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Recent Articles

  • FTC to Serve Google With Subpoenas in Broad Antitrust Probe

    Thomas Catan: >The new inquiry, by contrast, will examine fundamental issues relating to Google’s core search-advertising business, said people familiar with the matter. The business is the source of most of Google’s revenue. The issues include whether Google—which accounts for around two-thirds of Internet searches in the U.S. and more abroad—unfairly channels users to its…

    Thomas Catan:
    >The new inquiry, by contrast, will examine fundamental issues relating to Google’s core search-advertising business, said people familiar with the matter. The business is the source of most of Google’s revenue. The issues include whether Google—which accounts for around two-thirds of Internet searches in the U.S. and more abroad—unfairly channels users to its own growing network of services at the expense of rival providers.

    This will likely result in bad news for Google, yes the courts have made it harder since the Microsoft anti-trust days, but if you think the FTC can’t find at least a few instances where Google abused their monopoly — well you would be wrong.

  • The Eleventh App

    David Barnard responding to [this post](http://37signals.com/svn/posts/2959-ten-apps-is-all-i-need) from David Heinemeier Hansson: >If we took a poll of all iOS users and asked for a list of the eleven absolutely essential, can’t live without apps I bet we’d end up with at least a thousand different types of apps. He makes a great point that adds to…

    David Barnard responding to [this post](http://37signals.com/svn/posts/2959-ten-apps-is-all-i-need) from David Heinemeier Hansson:
    >If we took a poll of all iOS users and asked for a list of the eleven absolutely essential, can’t live without apps I bet we’d end up with at least a thousand different types of apps.

    He makes a great point that adds to what I was [saying](https://brooksreview.net/2011/06/dhh-apps/) very nicely.

  • Nevada Passes Law Authorizing Driverless Cars

    I imagine that one could devise a pretty clever self-driving car that, under normal circumstances, is better than many drivers I see on the road. What I can’t imagine is that mixing these cars with the erratic drivers that are *currently* on the road would be good at all. The problem isn’t that the driver…

    I imagine that one could devise a pretty clever self-driving car that, under normal circumstances, is better than many drivers I see on the road. What I can’t imagine is that mixing these cars with the erratic drivers that are *currently* on the road would be good at all.

    The problem isn’t that the driver can’t override the system — they can — the issue I have is that most people interested in this wouldn’t be paying attention at all.

    #### And

    The biggest challenge for these cars is whether they can “foresee” impending crashes. Meaning when I drive down a residential street on a nice day I keep an eye out for kids playing that may suddenly go running after a loose ball, how could a car do that? No matter how advanced sometimes you just can’t beat the human eye. Because the first time a ‘driverless’ car kills a kid in an accident that a human could have avoided — well that’s the end of the dream.

  • The FBI Stole an Instapaper Server in an Unrelated Raid

    Marco Arment: >So the FBI now has illegal possession of nearly all of Instapaper’s data and a moderate portion of its codebase, and as far as I know, this is completely out of my control. [This](http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/21/f-b-i-seizes-web-servers-knocking-sites-offline/) whole [mess](http://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/department-of-justice-disrupts-international-cybercrime-rings-distributing-scareware) is crazy to try and wrap your head around. Likely the only way that Marco ever gets…

    Marco Arment:
    >So the FBI now has illegal possession of nearly all of Instapaper’s data and a moderate portion of its codebase, and as far as I know, this is completely out of my control.

    [This](http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/21/f-b-i-seizes-web-servers-knocking-sites-offline/) whole [mess](http://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/department-of-justice-disrupts-international-cybercrime-rings-distributing-scareware) is crazy to try and wrap your head around. Likely the only way that Marco ever gets and explanation or half-hearted apology from the FBI is if:

    1. He knows someone at the FBI.
    2. We (the collective Internet) make a big enough stink about it.

    I say we make a big ol’ stink about this — we, as United States citizens, have a duty to hold those we put in power responsible for their actions. If someone must resign for taking a picture of their junk, then someone **must** explain why they took down seemingly innocent sites. At the very least, the warrant needs to be produced to the public and if the FBI did over reach they need to be held accountable for that action.

    UPDATE: Marco got the server back [last night](http://blog.instapaper.com/post/6854208028), it’s still not known why it was ‘taken’.

  • Stephen Elop Unveils Nokia’s First Windows Phone Device

    Tom Warren on what is rumored to be the first Nokia Windows Phone 7 device: > The design of the device appears to be identical to the recently announced Nokia N9, powered by MeeGo. Surprise!

