPhone ship that was being bombarded by larger screened rivals.
    – Inc.com thinks there’s a chance the earbuds will be great “for business purposes”.
    – The Consumerist thinks the new dock connector is going to be a real pain in the ass for consumers.

    I can’t wait for tomorrow’s reports…

    **Update**: [GigaOm is blaming Apple’s lack of adoption of NFC as being the reason NFC is floundering](http://gigaom.com/2012/09/12/iphone-5s-nfc-snub-will-keep-technology-out-of-mainstream/). Yeah…

  • Quote of the Day: Gadi Amit

    “We don’t need translation of the digital medium in mechanical real-life terms. It’s an old-fashioned paradigm.” — Gadi Amit

    “We don’t need translation of the digital medium in mechanical real-life terms. It’s an old-fashioned paradigm.”
  • SpiderOak

    A nice review from Glenn Fleishman on Macworld that looks at an interesting backup/sync option called SpiderOak. He concludes: >If you’re looking for the highest level of privacy and a service that has all of the pieces in one place for backup, sync, and read-only folder sharing, SpiderOak offers the strongest solution. I’ve known about…

    A nice review from Glenn Fleishman on Macworld that looks at an interesting backup/sync option called SpiderOak. He concludes:
    >If you’re looking for the highest level of privacy and a service that has all of the pieces in one place for backup, sync, and read-only folder sharing, SpiderOak offers the strongest solution.

    I’ve known about SpiderOak for a long time now, at it seems right up my alley, but honestly the UI is confusing and ugly. I tried to use it a month ago and just couldn’t find the time to want to set it up. That’s why Dropbox and Time Machine are so powerful — just flip a switch and forget about it.

    Still, I’ve heard from many that SpiderOak is a much more secure option — and with iCloud it might make a nice complimentary service over Dropbox. I’ll give it another go.

  • ‘Integrity and Bullies With Blogs’

    Joshua Topolsky (the editor-in-chief of *The Verge*) responded to [earlier criticism](https://brooksreview.net/2012/09/reporting-kind-of/) of a Verge post on his personal Tumblr. Overall it’s about what you would expect, but the opening salvo is a real gem and so I think we should break down the opening paragraph line-by-line. >I wanted to make this brief, because I have…

    Joshua Topolsky (the editor-in-chief of *The Verge*) responded to [earlier criticism](https://brooksreview.net/2012/09/reporting-kind-of/) of a Verge post on his personal Tumblr. Overall it’s about what you would expect, but the opening salvo is a real gem and so I think we should break down the opening paragraph line-by-line.

    >I wanted to make this brief, because I have more important things to do with my time than respond to bullies who like to play-pretend that they know things they don’t.

    This is an interesting way to start. He’s trying to discredit those that are speaking out about this, saying they are “play-pretending” that they “know” things that they don’t. Further, that even talking about these people are a waste of his time because this is very much a non-issue. Two of those people: Marco Arment and John Gruber. So I’m thinking this opening statement is a bit of a stretch, but heck, he’s upset.

    I’m breaking the next bit up for better analysis.

    >But, just as I felt compelled to respond to Michael Arrington when he attacked the work I (and my team) did at Engadget,[…]

    It’s one thing to have Arment or Gruber call you out, but Arrington? Ouch, I had forgotten about that.

    > […]I am now responding to Marco Arment, John Gruber,[…]

    I’m glad he didn’t pussyfoot around calling people out by names — when everyone knows who called you out, best to address those people directly.

    >[…]and anyone else who sets up a minimal WordPress blog and thinks that the ability to publish text onto the internet gives them insight into what journalism is or what I do for a living.

    Wait, you have got to be fucking kidding me, this is the next bit of discrediting tactic he is taking? That somehow a minimal looking WordPress blog makes you a shit writer? How do the tools have anything to do with the writing talent?

    Topolsky is using Tumblr for fucks-sake if you really want to start talking about platforms, probably not best to sling shit when using Tumblr — just saying. ((I mean Jim Dalrymple has a minimalist looking WordPress blog, didn’t comment on this, and is ten times the writer/reporter/journalist of the entire Verge staff combined. Probably best to check the WordPress comment at the door.))

