Dave Winer on why Google cares if you use a *real* name for Google Plus:
>And to give them information about what you do on the Internet, without obfuscation of pseudonyms.
It’s about the greenbacks…
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Dave Winer on why Google cares if you use a *real* name for Google Plus: >And to give them information about what you do on the Internet, without obfuscation of pseudonyms. It’s about the greenbacks…
Dave Winer on why Google cares if you use a *real* name for Google Plus:
>And to give them information about what you do on the Internet, without obfuscation of pseudonyms.
It’s about the greenbacks…
Dave Cameron, perhaps my favorite baseball writer, informing readers of his diagnosis of Acute Myeloid Leukemia: >Statistics can be powerful, useful tools, and at times, they can be critical to understanding what to do. Other times, though, they’re useless, and so, for this situation, I say screw the data; I choose hope instead. Thoughts and…
Dave Cameron, perhaps my favorite baseball writer, informing readers of his diagnosis of Acute Myeloid Leukemia:
>Statistics can be powerful, useful tools, and at times, they can be critical to understanding what to do. Other times, though, they’re useless, and so, for this situation, I say screw the data; I choose hope instead.
Thoughts and prayers with you Dave.
There is certainly something going on between the two lately. Whether Murdoch is pulling the strings or not, we can only speculate. It’s sad that in my eyes the WSJ is slowly losing credibility. It’s fine to report news and speculation — that’s the medias job (self-appointed as it may be) — but the timing…
There is certainly something going on between the two lately. Whether Murdoch is pulling the strings or not, we can only speculate. It’s sad that in my eyes the WSJ is slowly losing credibility.
It’s fine to report news and speculation — that’s the medias job (self-appointed as it may be) — but the timing of these reports and the type of reports they were is what concerns me.
Mg Siegler: >And then there is the biggest number of all. For the year, the Online Services Division lost .557 billion. He also notes that the division has been losing money for 6 years now and that the losses have been getting worse not better. He also notes: >Don’t overlook another crazy stat: Microsoft was…
Mg Siegler:
>And then there is the biggest number of all. For the year, the Online Services Division lost .557 billion.
He also notes that the division has been losing money for 6 years now and that the losses have been getting worse not better.
He also notes:
>Don’t overlook another crazy stat: Microsoft was able to decrease general and administrative expenses by 60 percent for the year, and still lost more than ever.
That’s crazy. It’s time to cut your losses and walk away Microsoft.
AnandTech does a nice job of breaking down the performance hits you get with FileVault. They note a 20-30% hit in performance, but I am hear to tell you that I haven’t noticed any such slow downs and some of their tests seem a bit unrealistic to me. Their tests are things that an average…
AnandTech does a nice job of breaking down the performance hits you get with FileVault. They note a 20-30% hit in performance, but I am hear to tell you that I haven’t noticed any such slow downs and some of their tests seem a bit unrealistic to me.
Their tests are things that an average to above-average user are likely never to do. ((Unless average users open 42 reply email windows at once. I don’t think I reply to that many emails in a day.))
My thanks to Palimpsest for sponsoring the RSS feed for this week, be sure that thank them too by checking out the app. If you are a fan of long-form articles then this is the app for you. Palimpsest is a very interesting take on reading — it’s not an app that you curate, it’s an…
My thanks to Palimpsest for sponsoring the RSS feed for this week, be sure that thank them too by checking out the app.
If you are a fan of long-form articles then this is the app for you. Palimpsest is a very interesting take on reading — it’s not an app that you curate, it’s an app of excellently curated long reads.
This is an app for readers. I *am* a reader.
One thing that is hard about writing a review for yet-to-be-released software is there are only a handful of people that have used the software and typically those people are all geeks. This means that somethings, perhaps important things, get missed or are simply lacking in ‘coverage’. I don’t care to read every review of…
One thing that is hard about writing a review for yet-to-be-released software is there are only a handful of people that have used the software and typically those people are all geeks. This means that somethings, perhaps important things, get missed or are simply lacking in ‘coverage’.
I don’t care to read every review of Lion out there, but I feel like I didn’t do a few aspects of Lion enough justice in my initial review.