    Tom Warren on what is rumored to be the first Nokia Windows Phone 7 device:
    > The design of the device appears to be identical to the recently announced Nokia N9, powered by MeeGo.

    Surprise!

  • Walt Mossberg’s Samsung Series 5 Google Chromebook Review

    Walt Mossberg: >The Chromebook starts up almost instantly—in 10 to 15 seconds in my tests—much more quickly than most Windows machines. This is partly because it’s really just a big Web browser. In my tests, Apple’s MacBook Air started just about as quickly, but it costs twice as much. He neglects to mention that the…

    Walt Mossberg:
    >The Chromebook starts up almost instantly—in 10 to 15 seconds in my tests—much more quickly than most Windows machines. This is partly because it’s really just a big Web browser. In my tests, Apple’s MacBook Air started just about as quickly, but it costs twice as much.

    He neglects to mention that the MacBook Air can do far more than twice as many things as the Chromebook. Mossberg spends the entire article trying to like the Chromebook, but ultimately can’t recommend it (no surprise) — what strikes me as odd is that he seems to think this is the way of the future:

    >So a cloud-centric computer isn’t a crazy idea.

    I agree, but the Chromebook idea is far more than just a ‘cloud-centric computer’ — it is a web-browser-centric computer, and that is a crap idea. Small storage is fine on a computer with a strong cloud offering, but doing everything in a web browser is far from ideal.

    For an example of a real “cloud-centric computer” look no further than future iOS devices once iCloud launches, and no I am not joking.

  • More Apple Patents

    Nilay Patel laying the smack down: >So Apple got yet another patent granted today, and now there’s yet another media firestorm over whether it means Cupertino will be able to sue every other phone manufacturer out of business, or at least out of the business of making multitouch devices. And, as usual, most of the…

    Nilay Patel laying the smack down:
    >So Apple got yet another patent granted today, and now there’s yet another media firestorm over whether it means Cupertino will be able to sue every other phone manufacturer out of business, or at least out of the business of making multitouch devices. And, as usual, most of the hysteria is based on a fundamental misinterpretation of what the patent claims actually say, and what behaviors they actually cover in iOS.

    The end result of his analysis: a boring patent.

  • David Heinemeier Hansson On Third Party Apps for Mobile

    David Heinemeier Hansson commenting on the Nokia N9 and the apps he needs to make a phone useful: >But the established wisdom now is that you cannot win without hundreds of thousands of apps. I have to disagree, DHH is arguing that if you get the core apps right (for him those are: Safari, Camera,…

    David Heinemeier Hansson commenting on the Nokia N9 and the apps he needs to make a phone useful:
    >But the established wisdom now is that you cannot win without hundreds of thousands of apps.

    I have to disagree, DHH is arguing that if you get the core apps right (for him those are: Safari, Camera, iPod, Clock, Weather, Photos, Messages, Mail, and Maps) then you have a rock solid device. That is a hard argument to argue with because he is right, 3rd party apps don’t make a device good.

    Third party apps make a good device, great — and that is where I disagree with him.

    With DHH’s argument you would also have to wonder why someone just doesn’t own a dozen or so items of clothes, after all if you have one really good shirt, why do you need two from two companies? It’s really about choice and whether those choices are good or bad it doesn’t matter, it’s what the current market is demanding — to ignore the current market, well ask RIM how that works out.

    This late in the game it is downright foolish to think that you can compete with iOS jsut offering the “core” apps.

  • RIM Becoming Too Radioactive to Takeover

    I have no clue why anyone would want to take over RIM — it surely would make the stock drop of whatever company acquires them. Ed Sutherland reporting on RIM’s woes of late: >Once worth $83 billion, the Waterloo, Ontario BlackBerry maker has slid to around $15 billion Yikes, if I was the board I…

    I have no clue why anyone would want to take over RIM — it surely would make the stock drop of whatever company acquires them.

    Ed Sutherland reporting on RIM’s woes of late:
    >Once worth $83 billion, the Waterloo, Ontario BlackBerry maker has slid to around $15 billion

    Yikes, if I was the board I would be so mad I would wish that I had two CEOs to fire — oh wait.

  • The Brooks Report Card

    Myke and Terry were kind enough to have me on the Bro Show again. This time around we talked about WWDC, hardware rumors, the Nokia N9, and ArringtonCrunch/Aol. These guys are a lot of fun so be sure to check out this episode.

    Myke and Terry were kind enough to have me on the Bro Show again. This time around we talked about WWDC, hardware rumors, the Nokia N9, and ArringtonCrunch/Aol. These guys are a lot of fun so be sure to check out this episode.