    Further, this minimal looking WordPress blogger hack, looked into his RSS feed of ~600 tech minded sites to see who commented about *The Verge* — of those commentators I am the only one on WordPress that commented — so it must be me right? I mean it’s not like WordPress is [*that* popular to blog on](http://trends.builtwith.com/cms).

    Give me a break.

    That’s not to mention that Topolsky likely offended half of the people that read *The Verge*, but hey he needs to defend his site.

    ### The Error

    Here’s the thing, I would have loved for Topolsky to have posted this as an open “letter from the Editor” on *The Verge*. He could have clearly and calmly laid out the policies at *The Verge*. He could have went on record as saying why the topic was omitted, that they always tell the truth, and so forth.

    But he didn’t.

    Instead Topolsky responded on his smaller personal Tumblr site.

    >My point is this: when someone accuses this team of lacking in integrity, or being on the take for a company, or somehow perverting their work for the sake of some other party (readers or otherwise), I take it pretty seriously. I think it’s bullshit, and I won’t stand for it.

    “I mean, not seriously enough to talk about it openly on the site that I am editor-in-chief of, but the next level down for sure. But really, as I said, I don’t have time for this shit — it’s serious — but I don’t have time for it.”

  • Quote of the Day: Harry Marks

    “9to5Mac is the ‘used car salesman’ of Apple blogs (maybe a notch below DigiTimes).” — Harry Marks

    “9to5Mac is the ‘used car salesman’ of Apple blogs (maybe a notch below DigiTimes).”
  • “Reporting”

    Harry Marks on the fact that the Spectre One looks exactly like an iMac, and yet Engadget didn’t mention that in its review — instead the author tweeted it would have been trolling to mention that fact — rebuts: >I don’t believe it would be “trollish” to state that the Spectre One is, at the…

    Harry Marks on the fact that the Spectre One looks exactly like an iMac, and yet Engadget didn’t mention that in its review — instead the author tweeted it would have been trolling to mention that fact — rebuts:
    >I don’t believe it would be “trollish” to state that the Spectre One is, at the very least, influenced by Apple’s iMac all-in-one.

    [Marco Arment points out](http://www.marco.org/2012/09/10/elephant):

    >Big “gadget” blogs depend on maintaining very friendly relationships with the companies whose products they cover so they can continue to get exclusives, interviews, press badges to events, and early access to products.

    Better still, [Jonathan Poritsky reminds us that those exclusive are usually piss-poor anyways](http://candlerblog.com/2012/09/10/staying-friendly/).

    Of course, [this shouldn’t be surprising to anyone](https://alpha.app.net/benbrooks/post/372549) — it’s [one of the reasons I moved to a paywall model](https://brooksreview.net/2012/07/new-tbr/) so that I could *always* avoid not being able to speak my mind.

    I’d like to say I expect more from Engadget or *The Verge*, but I really — honestly — trust their reviews less than I trust Amazon reviews.

  • Siri Drops the “That”

    A nice catch by Shawn, but more interesting is that he feels he treats Siri like a person. I, for one, treat her better — last night I caught myself saying to Siri: “**Please**, set a time for 20 minutes.” I mean who uses “please” anymore? My guess, 95% percent of people that use Siri,…

    A nice catch by Shawn, but more interesting is that he feels he treats Siri like a person. I, for one, treat her better — last night I caught myself saying to Siri: “**Please**, set a time for 20 minutes.” I mean who uses “please” anymore?

    My guess, 95% percent of people that use Siri, speak like they are naturally speaking to a human. That’s not because we think Siri is a person — no — I’m guessing it is because Siri actually understands us ((Mostly.)) when we use our *natural* language.

  • ‘I’m David Marcus, and I’ve Been Running PayPal’

    David Marcus, in a comment on Hacker News, about all the complaints surrounding PayPal: >[…]there’s a massive culture change happening at PayPal right now. If we suck at something, we now face it, and we do something about it. There’s so much that’s fascinating about his statement. Let me just run through them: 1. This…

    David Marcus, in a comment on Hacker News, about all the complaints surrounding PayPal:
    >[…]there’s a massive culture change happening at PayPal right now. If we suck at something, we now face it, and we do something about it.