### FileVault
I didn’t write a lot about FileVault in my review because I had only recently enabled it (I basically waded through the dev forum posts on FileVault 2 to make sure my computer wouldn’t melt upon enabling it before I turned it on). I have had it enabled for a while now and I have a few thoughts on it:
1. I don’t know why you wouldn’t enable this. It is not like old FileVault as the entire disk is encrypted and this encryption is transparent to all Applications.
2. John Siracusa has a great [overview of it](http://arstechnica.com/apple/reviews/2011/07/mac-os-x-10-7.ars/13) and reiterates my above statement: “The end result is that regular users will be hard-pressed to notice any reduction in performance with encryption enabled. Based on my experience with the feature in prerelease versions of Lion, I would strongly consider enabling it on any Mac laptop I plan to travel with.” That’s Siracusa saying it, not me. I completely agree.
3. Again, if you have a portable Mac I strongly recommend that you enable FileVault. (Perhaps one exception being people who need maximum performance and have no concern for losing or having their laptop stolen.)
4. You can use your computer while it is encrypting, budget about half a day depending on your disk size and type (smaller SSDs will be faster, larger HDDs will be slower).
I hated the last iteration of FileVault, but I love this version. The process is fully reversible leaving you little reason not to give FileVault a try.
### Automatic Termination
On Episode 19 of the B&B Podcast I was talking with Shawn about my hatred for Launchpad. I mentioned that I thought it was poor because it would eventually lead users to using too much swap files given that the dock doesn’t show application status by default (more on this in a bit).
What I didn’t know is that Lion actually has a protocol called Automatic Termination. This allows Lion to close down your apps that support this command in order to reclaim RAM space. For more advanced users this probably seems a touch unnerving.
What will perhaps be more interesting is which developers choose not to support this (Yojimbo would be one I would think shouldn’t support this, ever). Though if an app supports the ‘restore’ functionality in Lion I don’t see any reason to *not* support Automatic Termination unless it is something that is only beneficial when it is running (again, Yojimbo).
I actually think this is a huge deal and a massive change for full-fledged OSes. This is basically Apple asking users to stop worrying about managing system resources and to start treating apps on your Mac the same way that you would in iOS.
### Dock Dots
So the Dock by default does not show the application status dots. My Dock only has applications that are running in it and so I keep the dots turned off (they aren’t very attractive). I would suggest that until more apps get Automatic Termination support that you should turn the dots on. After a few months turn them off as it is likely that your Mac will just be better if you trust the OS to manage your RAM allocation. Again, *likely*.
The biggest problem I see with the Dock dots being off is that for the system to work well developers need to support auto-save, restore, and Automatic Termination all together — what could potentially make this default setting problematic is support being too slow in rolling out.
### Option Key
Go crazy holding the `option` key in Lion before you click on things — there is a whole world of options and extras waiting to be discovered here.
### Natural Scrolling
A lot of people seem to hate the new natural scrolling — leave it on for the next two weeks. At the end of those two weeks if you still hate it then you can turn it off. I bet after 6 days you forget all about it.
### More
Shoot me an email, or an @reply on Twitter if there are any nagging questions that you have because somethings I just don’t think of mentioning.
The more I learn/read about this Oracle-Google spat the more I think Google stands to pay a large chunk of cash to Oracle. Right or wrong it sounds like Google stands to lose this one.
The more I learn/read about this Oracle-Google spat the more I think Google stands to pay a large chunk of cash to Oracle. Right or wrong it sounds like Google stands to lose this one.
The BBC: >50. “I could care less” instead of “I couldn’t care less” has to be the worst. Opposite meaning of what they’re trying to say. Jonathan, Birmingham This one drives me nuts — [Dan Benjamin](http://5by5.tv/) needs to take note of this. The rest are pretty funny (just to see what bugs those silly Brits).
The BBC:
>50. “I could care less” instead of “I couldn’t care less” has to be the worst. Opposite meaning of what they’re trying to say. Jonathan, Birmingham
This one drives me nuts — [Dan Benjamin](http://5by5.tv/) needs to take note of this. The rest are pretty funny (just to see what bugs those silly Brits).
“The iPad didn’t enter the tablet market. It created the tablet market.” — John Gruber
MG Siegler has an awesome new term for some of the ‘individuals’ we find on the Internet.
MG Siegler has an awesome new term for some of the ‘individuals’ we find on the Internet.
