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  • Sitting and Standing

    A Cornell University study: >So the key is to build movement variety into the normal workday. Very interesting to read, the key thing that the report says is that you need to move around. While I love standing at work, I also move frequently while at work and sit for long periods to and from…

    A Cornell University study:

    >So the key is to build movement variety into the normal workday.

    Very interesting to read, the key thing that the report says is that you need to move around. While I love standing at work, I also move frequently while at work and sit for long periods to and from work (and after work hours). Ideally I would like an adjustable desk, but I think not having an adjustable desk actually makes me move quite a bit more.

  • Thoughts on Metro

    Windows 8 with Metro UI was [unveiled](http://channel9.msdn.com/events/BUILD/BUILD2011/BPS-1004) this week and you have likely seen most of the UI and little tricks Microsoft is using to “re-imagine” Windows — and apparently Microsoft itself. If I am perfectly honest Windows 8 excites me a bit. Metro UI is anything but boring. I am not excited about Ribbon…

    Windows 8 with Metro UI was [unveiled](http://channel9.msdn.com/events/BUILD/BUILD2011/BPS-1004) this week and you have likely seen most of the UI and little tricks Microsoft is using to “re-imagine” Windows — and apparently Microsoft itself.

    If I am perfectly honest Windows 8 excites me a bit. Metro UI is anything but boring.

    I am not excited about Ribbon UIs and other UI monstrosities that Microsoft has jammed into their aging OS — I am very interested in everything that has to do with the Metro UI paradigm. It is something very original that is coming out of a company better known for “copying”.

    Metro UI is a risk for Microsoft, and that’s something that you can’t say about most of its products. The last risk was Windows Vista and that was a risk done by necessity so that the OS could keep up with OS X’s speed. Before that they gambled on Zune and Xbox. Both introduced well after the markets for each device was established.

    Metro is Microsoft acknowledging that Apple has something with iOS, but instead of Microsoft copying iOS (as they typically would have done) they decided to let their imaginations run wild.

    There is quite a bit about Metro that I think is darn clever and quite a bit that I hate. By and in large Metro is not an iOS clone, from what I have gleaned from playing with Windows Phone 7, erm, phones — Metro is a refreshing change. ((This would be in contrast to Android, which just feels like the Microsoft clone of iOS in my opinion. Ergo Metro is more like the difference between WebOS and iOS.))

    There’s a few things that I think are worth pointing out about Metro at this point, so let’s go through them.

    ### Copied from iOS

    There are two really interesting “concepts” that Microsoft took out of the iOS playbook: multi-tasking and Flash. There will be no “true” multi-tasking, instead Metro will kill off apps after a bit — much in the same way that iOS 4+ does multi-tasking. This was obviously done for battery-life and performance reasons, but I still find it very interesting that this approach was taken by Microsoft.

    The second thing is the [lack of Flash in IE 10](https://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2011/09/14/metro-style-browsing-and-plug-in-free-html5.aspx). In fact just like in mobile Safari there will be no plugins that the user can install — again for battery life and performance reasons. I wonder if Adobe is still feeling pretty smug?

    Note that I don’t have any intention in calling Microsoft a copy-cat for taking these features, I just want to point out that these are very interesting (and often controversial) features to bring to Metro. It would have been far less controversial to let users install Flash is they pleased and to run down their own batteries by keeping a ton of apps open.

    Microsoft was faced with a choice of trying to please every one and trying to do what would be best for the user experience — they chose the latter, that’s interesting.

    ### Grid App Templates

    One of my favorite parts about iOS is the creativity that an App UI design can put forth. From the textures of Reeder, the crazy cards of Twitter (iPad), the awesome MLB At-Bat and more — they can all look very different. Certainly the apps can be made to look like first-party apps by utilizing many of the features built into iOS (button controls and bars), but even Apple goes outside the box on apps like iBooks. It’s fantastic.

    That’s why I was a bit worried while watching the Microsoft Build presentation about how any developer can make their apps beautiful by “dropping” them into the “Grid” template that Microsoft includes in Metro. There’s a joke to be made here about Windows developers and their eye for design, so in that light perhaps such a template is a good thing?

    I think it is potentially very bad. It is selling Windows developers short. I am sure you don’t have to build with that Grid template to get in the Microsoft store, but — and this is a big but — what will the Metro user think of non-grid apps?

    If 90% off all apps are built off the Grid template (which I think is a safe assumption given Windows apps I have seen) then wouldn’t a user be off put by an app not using this template?