    There’s so much that’s fascinating about his statement. Let me just run through them:

    1. This was sent publicly on a very nerdy link aggregation site. Not done via a Press Release or anything more private.
    2. This sends the wrong message. This makes PayPal sound like a startup (again) and makes the company look rather unprofessional — not something you want your online bank sounding like.
    3. That said, I love that he did this. The statements could be complete bullshit, but the fact that he had the savvy to respond to this criticism is fantastic.
    4. This feels more like a response to the loss of customers, than it does a response to a real complaint.
    5. PayPal is clearly worried about their future, because you don’t hire a guy that says the things Marcus is saying if you are riding high.

    Should be interesting to watch if any changes happen.

  • Belkin WeMo

    When Shawn Blanc first told me about the WeMo, I was pumped. An iPhone controlled outlet and a web enabled motion sensor sounded not only awesome, but perfect. With Belkin making the project I was even more in love with the idea — because while I don’t think everything that Belkin makes is great, I…

    When Shawn Blanc first told me about the WeMo, I was pumped. An iPhone controlled outlet and a web enabled motion sensor sounded not only awesome, but perfect. With Belkin making the project I was even more in love with the idea — because while I don’t think everything that Belkin makes is great, I do think that for the most part they don’t make crap for the sake of making crap.

    I purchased the kit that included the switched outlet controller and the motion sensor device — I had the perfect scenario mapped out. My living room is lit with two tall lamps, neither of which are on a switched outlet and thus must be turned on by hand. I put the switched outlet on one lamp and was amazed at how well the entire thing worked.

    I then started to play around with the motion sensor, and quite honestly am not impressed by it in the least. I can’t seem to find a good use for the motion sensor and this is in part due to the fact that anything it would alert me to, would likely be too late of an alert by the time I was alerted. Even though we are only talking about a seconds type of delay, it’s still significant enough to make the product harder to find a fit for. Since I haven’t used the motion sensing bit very much, this is all I feel comfortable saying about that part of the WeMo.

    The Pros of the Switched Outlet Component

    • It works very fast. In my home there is a less than one-half second delay from the time you tap the on/off button on the iPhone to the time the light turns on and off. (The light has an LED bulb in it, so the delay isn’t some CFL nonsense.)
    • It’s very reliable. My biggest fear was that it would crap out at times and leave me high and dry. It hasn’t once crapped out that I can remember. It did stop working one day, but then I found out the cats had unplugged it somehow.
    • It’s insanely convenient. We can now leave the light on while we walk the hallway to the bedroom at night and wait to turn off the living room light until we are both in bed. That may sound silly to some, but we really love being able to do this.

    The Cons of the Switched Outlet Component

    • You cannot turn on the light without using the WeMo app, which is logical, but you can turn off the light without using the app — and once someone does that it can’t be turned back on with just the app. Do you see where this can get confusing?
    • The app needs to launch faster.
    • The switch makes a very audible click when you turn it on and off. I wish it was silent — that’d be far better.
    • The icon for the app is, well, let’s just say that I keep it hidden in a folder — as inconvenient as that maybe.

    Wrap Up

    The WeMo switched outlet component is a solid device and we will likely be getting another for the other lamp in our living room. I wish the UI was a little better on the app, but it’s not the worst I have seen and is perfectly useable as is.

    The motion sensor is simply not something I can find a use for, but I am certain there are uses for it. ((If you want mine, send me an email — best offer gets it.))

    There’s a bunch of cleverness about WeMo, from the rules you can setup to the WAN support. It’s a solid product all around.

    If you buy it from Amazon, you can support the site: here’s just the switch component and here’s the switch plus motion sensor package.

  • Quote of the Day: Wells Riley

    “Skeuomorphism helps people misunderstand the capabilities and limitations of digital products based on their understanding of a physical analog.” — Wells Riley

    “Skeuomorphism helps people misunderstand the capabilities and limitations of digital products based on their understanding of a physical analog.”
  • The Pricing of Subscriptions

    I’ve been seeing all of the Read & Trust members link to their new monthly magazine this week, and I made [the following comment on App.net about it](https://alpha.app.net/benbrooks/post/342482): >I don’t like the Read and Trust magazine pricing $6 for a single issue, but $5 a month for a subscription. To me that’s says “we want…

    I’ve been seeing all of the Read & Trust members link to their new monthly magazine this week, and I made [the following comment on App.net about it](https://alpha.app.net/benbrooks/post/342482):

    >I don’t like the Read and Trust magazine pricing $6 for a single issue, but $5 a month for a subscription. To me that’s says “we want you to subscribe because we know you’ll forget to unsubscribe later” Sends the wrong message.