Eyeballing it the 2011 i7 MacBook Air looks about twice as fast as the top of the line 2010 MacBook Air. Damned impressive.
Eyeballing it the 2011 i7 MacBook Air looks about twice as fast as the top of the line 2010 MacBook Air. Damned impressive.
By itself this is a respectable number, now take into account [this Tweet](https://twitter.com/#!/trixxy/status/94145791643492352) from Thomas Ricker: >In other words, Apple moved over 3.6 petabytes in the last 24 hours. Wow.
By itself this is a respectable number, now take into account [this Tweet](https://twitter.com/#!/trixxy/status/94145791643492352) from Thomas Ricker:
>In other words, Apple moved over 3.6 petabytes in the last 24 hours.
Wow.
Anil Dash: >Why are they so cynical about conversation on the web? Because a company like Google thinks it’s okay to sell video ads on YouTube above conversations that are filled with vile, anonymous comments. Because almost every great newspaper in America believes that it’s more important to get a few more page views on…
Anil Dash:
>Why are they so cynical about conversation on the web? Because a company like Google thinks it’s okay to sell video ads on YouTube above conversations that are filled with vile, anonymous comments. Because almost every great newspaper in America believes that it’s more important to get a few more page views on their website than to encourage meaningful discourse about current events within their community, even if many of those page views will be off-putting to the good people who are offended by the content of the comments. And because lots of publishers think that any conversation is good if it boosts traffic stats.
A must read for any web user.
TidBITS Staff: >Can’t remember which key combination creates an e with an accent agu (é)? Press and hold a key to bring up accented alternatives, a feature introduced in iOS. You can click the accent you want, or, since your fingers are already on the keyboard, press the number that appears below the character you…
TidBITS Staff:
>Can’t remember which key combination creates an e with an accent agu (é)? Press and hold a key to bring up accented alternatives, a feature introduced in iOS. You can click the accent you want, or, since your fingers are already on the keyboard, press the number that appears below the character you want.
I actually didn’t know this one and a few others on this list. One thing I do know: `option` is an incredibly powerful key in Lion.
Nice tip from Matt Gemmell: >It would be unacceptable to invite the inevitable physical slips this would case, so “Don’t Save” is now triggered by Command-Backspace (which is an excellent shortcut, since not saving means your document’s contents will be deleted, in a sense, and hitting Command-Backspace is slightly more difficult than hitting Command-D).
Nice tip from Matt Gemmell:
>It would be unacceptable to invite the inevitable physical slips this would case, so “Don’t Save” is now triggered by Command-Backspace (which is an excellent shortcut, since not saving means your document’s contents will be deleted, in a sense, and hitting Command-Backspace is slightly more difficult than hitting Command-D).
John Siracusa: >Lion will quit your running applications behind your back if it decides it needs the resources, and if you don’t appear to be using them. The heuristic for determining whether an application is “in use” is very conservative: it must not be the active application, it must have no visible, non-minimized windows—and, of…
John Siracusa:
>Lion will quit your running applications behind your back if it decides it needs the resources, and if you don’t appear to be using them. The heuristic for determining whether an application is “in use” is very conservative: it must not be the active application, it must have no visible, non-minimized windows—and, of course, it must explicitly support Automatic Termination.
Shawn and I were talking about how Lion needs this feature on the podcast we recorded yesterday. I had no clue Lion supported this and the implementation sounds near perfect. ((Likely I had no clue about this because apps must support it, and when you beta test a new OS it is pretty rare to test apps designed for that OS. Good catch by Siracusa.))
Shawn and I talk all things Lion. Brought to you by: [HipChat](https://www.hipchat.com/) and [Campaign Monitor](http://www.campaignmonitor.com/)
Shawn and I talk all things Lion.
Brought to you by: [HipChat](https://www.hipchat.com/) and [Campaign Monitor](http://www.campaignmonitor.com/)
Shawn Blanc on how to make the Library folder visible under Lion: >The ~/Library folder is now hidden. If you want to see it, a simple terminal command will unhide it: >`chflags nohidden /Users/[username]/Library/` Also: the rest of his review is excellent.
Shawn Blanc on how to make the Library folder visible under Lion:
>The ~/Library folder is now hidden. If you want to see it, a simple terminal command will unhide it:
>`chflags nohidden /Users/[username]/Library/`
Also: the rest of his review is excellent.