    On iOS users tend to reward innovative and unique UIs, but will they on Metro when Microsoft is so heavily pushing and promoting that things all look uniform — right down to the baseline grid that the text sits on?

    What Metro apps end up looking like should be an interesting thing to watch and my guess is that (sadly) they will all look the same. I hope this isn’t the case.

    ### Landscape First

    I’m certainly not the [first to mention](http://getwired.com/2011/09/15/the-landscape-tablet-landscape/) this, but when it comes to tablets Windows 8 (and Metro) certainly look like they were first and foremost designed as a landscape UI. Certainly they rotate, but they are 16:9 widescreen and made with the “home” button on the bottom when you hold your device in landscape.

    I find that odd especially given [this post](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/tablet-power/) that I wrote about tablets giving some power back to users through not forcing users or developers to pick an screen orientation.

    The only explanation that I can come up for this is that Microsoft really thinks of Windows 8 tablets, not as “tablets” but as laptops minus the keyboard bit.

    That is, I don’t think Microsoft sees users really using Windows 8 tablets as anything more than a slightly more portable laptop — that’s an interesting take for such a forward thinking Metro UI, it almost seems counter-intuitive to a Metro UI.

    ### Timing

    The unfortunate bit of all this Windows 8 talk is that the OS is at least another year away. By then iOS 5 will be out and we will certainly be awaiting the arrival of iOS 6 and perhaps even a new Mac OS X version as well.

    So why is that bad? Well, for starters, while Metro looks great now, in 2011, will it still look that good in late 2012?

    Perhaps you think that is the fanboy in me talking, but let me ask you this: does iOS 3 still look good to you?

  • The Four Themes

    Paul Thurrott on CEO Steve Ballmer’s thoughts at the BUILD conference: >The four themes for Microsoft are new hardware form factors, which include slates and convertible tablets, of course, but also the new Ultrabook PC; cloud services; and new application scenarios that provide new opportunities for developers. “Each and every one of these things is…

    Paul Thurrott on CEO Steve Ballmer’s thoughts at the BUILD conference:
    >The four themes for Microsoft are new hardware form factors, which include slates and convertible tablets, of course, but also the new Ultrabook PC; cloud services; and new application scenarios that provide new opportunities for developers. “Each and every one of these things is shifting our direction, what we’re doing, what we’re trying to accomplish,” Ballmer said, “and each and every one of them, I think, has incredible opportunities not just for us, but for every developer in the world.”

    So in other words Microsoft is “shifting” to build: iPads; what used to be called Tablets, but are just those funky jobbers with rotating screens that weigh ten pounds; “of course” MacBook Airs; iCloud/Google/Amazon; App Store.

    *Innovative.*

    That’s not to say this isn’t a good strategy for Microsoft, but honestly it is the *only* strategy for them — so why put these things into such silly categories?

    This bit from Thurrott cracked me up, if for no other reason than the passive jealousy the statement holds:

    >And of course, PCs are just kicking the bejesus out of tablets, despite reports to the contrary: Apple might sell 35 million iPads this year, and it gets a lot of press for that. But there will be over 10 times as many PCs sold in the same time period, and while growth is comparatively slow—as it would be for such a mature product—it’s still a growing market.

  • Flight Card

    This app makes me want to fly somewhere — man is it beautiful looking.

    This app makes me want to fly somewhere — man is it beautiful looking.

  • Groupon Getaways Aren’t the Deal They Seem to Be

    Rocky Agrawal has a great post about Groupon Getaways that ties nicely in with [what I wrote yesterday](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/death-spiral/). According to Agrawal: >The reason that regular Groupons are so generous is that merchants are sold on the line that they can do the first deal at a loss and you will become a repeat customer. Hotels…

    Rocky Agrawal has a great post about Groupon Getaways that ties nicely in with [what I wrote yesterday](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/death-spiral/). According to Agrawal:
    >The reason that regular Groupons are so generous is that merchants are sold on the line that they can do the first deal at a loss and you will become a repeat customer. Hotels don’t buy that. To a hotel revenue manager, you’re a head in a bed. Not only must your head be profitable for a given night, it must be maximally profitable. If there’s a big convention in town and rooms are selling for $500 a night, you won’t be able to use that Groupon voucher that you bought for $100 a night.