    I still firmly stand behind that statement, but before I get into it I want to make a couple of disclosures:

    1. I used to be a member of Read & Trust (I think I was one of the first, but I can’t recall) and recently left the network. There’s no big scandal, Read & Trust required me to put a link and/or logo on my homepage linking to them and I was not willing to do that — so I left. I honestly have no ill-will about it. ((I doubt that stops people from writing this off as my being disgruntled, upset, or otherwise. Truthfully neither Read & Trust, or I gained anything from my membership.))
    2. Most of the writers on Read & Trust are people that I would consider pals. However, **every** writer on Read & Trust is someone that I respect.

    Having said that, I am critical of the pricing model of their new magazine, but my criticism is far deeper reaching than just the Read & Trust Magazine — as was pointed out to me on App.net it’s a common pricing practice in the magazine industry, but it is a practice that I really don’t like. So my criticism isn’t directed squarely at Read & Trust, they are just what sparked the thought and for simplicity what I will use as the example in this post.

    I do think, that for $6 or $5, the Read & Trust Magazine is likely worth it (I haven’t read a copy) just judging by the writing talent alone.

    OK, here’s my argument as clearly as I can state it:

    Pricing a single issue at a higher price than the subscription price (a subscription that would also get you the same issue) is a practice that I do not like for a couple reasons:

    – To me it feels like I am being pushed into a subscription, otherwise I am being a fool for paying more for just one issue.
    – Because of that I am left asking what the motivation is for pushing me to the subscription, and there is only one reason that I see: there’s a benefit to having subscribers over single-issue buyers.

    The benefit for traditional magazines and newspapers to having more subscribers has been increased circulation numbers, which would mean that they could sell the ad slots in the magazines/newspapers for a higher rate.

    Circulation is akin to page views in today’s web parlance — meaning cheaper subscriptions were used to entice more page views to up ad rates across the board. With a digital, non-ad laden, goods like the Read & Trust magazine, there isn’t a motivation to pump page views. Therefore the only (business) motivation is to sell as many issues as they can. Again I don’t have any insider knowledge, but this is my best guess as to their motivation.

    So if your motivation is selling as many magazines to readers as you can, why price the single item higher?

    My thinking is that it is simply, as I said at the beginning, in hopes that people forget to cancel their subscription at some point. I see how that sounds vilifying to Read & Trust, but to be clear: people forget to cancel things, I know people probably forget to cancel their membership to my site all the time — I wish there was a better way to alert people, but that’s why I made this site work after you cancel a membership (you can sign up, cancel, and keep viewing until you would have had to renew next). My point is not to say anyone is a “bad” guy, just that this type of pricing sends the wrong message to me.

    Ideally I would think it would be most beneficial to price single issues and subscriptions at the same price. This leaves the only reason for subscribing to be a convenience factor for readers: you buy once and get all the new issues and don’t have to worry about paying each time.

    This is why I don’t like single items being priced higher than subscriptions: I am leery to subscribe if I am not sure I will like it, and eat I feel punished for not subscribing. ((And yes, I know you can twist this to me punishing non-members — but it’s too different to make the same argument. The argument I would have to make is that I’ve devalued the paid membership by making the paid content free after 7 days — which I have. I’m sure there’s more arguments to be made, I’d love to hear them — honestly.))

    So what’s the other side of the argument?

    The arguments that I heard on App.net are:

    – *It’s industry standard practice.* Which as I said above is not really an argument here and moreover it’s a poor excuse if you ask me. This borders on lazy thinking: it’s what everyone does, so too shall I.
    – *How’s this different than charging less for an annual subscription, than you would for a monthly subscription?* That’s a great question, and in my mind they are two very different things. First the annual subscription is actually a pre-payment for goods or services, therefore the [time value of money argument](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_value_of_money) is in play. Basically, you can afford to discount a pre-payment because of the value you get from gaining the cash up front and not having to wait for it. But charging more for a single issue, verses a monthly payment, isn’t charging less for a pre-payment — you still deliver the same good at the same time, just for different prices. If I am missing a point here, let me know.
    – The very best argument I heard was related to bulk goods discounts, and I will present it to you as [Matt Flaschen presented it to me on App.net](https://alpha.app.net/mattflaschen/post/343283):

    >@benbrooks how is that different from a bulk discount when you really think about it?