  • That Flickr iPhone Data

    Amazing iPhone camera usage being reported by Flickr, especially after you take into account the fact that they can’t count all the photos taken with the iPhone.

    Amazing iPhone camera usage being reported by Flickr, especially after you take into account the fact that they can’t count all the photos taken with the iPhone.

  • Review: Agenda

    Since the iPhone came out I have been less than enamored with the stock calendar app — it’s not that it is *bad* — it’s that the stock calendar app doesn’t meet my [calendar criteria](https://brooksreview.net/2010/09/sucky-calendars/). To sum up the linked post about calendars: I don’t see any reason why a calendar app should ever show…

    Since the iPhone came out I have been less than enamored with the stock calendar app — it’s not that it is *bad* — it’s that the stock calendar app doesn’t meet my [calendar criteria](https://brooksreview.net/2010/09/sucky-calendars/).

    To sum up the linked post about calendars: I don’t see any reason why a calendar app should ever show me the ‘past’ by default. In that respect the built-in calendar app fails miserably unless you keep it in day or list view — neither of which is very good.

    I have — off and on — for quite a while now been using Calvetica. The problem with Calvetica is that I have always liked looking at Calvetica more than I have liked using it. That is: I find it a bit cumbersome to use, but very beautiful to look at. (Yes adding calendar items is a touch faster in Calvetica than the native calendar app.)

    I was lucky enough to get contacted a while back about a new calendar app: [Agenda](http://getappsavvy.com/agenda/). I was told (as I have been before) that this was THE calendar app and that I was going to love it.

    After using it for weeks now I can report that I do, indeed, love it. However, before I talk about what I love, I should probably mention what I don’t love about the app (and it is a short list):

    1. I am not a fan of the icon (surprise). It’s not terrible, but it is also not representative of the app in the least. It shows an old desktop style calendar when this app is anything but mimicking that design.
    2. The last thing that I am not a huge fan of is the bottom toolbar being translucent — that design choice just kind of bugs me. Again, it’s not terrible and many probably like it — I just find it distracting.

    ### The Good (Really Good)

    The good part about this app is that it is just a never ending scrolling list of days, no times shown unless you have an appointment on that day — then it shows you the start time of the appointment. This is awesome, this is what I need, this is perfect.

    On my iPhone I don’t need to know anything other than what is coming up and Agenda excels at showing me this. If the app did nothing more than that it would be worth the $1.99 price tag, but it does so much more.

    The entire app is driven by left and right swiping (even though [Nokia just invented that](https://brooksreview.net/2011/06/nokia-n9/)). By default you see the list of days, swiping left to right zooms you out, meaning you now see a month view, then a year view. Swiping right to left moves you into a day view, then appointment view. The animation and swipes are very fast and well done.

    What makes this interaction so good is not that it exists, but that it makes using the app one handed a joy — this is an app that you can check as you run out the door.

    I love that.

    ### Some Oddities

    The current version in the App Store doesn’t have one of the best improvements to the app: double tap the top to return to “today”. That is coming in an update already submitted and the lack of the feature really slows down the usage of the app — because getting back to ‘today’ without it is really cumbersome. I wouldn’t mention that this was being improved, but since it is already submitted I think it is safe to judge the app with that being a part of the app (added to it that I have used the app with this feature).

    All the calendars are grabbed from Apple’s Calendar app, which is fine, but do note that all the calendars appear as one color (black) in the main view. I can’t decide if I like this choice or not, on the one hand the other views color code the calendars so it is nice not to have to be disgusted with the rainbow that is my schedule — on the other hand it is sometimes frustrating trying to “dig” deeper to find out which calendar that event is on.

    ### Buy It

    This is all a rather long winded way of saying: [buy this app](http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/agenda-a-better-calendar-todays/id440764409?mt=8). It is a great calendar app, the best I have used on the iPhone thus far. Well done.

    UPDATED: A lot of people have commented on the badge icon, this is optional and can be completely turned off in settings. The badge, by the way, shows the current date. I recommend you leave it off, then again I hate all badge icons.

  • Steve Jobs: Wedding Photographer

    Carolyne Zinko and Carrie Kirby: >No official wedding photo was available because the photographers — Jobs and Ellison’s son, David — had not finished preparing them for the photo album yet, Ellison said. That would be Steve Jobs they are talking about. This isn’t really news, but it leaves me with so many questions: 1.…

    Carolyne Zinko and Carrie Kirby:

    >No official wedding photo was available because the photographers — Jobs and Ellison’s son, David — had not finished preparing them for the photo album yet, Ellison said.