  • Release Day Economics

    Uniform Motion details what they get to keep from various different methods of distributing their music: >That being said, it costs us 35 EUR/year to keep an album on iTunes, Spotify, and Amazon (105 EUR per year for all 3 of our albums!) so we don’t make any money until 24 people have bought a…

    Uniform Motion details what they get to keep from various different methods of distributing their music:
    >That being said, it costs us 35 EUR/year to keep an album on iTunes, Spotify, and Amazon (105 EUR per year for all 3 of our albums!) so we don’t make any money until 24 people have bought a digital copy of the album on iTunes, or 150 single songs, or if we get tens of thousands of listens on Spotify! In most cases, it’s actually more economically viable not to sell the music at all.

    It’s a pretty amazing break down.

  • Instapaper’s (Anti-)Social Network

    Marco Arment took the time to comment on [this post](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/ego-less/) of mine: > In addition to removing the emotional rollercoaster of follower counts and unfollows, this may actually increase following activity: if people realize that others won’t know when they follow or unfollow, they may feel more comfortable doing so. You should read the entire…

    Marco Arment took the time to comment on [this post](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/ego-less/) of mine:

    > In addition to removing the emotional rollercoaster of follower counts and unfollows, this may actually increase following activity: if people realize that others won’t know when they follow or unfollow, they may feel more comfortable doing so.

    You should read the entire post about why he chose to make Instapaper’s features the way he did, it’s fantastic.

  • Windows 8 BSOD Now Includes a Sad Face

    Look at the screenshot, tell me that will not piss you off even more when your Windows machine crashes. On a positive note it should be much more comical when electronic billboards crash…

    Look at the screenshot, tell me that will not piss you off even more when your Windows machine crashes.

    On a positive note it should be much more comical when electronic billboards crash…

  • The Masked Social Network

    There’s something incredibly unnerving the first time you start “following” the liked items of other users on Instapaper. Instapaper makes no suggestions to you of popular users and offers no list of current users — this is quite unexpected. You get the option of looking up people via other social networks, or just by email…

    There’s something incredibly unnerving the first time you start “following” the liked items of other users on Instapaper. Instapaper makes no suggestions to you of popular users and offers no list of current users — this is quite unexpected.

    You get the option of looking up people via other social networks, or just by email address, this is of course in stark contrast to just about any other social offering you will encounter — as they much prefer shoving as many users in your face as possible.

    It’s a purposeful mask that has been pulled over the “social” offerings of the inherently non-social activity of reading.

    Even if you use Instapaper you can still “hide” yourself from other users, if you so desire. Perhaps most jarring is that you get no indication *if* anybody is actually following you.

    There are no follower counts.

    No following counts.

    No popularity contests.

    No cliques.

    No ego stroking.

    There’s just a list of articles that people you chose to follow decided that they liked. All without knowing who, or if, anybody will ever see that they liked that article.

    It’s a fascinatingly private social system.

    I want more of it.

    Effectively Instapaper has found a way to keep its users engaged with the site’s main purpose, reading, while offering users ways of keeping tabs other readers. It’s like getting a peek at someone else’s bookcase, without them knowing that you peeked.

    Imagine what would happen if Twitter operated this way: you have no inkling of who is following you and others have no clue if you are following them. You just have an account that you post to, occasionally a person responds to you. The only way you know if a person is following you is when you go to Direct Message them.

    Imagine that, because what would really change?

    Some numbers go away, sure, some egos are deflated — that’s a bonus. But what is the worth of a follower? To businesses it is bragging rights, and job security for “social media experts” — but for you the individual, does it matter?

    I would argue not only does it not matter, but knowing these counts makes the service worse.

    The service is made worse because people behave differently given the setting they are in. Would you say the same things if you have ten followers as you would if you had ten million followers?

    I know I wouldn’t.

    Actually I know exactly what Twitter would feel like: blogging.

    If you have a site with no analytics on it at all, then you have an exact sense of what such a Twitter-without-counts would feel like.

    I know roughly how many people read this site (blogging equivalent of followers), but I don’t know who most people are — it’s a blind count. I know who some of you are because we have conversed via email and Twitter, but the overwhelming majority of you are, well, anonymous.

    I like it that way, I am guessing most of you like it that way too. Maybe Kim Jong-il ((I cite him because, well, it amuses me — feel free to substitute any name.)) reads this site, maybe he doesn’t — but if he did and I knew that? Well, my message would certainly change.

    Follower and friend counts play to the human ego and our curiosity, but sometimes I think it would be better to let us be curious. The knowledge of not only that you are being “watched”, but of who is watching you makes social networks far less interesting. ((I like to look at this in the context of dancing — something I hate doing with a passion. I am far less likely to dance around people that I know. Slightly more likely to do it when intoxicated around people I know. Even more likely to dance around people I don’t know. And most likely to dance in front of people that I don’t know while intoxicated.))