    After I responded with an economies of scale rebuttal [he stated](https://alpha.app.net/mattflaschen/post/343391):

    >@benbrooks yes, it’s more obvious on physical goods. But it applies otherwise too. If a magazine knows they have subscription income, they can be more comfortable offering a writer a six-month contract. If they have one bad issue, there’s still income.

    I honestly hadn’t thought of that, which is why I love stirring this up from time to time — great thoughts come from the chaos. Perhaps this is what Read & Trust is doing, I don’t know, so if it is what they are doing then I can see the reason for the push towards a subscription, I still don’t like it, but the reason makes complete sense.

    However, if this isn’t the case with Read & Trust then I just don’t get why the price of a single issue is higher than the monthly subscription. If it was for two months, makes sense, because then you have pre-payments, but for the same month/issue — that’s hard for me to make sense of.

    Not only do I think consumers are better off with equal pricing, but I think Read & Trust would be too and that applies to any company selling goods without advertising in play.

    **Update** (September 10, 2012): A few people have told that this sounds overly pointed at Read & Trust, and makes too many assumptions. I did not reach out to Aaron Mahnke the founder of Read & trust before publishing this, and have not reached out to him now. I welcome any thoughts on this and have made updates to the post in-line above to clarify a few areas.

  • ‘How Google Builds Its Maps—and What It Means for the Future of Everything’

    A fascinating in-depth look by Alexis Madrigal at how Google maps the world. What’s interesting to me is just how much human involvement this takes — there’s no doubt that Google Maps is the premier online mapping service — [but how does Google make money off of Maps](http://www.quora.com/How-does-Google-Maps-make-money)? That’s the real question. Having used iOS…

    A fascinating in-depth look by Alexis Madrigal at how Google maps the world. What’s interesting to me is just how much human involvement this takes — there’s no doubt that Google Maps is the premier online mapping service — [but how does Google make money off of Maps](http://www.quora.com/How-does-Google-Maps-make-money)?

    That’s the real question. Having used iOS 6’s new mapping application, it’s readily apparent to me that while not *as good* as Google’s, I’ve yet to be frustrated, lost, or annoyed by Apple’s offering. Which is to say, I bet most other people won’t be bothered by Apple’s offering either — where does that leave Google? Will people really care to download a Google Maps app, when the built in one is pretty damned good too?

    Does Mapquest often get downloaded on iPhones? I think we have our answer.

    So while Google spends millions, billions(?), on maps I have to wonder if it will all have been wasted as a source of income for them.

  • The Kickstarter Conundrum: Who’s Taking the Risk? You.

    There’s been an uptick in chatter about Kickstarter the past few weeks — most of the chatter has been on the negative side. People are getting upset the projects they backed still haven’t shipped — projects like The Pebble watch. There has been a lot of good things to come out of Kickstarter, to name…

    There’s been an uptick in chatter about Kickstarter the past few weeks — most of the chatter has been on the negative side. People are getting upset the projects they backed still haven’t shipped — projects like The Pebble watch. There has been a lot of good things to come out of Kickstarter, to name a few that I backed:

    – [The Glif](http://www.studioneat.com/pages/glifoptions)
    – [The Shape of Design](http://www.shapeofdesignbook.com)
    – [Dark Sky](http://darkskyapp.com)

    I was surprisingly complaint free on these projects, but it seems now that Kickstarter may be too big for their own good. Specifically, it seems, that there is such a thing as over-funding a project. While that is a massively over simplification of what is really happening, it’s worth taking a deeper look at it. I see two main issues with Kickstarter projects right now, and unfortunately I am also seeing little, to no, help from Kickstarter themselves.

    The two main issues:

    – Projects biting off more than they can chew.
    – Promising more things (features, goodies, etc) in the same amount of time if higher funding levels are reached.