    That would be Steve Jobs they are talking about. This isn’t really news, but it leaves me with so many questions:

    1. Will Jobs create the photo album from iPhoto or Aperture?
    2. What camera did Jobs use, Canon/Nikon/iPhone?
    3. How long before Jobs considers the photos ‘finished’?

    Lastly: How cool is it to say that Jobs was one of your wedding photographers? (Technically I know the answer to this one: awesome.)

    [via Viticci]
  • 5 Months of Customer Service Hell with HTC

    Lucas Dailey writing about getting a replacement for his HTC EVO: >It took over 5 months, between 18-22 long calls to HTC (and a few to Sprint), explaining the problem in great detail to maybe 10-15 people, and easily hundreds of hours without a working phone. All to fix a defective phone under warranty with…

    Lucas Dailey writing about getting a replacement for his HTC EVO:

    >It took over 5 months, between 18-22 long calls to HTC (and a few to Sprint), explaining the problem in great detail to maybe 10-15 people, and easily hundreds of hours without a working phone. All to fix a defective phone under warranty with HTC.

    I don’t post this as a knock against Android, but as a knock against HTC — this is pitiful customer service. Compounding the issue is the odd warranty that makes the carrier responsible for the battery and the manufacturer responsible for the rest, I find that very odd.

    The fact that it took a YouTube video to convince HTC that there was a problem — that shows a general lack of caring for your customers. Now THAT is something I can assure you I have never experienced with Apple (and yes I have worked with many problematic Macs with Apple).

  • WordPress Breach

    Matt Mullenweg on today’s WordPress security breach: >Second, if you use AddThis, WPtouch, or W3 Total Cache and there’s a possibility you could have updated in the past day, make sure to visit your updates page and upgrade each to the latest version. Passwords used on WordPress.org have been reset too. Be sure to update.…

    Matt Mullenweg on today’s WordPress security breach:

    >Second, if you use AddThis, WPtouch, or W3 Total Cache and there’s a possibility you could have updated in the past day, make sure to visit your updates page and upgrade each to the latest version.

    Passwords used on WordPress.org have been reset too. Be sure to update.

    (I feel like nothing online is safe anymore and am damned glad that I have 1Password.)

  • Maximizing OS X with an SSD plus HDD Setup

    Matt Legend Gemmell has an awesome walkthrough on how he has maximized the speed of his iMac using both the SSD and HDD, very nice. Worth a read if you have a machine like this.

    Matt Legend Gemmell has an awesome walkthrough on how he has maximized the speed of his iMac using both the SSD and HDD, very nice. Worth a read if you have a machine like this.

  • Quote of the Day: Brent Simmons

    “I can always tell a long-time Windows user from a Mac user — Windows folks put two spaces after a period.” — Brent Simmons

    “I can always tell a long-time Windows user from a Mac user — Windows folks put two spaces after a period.”
  • Why not Windows?

    Omnigroup CEO Ken Case on why they don’t develop for Windows: >And again, our goal is not to make the most money—it’s to make the best software.

    Omnigroup CEO Ken Case on why they don’t develop for Windows:
    >And again, our goal is not to make the most money—it’s to make the best software.

  • Buying New Tech

    If you are the geek in your family then you are likely the person that gets asked two things quite often: 1. What should I buy? 2. When should I buy it? The former is pretty easy now days: I just steer people to the current Apple tech that will best suit their needs. It’s…

    If you are the geek in your family then you are likely the person that gets asked two things quite often:

    1. What should I buy?
    2. When should I buy it?

    The former is pretty easy now days: I just steer people to the current Apple tech that will best suit their needs. It’s a blanket rule of mine with the caveat: “If you buy a non-Apple product I will not be able to help you fix it.” (In other words I make my family and friends well aware that I have no interest, time, or knowledge in helping to fix their Win/Google products.)

    The second question, the “when”, is damned hard to answer. We all know when Apple *usually* launches a new product (8-12 month cycles), but we never actually know *if* they will be launching a new update. That makes it incredibly hard to confidentially tell someone in your family when to buy something — especially considering that they are likely not to be the type wanting or needing to buy a new iPad each year, that is reserved for us obsessed geeks.

    ### The Best Time

    We all know that the best time to buy any new Apple gear is in the first month following its release. As I said above, Apple is on 12 month cycles for iOS devices and roughly 8 month cycles on Macs. That’s the blanket timing that I use for judging these things.

    The easiest products are iPads and iPhones, typically you can tell your family when it is a good time to buy these things is. With Macs though the problem is a bit harder, realistically Apple may refresh the product anywhere from 6-12 months after a “new” version goes on sale.