  • These Four Threats Against Android Secured Motorola Mobility a $12.5 Billion Offer From Google

    Florian Mueller on Google’s premium paid to Motorola: >This isn’t a defensive purchase in the sense of Google becoming strong enough to retaliate seriously against its strategic rivals (mutually assured destruction). It’s defensive-defensive in the sense of merely attempting to prevent an exacerbation of the Android patent situation due to what MMI was going to…

    Florian Mueller on Google’s premium paid to Motorola:
    >This isn’t a defensive purchase in the sense of Google becoming strong enough to retaliate seriously against its strategic rivals (mutually assured destruction). It’s defensive-defensive in the sense of merely attempting to prevent an exacerbation of the Android patent situation due to what MMI was going to do otherwise.

    Credit where credit is due, Motorola did a great job negotiating this sale.

  • Death Spiral

    Right now consumers are pushing companies — many large, smart, companies — down a death spiral, a race to the bottom. Groupon, LivingSocial and coupon sites are the catalysts that have set this trend on fire, but it all started with the consumer “free” mentality. The idea that companies are making too much money screwing…

    Right now consumers are pushing companies — many large, smart, companies — down a death spiral, a race to the bottom. Groupon, LivingSocial and coupon sites are the catalysts that have set this trend on fire, but it all started with the consumer “free” mentality.

    The idea that companies are making too much money screwing over the “little guy” with high prices.

    Increasingly $0.99 has become too much money to pay for things that others spend a non-trivial amount of their life creating. Not just iPhone apps, candy bars, or soda — food, haircuts, tours, clothing — the consumer wants it all for free, or at least 80% off.

    It is a recession after all.

    Groupon of course is just one of many sites that offer steep discounts on goods and services, but they are the most popular, so I will pick on them a bit.

    Oh, yes, the creators of these products, and the proprietors of these businesses, opt-in to these wholesale oriented sites — but the real question I have is whether it is bad business practices or the consumer that forces this hand.

    Do you think Groupon would be as big as they are today had it not been for the recession we currently are in?

    Do you think restaurants would be willing to forgo all profit for one night — in the hope that repeat business comes from it?

    Of course we know the answer to that last question: hell yes. And that’s just a bad business decision.

    ### It’s a Two-Fold Problem

    On the one hand consumers are “forcing” business owners to make the tough call of “liquidating” product/services via sites like Groupon — and make no mistake about it, this is a liquidation service. On the other hand Groupon is helping to make successes out of companies that are either: not profitable, or are just a bad idea. ((Of course, exceptions to every rule — and such.))

    Before you email me, let me explain what I mean.

    Say you open a cupcake shop in a busy area — an area with many other cupcake shops ((For the life of me I will never understand the appeal of such places.)) — and business pretty much sucks for you. Your prices are in line with your competitors and in your mind the product is comparable.

    You turn to Groupon as a last ditch effort to your failing business. You offer a 60% off special for one day only with Groupon.

    That “Groupon day” your sales are through the roof. Astronomical even. Customers were lined up and all you worry about is where you will store all your cash come tomorrows repeat customers — a day that probably won’t come.

    Your business picks up, it’s not quite break-even yet, but it is 30% higher than it was before the Groupon deal.

    You are ecstatic.

    You now have false hope, the deadliest kind.

    This false hope will cause second mortgages, cashing out retirement funds and many other irrational moves to keep the hope of that one day alive.

    This is the hope that digs you a financial hole that you won’t get out of for another 10 years.

    What Groupon has showed you is that your business can work if you continue down the unsustainable path of selling products at a loss. That’s not the consumers fault — they are being smart — that’s the fault of the business owner.

    Let’s use an example a little more close to tech nerds hearts: the TouchPad.

    ### TouchPad Example

    For all intents and purposes the TouchPad was bad product ((I the sense that it simply did not sell, and thus consumers voted with their wallets that they did not want it.)) that fell flat on sales, then with the help of liquidation (a $400 price cut on a $499 product) good sales lead to a stupid decision that will likely cost the company more money — all chasing that same false hope.

    HP decided to kill off the TouchPad. They decided that they needed to clear the retail channels of products and liquidated it for $99, again down from $499. They decided (wisely, perhaps) that it was not the business for them. They sold the product in record time, in record amounts (for this product at least) during a liquidation-get-me-the-hell-out-sale.