    I think what is actually happening is that Kickstarter is suffering from being too successful. Originally the platform was one that artists used to deliver new music and films — to create things that they know how to create already. Now, with the massive success of gadgets on the site, many more people are wanting to create their dream gadgets — the difference is that most of these projects are started by people that have little to no experience actually creating the gadgets they seek to create — the polar opposite of the arts that were previously popular on the site.

    So it’s one thing when two guys get together and prototype a clever plastic tripod mount for an iPhone ((Not to minimize how amazing the Glif is.)) and a completely different thing when a group gets together and dreams up an interactive watch. The Glif was made from low-cost prototypes early on, they just needed money to fund large scale manufacturing. The Pebble isn’t real, the idea is, so not only is manufacturing needed, but so too is R&D.

    And R&D (spoiler alert) takes a lot of time.

    Yet in the project creators minds, the two projects almost seem one and the same. The Glif is a physical good made by two people that had no prior experience, which is basically the same was making any other physical good that happens to be a watch — right? Not quite.

    And that’s what all Kickstarter gadget backers are quickly learning: you cannot simply fund something into existence.

    So while some fault lies with over-ambitious Kickstarter project creators, I think we also have to fault the system. Kickstarter doesn’t stop a project from receiving funding at any point — you can raise as much as you humanly possible — and I don’t think that should change necessarily, but it should be better controlled.

    Here are some simple fixes I would like see put in place:

    1. Allow project creators the option to cap funding.
    2. Require actual estimates of cost and production times from project creators. That would be in the form of an proposal from a manufacturer that states the time required for manufacturing at certain break points and the estimate per unit cost for every X unit run. This would only be required by gadgety type projects.
    3. Automatically delay shipping estimates based on those proposals and the amount of units pre-sold. This gives backers a better understanding at the time of backing.
    4. Change the “backing” terminology. Stop being vague and working in a gray area. If a project says that you backing at X level will get you the item being back — that’s no longer a donation it’s a pre-order. So create two types of backers: donators and pre-orders. Donations are just that, you give them money and get nothing (maybe a sticker, whoopy). Pre-orders are exactly that: pre-ordering a good — this then becomes refundable. That would likely curtail the amount of projects being created, because of the risk associated, but that’s the way it should be. You need project creators to be confident they can deliver.
    5. A reality check. Kickstarter should hire some people that know a thing or two about manufacturing and have them take a look at popular projects to vet them for realistic goals. If the goals aren’t realistic, talk to the creators and give them a reality check, or suspend the project.

    I have more thoughts, but those are where I would start. The risk is actually to Kickstarter on a whole, as [Matt Griffin tells me on App.net](https://alpha.app.net/mattgriffin/post/340294):

    >@benbrooks the fact that I’m still waiting for my pebble is exactly why I won’t fund any more projects right now. I can only place one bet at a time and feel ok about it.

    Which brings me to my last point:

    Why is it that all of the risk with Kickstarter projects falls on the backers and not on the project creators?

    Yes, there is financial risk for project creators if they go over budget, but they could also spend all the money trying to ship, never ship, and I have no recourse because I was just “donating” money with the hope of getting a product.

    That doesn’t seem right and until it’s fixed I’m done backing things on Kickstarter.

  • ‘Apple Shifts Some Memory Chip Orders for New iPhone From Samsung to Other Chipmakers’

    Jung-Ah Lee: >Analysts said that the ongoing high-profile litigation between the two companies may have accelerated Apple’s move to reduce its dependence on Samsung. That’s deep. I said it earlier, but if Apple really wanted to screw over Samsung, they would find a way to not use Samsung as a supplier. It looks to me…

    Jung-Ah Lee:
    >Analysts said that the ongoing high-profile litigation between the two companies may have accelerated Apple’s move to reduce its dependence on Samsung.

    That’s deep.

    I said it earlier, but if Apple really wanted to screw over Samsung, they would find a way to not use Samsung as a supplier. It looks to me that Apple agrees, they need to diversify their suppliers. What’s most interesting to me, is how this will effect profitability for iOS hardware and quality. Hopefully the latter won’t be affected at all.