    ### My Rule

    OK enough talking about stuff you guys probably already know, or could suss out on your own. When my family comes asking: When should I buy X (assuming X is an Apple product because if it isn’t you should tell them to burn their money instead). I ask them three questions (if I don’t already know the answers):

    1. What do you want to do with X? (This is not always needed, but if they want to buy a product like a Mac and they would be better suited for an Air, but an Air that is a touch faster — that’s when this question becomes paramount to the decision of “when”.)
    2. When or what do you need it for? (e.g. upcoming trip, school, is this a time sensitive purchase)
    3. When will you be *able* to buy it? (i.e. Do you have the cash for this purchase now? Or are you asking me when you should buy it starting two months from now? This question serves as a sanity check for me, if the answer isn’t “right now” I tell them to get back to me when they have the money — let’s not waste each others time speculating about something we don’t need to speculate about just yet.)

    *(Note: As you can likely see by this point I am a bit of an ass in real life too. I have no qualms with saying these things to my family members, but depending on who they are I may tone down the bluntness factor. However, what I won’t do is tell someone what they want to hear, if it isn’t true or accurate.)*

    #### Edumacated Guessing

    Here comes the hard part: guessing. Unless you work in the top secret divisions of Apple you aren’t likely to know 100% when someone should upgrade or buy in, so you need to do your best guessing work.

    ##### Quickly

    For anyone that needs product X right now — for whatever reason they can’t wait — tell them just to go buy it right now. This is where you can explain that waiting isn’t a real option and that what is on sale right now is very good and will last.

    For iOS devices I generally tell people to expect to get two years worth of use out of the device. (Mainly because new versions of iOS are never very good on 3 year old hardware.) For Macs I tell people that they can expect to get 3-4 years use out of the device with no problem. That’s not to say the hardware won’t die, but that the machine should still be running serviceably fast in 3-4 years time. The less horsepower a person needs out of the machine the longer I extend that time, and vice versa.

    ##### Anytime

    Now we are on to the ‘anytime’ crowd, the folks that have decided they *want* a new computer, but have no urgent need *for* a new computer. My general rule here is to tell people what I know and what others are reporting as rumors. For instance: if a person wants to know when they should buy an iMac (now or later) I would look at the following:

    1. Date the iMac was last updated.
    2. Rumor mill.

    I would tell the person that typically Apple updates every 8 months and that the iMac was last updated 3 months ago (this is fictitious data). I would also tell them that I haven’t heard of any rumors of a new model, so now would be a probably be a pretty good time to buy.

    Simple, logical and easy. Except when the product is 6.5 months old and there are a ton of rumors circling (and have been for a month), in this case I tell them what I know and leave it up to them. There is risk in advising someone to buy something only for a new model to come out 15 days later (just outside of the return window) since they know where to find you. If the hardware they want to buy is 8+ months old I tell them to wait it out.

    **Pro Tip:** Have the person use their American Express card if they have one. AMEX has some consumer protections built in that can allow you to go get the newer model if it comes out within a set window of time — often longer than the return period. I have also heard that they will often extend the manufacturer warranty by an extra year. Be sure to verify this on your own, as these are things I heard from various different people.

    ### How I Roll

    To avoid the eventual emails about how I think when I personally purchase new Apple products, it boils down to a few factors.

    #### iOS Devices

    For iOS devices I go into every purchase knowing that I will buy a new device in a year. I buy the cheapest option that I can that still has the storage/options that I will want and need based on my planned activities for the year. (e.g. A lot of traveling means I will want 3G on the iPad and perhaps more storage space for movies.) ((My wife typically gets my old devices unless there is a compelling new feature that *I* want her to have, such as FaceTime.))

    #### Macs

    For Macs I go into every purchase with an idea of how long (all else being equal [read: my income]) I will need to use the computer before I replace it. The more money I spend on the computer the longer I will demand that it can last.

    So for my MacBook Air I planned/plan on keeping it for two years at the very least. For a MacBook Pro I would say three to four years, longer with something like a Mac Pro.

    ### Here’s Hoping

    Here’s hoping this helps you when your family comes rolling around with these often annoying questions. I know it has helped me to work this all out before I try to answer these questions when they inevitably catch me off guard.

  • Hipmunk Out for iPad

    My favorite flight search app (forget the web version) is now out for the iPad, and it is better than [its iPhone version](https://brooksreview.net/2011/04/quick-takes-on-five-apps-7/).

    My favorite flight search app (forget the web version) is now out for the iPad, and it is better than [its iPhone version](https://brooksreview.net/2011/04/quick-takes-on-five-apps-7/).