    Just as with our cupcake proprietor HP thought: “sweet! money!”. Of course it should have ended there for a company as smart as HP, but it didn’t. They were blinded. Instead HP decides that they should manufacture, or complete the manufacturing of, all existing materials to sell the TouchPad again.

    So where’s the problem?

    The problem is that the consumers bought the TouchPad not on the merits of the product, but solely based on the price — the deal — same with the cupcakes. When you discount a product as heavily as HP did to the TouchPad, the sales that the product garners during such a period has no bearing on what sales will be after discounting ends.

    If HP comes back with the TouchPad at $499 or even $399 — will it once again be a sales success? Likely not, we’ve already seen what those sales are like and it’s less than great. Consumers bought it at $99 because that was an absurd price, not because they had been longing for the device.

    Further if HP comes back selling the tablet at $99 — they essentially will be selling it at a loss ((Even if you argue that it is better than paying penalties, HP now has to support the device for more customers than they would have had. My guess: the cost of breaking contracts is about the same as the cost of supporting a money losing device.)) — what sense does that make?

    Two things could then happen because of the false hope HP gained during a fire sale:

    1. HP will come back with fire sale prices again, thus losing more money.
    2. HP will come back hoping for a bump in sales at the original product prices. Only to be disappointed, thus holding another fire sale. The end result of which is losing more money.

    ### Massive Liquidation is Bad Business

    Deborah L. Cohen reporting on a comment from [Ellen Malloy](http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/06/30/us-column-cohen-groupon-idUSTRE65T56R20100630):

    >If a business needs to drive traffic with discounts, she said, it often means there are underlying problems.

    These models are all about building a business off of bad, inaccurate, data and hiding that fact with sales surges spurred by nothing more than slashing prices below a sustainable level.

    Time again there has been one business model that has proven to be successful, as stated recently by [Marco Arment](http://5by5.tv/buildanalyze/42):

    >[…] the traditional style of spend less than you make.

    That’s the only way to make money, short of fooling someone into buying your company for more than it’s worth. ((Often called: potential for profits.)) It’s the model that all business should start off with and guess what flies in the face of such a model: selling products/services for less than it costs you to make/serve those items.

    Groupon liquidations are dangerous to business because they promote a race to the bottom. This is only exacerbated by more and more Groupon deals being “targeted” to specific areas, which is just a stupid way of saying the deals are not coming from giant companies, but from mom and pop companies in local areas.

    These types of business are prone to this type advertising because they are inexpensive. Small business don’t have money to spend on traditional advertising, so what’s cheaper in the mind of these business owners:

    1. Taking money out of their personal savings or getting a loan to advertise? Or…
    2. Taking in less money for a day?

    It’s always option number two and that can work, but you have to be willing to ignore the results of that one day — which is near impossible when it is *your* business.

    It’s hard to ignore that data point for the same reason people balk at the notion of paying someone $50 an hour to paint a wall when they can do that themselves — which is the entire reason Home Depot exists. Or paying someone to un-clog a drain when corrosive, often pipe ruining, Drain-O is $10 a bottle at Home Depot.

    Business owners often don’t value their time, the same way that homeowners don’t value theirs.

    ### Note to Consumers

    This is not to change your mind as a consumer — if a business is stupid enough to fall for these traps then you should, by all means, take advantage. A deal is a deal.

    You should note however that a company [willing to sell you “unlimited” storage for $10 a month](http://techcrunch.com/2011/09/12/with-bitcasa-the-entire-cloud-is-your-hard-drive-for-only-10-per-month/), when it’s primary competitor has decided they cannot do that at that price — well perhaps that new company won’t be around that long. Buyer beware.

    ### To Businesses

    This is a memo to all business owners large and small: pull your heads out of your asses and stop racing to the bottom. You cannot make a sustainable business by selling goods and services at a loss. You must — completely — ignore sales data gained by holding fire sales, that data is irrelevant to your normal operations.

    I started thinking about this with this very blog and the income streams that I use to pay for the costs and my time. I have the small Fusion ad and the RSS sponsorships.

    I don’t know the practices that Fusion uses to fill the ad spots, but I do know RSS sponsorships and just how hard they are to fill from time to time. It takes work, but could easily be filled if I dropped prices.

    In the past few months a ton of blogs have implemented these types of income streams — all at different prices and values to potential advertisers. Filling spots continues to get harder, but — luckily — most sites are steadfast in their pricing, thus avoiding a dreaded race to the bottom as I outlined above.