  • ‘I’m Done With the Verge’

    Jonathan Poritsky writing about the end of his readership to *The Verge*: >On what planet is disclosure a suggestion? Full disclosure: Poritsky emailed me his post. Wait, maybe I should phrase that differently: >EXCLUSIVE: Poritsky emailed me his post. That’s better. I gave up on *The Verge* [awhile ago myself](https://brooksreview.net/2011/12/failure/), but hey that’s just me.…

    Jonathan Poritsky writing about the end of his readership to *The Verge*:
    >On what planet is disclosure a suggestion?

    Full disclosure: Poritsky emailed me his post. Wait, maybe I should phrase that differently:

    >EXCLUSIVE: Poritsky emailed me his post.

    That’s better. I gave up on *The Verge* [awhile ago myself](https://brooksreview.net/2011/12/failure/), but hey that’s just me. ((Fun note, my post is listed in Wikipedia, of which I take great pride being the critical guy’s post on Wikipedia.))

    To be fair, *The Verge* has some of the best patent litigation coverage on the web — they do a great job and should be commended for that, but the things Poritsky points our are just, well, really egregious. The rest, the reviews, commentary, news, is all poor on a daily basis and really should be better given the talent level of *The Verge’s* staff.

    That said, if you do dump *The Verge*, why not [subscribe to Poritsky’s site](http://candlerblog.com)? That’s what I just did. It’s certainly better looking than *The Verge*. ((Exception to that permalink button, that’s gotta go. Update: He changed them, good man.))

  • Quote of the Day: The Beard

    “I write until my point is made and then I stop.” — The Beard

    “I write until my point is made and then I stop.”
  • Nokia Faked the Still Photos Too

    Pretty damning research and quasi-proof from Youssef Sarhan that Nokia faked the still photos for the Lumia 920 too. [I take back what I said](https://brooksreview.net/2012/09/gruber-nokia/), Nokia should be taken to task over this level of deceit. [I’d love to see the FTC step in and sanction them over misleading advertising](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_advertising#United_States_advertising_regulations).

    Pretty damning research and quasi-proof from Youssef Sarhan that Nokia faked the still photos for the Lumia 920 too.

    [I take back what I said](https://brooksreview.net/2012/09/gruber-nokia/), Nokia should be taken to task over this level of deceit. [I’d love to see the FTC step in and sanction them over misleading advertising](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_advertising#United_States_advertising_regulations).

  • The B&B Podcast #75: B&B 2.0

    In addition to talking about Kindles and App.net, Shawn and I announce our new show format. I won’t give everything away here except one thing: our new goal is to stay at 30 minutes or less per show. If you haven’t had time to “catch up”, this is one you might move to the top…

    In addition to talking about Kindles and App.net, Shawn and I announce our new show format. I won’t give everything away here except one thing: our new goal is to stay at 30 minutes or less per show. If you haven’t had time to “catch up”, this is one you might move to the top of your podcast queue.

    We are also accepting sponsors for each show, $395 a show. Get in touch with me to book that. ((I know, I know, but how do you paywall a podcast?))

  • Quote of the Day: Elliot Jay Stocks

    “PayPal, you are the scourge of the internet. Fuck you.” — Elliot Jay Stocks

    “PayPal, you are the scourge of the internet. Fuck you.”
  • ‘Why and How I Use Fever’

    Nice, timely, post from Anthony Drendel detailing how he uses Fever° and why he uses it opposed to other RSS readers. I have to agree with him on the reasons for using Fever — it’s a fantastic RSS tool. One point he left out is that Fever is great if you don’t like to waste…

    Nice, timely, post from Anthony Drendel detailing how he uses Fever° and why he uses it opposed to other RSS readers. I have to agree with him on the reasons for using Fever — it’s a fantastic RSS tool. One point he left out is that Fever is great if you don’t like to waste time keeping up with news while you are on vacation — just set the Hot List for the last week (or whatever time frame) and you can get a great sense of what happened while you were drinking, I mean vacationing.

    Reeder recently added in Fever support (you still need to have Fever installed on a web server), but I think Sunstroke — made by Drendel — is a far better option for interacting with Fever on your iPhone. He also just [updated Sunstroke to version 1.3](http://itunes.apple.com/app/id488564806), which has a lot of visual enhancements (read: better design).

    I’m often asked what I use for RSS, this is it: Fever and Sunstroke.