    Such a race is one I will never compete in. One that you shouldn’t compete in too.

  • Windows 8 Ushers in the Post-Post-PC Era

    Zach Epstein: >Apple paved the way but Microsoft will get there first with Windows 8. A tablet that can be as fluid and user friendly as the iPad but as capable as a Windows laptop. Define: “capable”…

    Zach Epstein:
    >Apple paved the way but Microsoft will get there first with Windows 8. A tablet that can be as fluid and user friendly as the iPad but as capable as a Windows laptop.

    Define: “capable”…

  • Buy a Subscription, Get a Discounted Tablet

    That’s the line in Philadelphia at least. I think the design of the website says everything you need to know about this, erm, “program”.

    That’s the line in Philadelphia at least. I think the design of the website says everything you need to know about this, erm, “program”.

  • Hands-on Preview of the Windows 8 Developer Build

    Joanna Stern on the Windows 8 tablet given out at the Microsoft conference: > The whole user experience feels schizophrenic, with users having to jump back and forth between the two paradigms, each of which seem like they might be better off on their own. To be fair she notes that most of the Metro…

    Joanna Stern on the Windows 8 tablet given out at the Microsoft conference:
    > The whole user experience feels schizophrenic, with users having to jump back and forth between the two paradigms, each of which seem like they might be better off on their own.

    To be fair she notes that most of the Metro UI stuff is pretty decent (but still needs polish). The entire system seems to break down when you need to use what I will call the “legacy” UI — no surprise here.

  • The B&B Podcast – Episode 26: The Web Never Sleeps

    This week Shawn talks about roasting coffee beans in a popcorn popper and I try to listen to him. We also talked about Palm Pilots and the awesome new If This Then That website.

    This week Shawn talks about roasting coffee beans in a popcorn popper and I try to listen to him. We also talked about Palm Pilots and the awesome new If This Then That website.

  • Following Does Not Equal Attention

    Chris Brogan: >If someone is not following you on Twitter, it doesn’t mean they don’t like you. Not following means that the person has made other choices with what they want to focus on with that social network. You can be friends with someone and not follow them.

    Chris Brogan:

    >If someone is not following you on Twitter, it doesn’t mean they don’t like you. Not following means that the person has made other choices with what they want to focus on with that social network. You can be friends with someone and not follow them.

  • Charge money for your work. Dont be a jerk to people. Repeat.

    Nick Disabato: >Make something cool, charge people for it, take their money, keep making cool stuff. Sadly, an awful lot of people don’t practice it. Chicago style over the California style any day.

    Nick Disabato:
    >Make something cool, charge people for it, take their money, keep making cool stuff. Sadly, an awful lot of people don’t practice it.

    Chicago style over the California style any day.

  • Quote of the Day: John Gruber

    “Money is how you keep score, because it’s the one thing whose value everyone agrees upon.” — John Gruber

    “Money is how you keep score, because it’s the one thing whose value everyone agrees upon.”
  • HTC Boss on Windows Phone 7, Patent Wars and Why iPhones Aren’t Cool Anymore

    John Cook quoting Martin Fichter, the acting president of HTC America: >I brought my daughter back to college — she’s down in Portland at Reed — and I talked to a few of the kids on her floor. And none of them has an iPhone because they told me: ‘My dad has an iPhone.’ There’s…

    John Cook quoting Martin Fichter, the acting president of HTC America:
    >I brought my daughter back to college — she’s down in Portland at Reed — and I talked to a few of the kids on her floor. And none of them has an iPhone because they told me: ‘My dad has an iPhone.’ There’s an interesting thing that’s going on in the market. The iPhone becomes a little less cool than it was. They were carrying HTCs. They were carrying Samsungs. They were even carrying some Chinese manufacture’s devices. If you look at a college campus, Mac Book Airs are cool. iPhones are not that cool anymore. We here are using iPhones, but our kids don’t find them that cool anymore.

    I had no idea that the President of HTC was using an iPhone — or did I read that wrong?

  • Twenty-Five Pieces of Basic Sartorial Knowledge So You Don’t Look Dumb

    Jesse Thorn: >Cell phone holsters are horrible. Also be sure to support Season 2 of Put This On, over at [Kickstarter](http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1136753854/put-this-on-season-two?ref=card).

    Jesse Thorn:
    >Cell phone holsters are horrible.

    Also be sure to support Season 2 of Put This On, over at [Kickstarter](http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1136753854/put-this-on-season-two?ref=card).