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Leica Sofort 2June 13, 2024
Grand Seiko SBGX261February 23, 2023

Recent Articles

  • Microsoft board backs Ballmer over Einhorn

    Bill Rigby, reporting on Microsoft’s board backing Steve Ballmer, quotes BGC Partners Colin Gillis: >”It’s on. David Einhorn likes to shake things up,” Gillis said. As for Microsoft’s stock staying flat over a decade, “the question is, is it because of Ballmer, or is it because people are concerned about a post-PC era?” That’s *not*…

    Bill Rigby, reporting on Microsoft’s board backing Steve Ballmer, quotes BGC Partners Colin Gillis:
    >”It’s on. David Einhorn likes to shake things up,” Gillis said. As for Microsoft’s stock staying flat over a decade, “the question is, is it because of Ballmer, or is it because people are concerned about a post-PC era?”

    That’s *not* the question, because it doesn’t matter. The CEO of any company is supposed to successfully navigate a changing consumer market, both Apple and Google have succeeded at that, Microsoft has not — plain and simple.

    So yes Microsoft’s core business maybe deflated as a result of market conditions and yadda yadda yadda — the point is that Ballmer should have found a new avenue for growth. The point is that Ballmer is responsible for letting “people concerned about post-PC era” affect Microsoft’s stock.

  • Reign of Error

    Ryan Block calling for Gates to come back as Microsoft’s CEO: >There’s taste, though, and there’s cunning — and it was Bill’s killer instinct that made Microsoft the undisputed winner of the first wave of personal computing. And with each passing quarter, it’s becoming increasingly clear that in matters of both taste and cunning, Steve…

    Ryan Block calling for Gates to come back as Microsoft’s CEO:
    >There’s taste, though, and there’s cunning — and it was Bill’s killer instinct that made Microsoft the undisputed winner of the first wave of personal computing. And with each passing quarter, it’s becoming increasingly clear that in matters of both taste and cunning, Steve Ballmer has neither.

    His post is a must read if you are at all interested in why Steve Ballmer sucks at being a CEO of Microsoft. Block has a great take on the lack of vision Ballmer brings and makes a compelling argument for why Gates may come back. ((Being that The Gates Foundation’s funds are tied to Microsoft’s success.))

  • Amazon’s Mac App Store

    Interesting move from Amazon and logical. I would still buy from the Apple Mac App Store as the licensing terms appear to be better on the surface and the ease/upgrade features are well worth it. However if you are leery of software vendor websites and the software you want isn’t on the Mac App Store,…

    Interesting move from Amazon and logical. I would still buy from the Apple Mac App Store as the licensing terms appear to be better on the surface and the ease/upgrade features are well worth it. However if you are leery of software vendor websites and the software you want isn’t on the Mac App Store, Amazon may just have it.

    Competition is always a good thing.

  • Google Unveils Wallet

    Exactly what was expected. Also I am really glad to see that they found a use for the [Google Wave logo](http://www.cloudave.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/ffc3caad93ce83f05713a8b863c86f5d.jpg).

    Exactly what was expected. Also I am really glad to see that they found a use for the [Google Wave logo](http://www.cloudave.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/ffc3caad93ce83f05713a8b863c86f5d.jpg).

  • TSA Cries

    First I heard of this, but Texas was set to vote on a bill in the State Senate that was already passed in the Texas House of Representatives. The bill would make it a misdemeanor for TSA to grope passengers. TSA responded by saying: >[…]Texas is barred by the U.S. Constitution from regulating the federal…

    First I heard of this, but Texas was set to vote on a bill in the State Senate that was already passed in the Texas House of Representatives. The bill would make it a misdemeanor for TSA to grope passengers.

    TSA responded by saying:

    >[…]Texas is barred by the U.S. Constitution from regulating the federal government[…]

    Texas backed down and didn’t vote after TSA said that it would suspend all flights out of Texas, lame. May I remind Texas that they most certainly can [opt-out of using the TSA at its airports](http://www.networkworld.com/community/airport+opt-out+TSA+hire+private+screeners). Perhaps Texas should pass a law that no airports in the Lone Star state can use the TSA, then pass the groping bill. They do that and I am moving to Texas.

    Oh an if you were curious, TSA claims it:

    >[…] would have had to shut down Texas airports as it “could not ensure the safety of passengers and crew.”

    I’d call TSA’s bluff. Chuck Norris has to be pissed that Texas backed down.

  • Splinternet Era

    Josh Bernoff: >This is yet another step in a trend we call the Splinternet. The open, standards-based Web experience that we’ve embraced for the last 15 years is becoming a set of platforms that people love, but that are controlled by companies (like Apple, Facebook, and now Twitter). While these platforms are exciting, do not…

    Josh Bernoff:
    >This is yet another step in a trend we call the Splinternet. The open, standards-based Web experience that we’ve embraced for the last 15 years is becoming a set of platforms that people love, but that are controlled by companies (like Apple, Facebook, and now Twitter). While these platforms are exciting, do not be naive: companies control them and will set the rules on how marketers can use them to connect. They’ll change those rules as they see fit, which will make your life as a marketer far more challenging. This is the Splinternet era; you’d better get used to it.

    Spot on. And this is going to apply to more than just marketers — it already is.

  • Like a Headless Chicken

    I have never had the privilege(?) to see a a chicken after its head was cut off, nor do I ever want to. What I used to picture growing up was a bloody, but oddly comical scene, of a headless chicken aimlessly running around Ozzy Osbourne. Now after witnessing the transgressions of the Twitter crew…

    I have never had the privilege(?) to see a a chicken after its head was cut off, nor do I ever want to. What I used to picture growing up was a bloody, but oddly comical scene, of a headless chicken aimlessly running around Ozzy Osbourne. Now after witnessing the transgressions of the Twitter crew over the past few months, well I just picture it as a very, very, sad thing.

    Twitter is acting like the proverbial headless chicken.

    I have been a passive Twitter user for a very long time, more recently becoming a much more active user. Twitter has become one of the last social networks that I even bother with using, let alone actually liking. Up and until about a month ago I was pretty happy with the state of being at Twitter ((Aside from my worries that they may soon run out of people willing to give them money.)) — things were moving swimmingly.

    Then Twitter got its head cut off.

    Instead of getting the warm and fuzzies when I read about what Twitter is doing next (like I do with say Square), I get the voice in my head that says: “crap what now?”

    It feels like Twitter is aimlessly running with two general goals right now:

    1. Make money!
    2. Get more users!

    Both are valid, but I always used to see Twitter as having these goals:

    1. Be awesome!
    2. Don’t be jackasses! (e.g. Microsoft and Google of late)

    The difference is huge. The latter was a company that was building a service that they used, loved, and wanted to continue loving. The former is building a business at the user’s expense for the sake of VCs.

    That’s not to say that Twitter can’t build a business — they should — and it’s not to say that the two are mutually exclusive — they aren’t. Instead of integrating the goals, or simply adding them on, Twitter has decided that these goals *are* mutually exclusive and that sucks.

    It is very clear that Twitter dropped their old mentality with the approach they are taking towards third party developers — they are treating them with blatant disrespect and using a cloak of vagueness to hide it (albeit poorly).

    ### Respect ###

    The first blow came with the not-so-subtle, shall we say, “encouragement” that developers should no longer make full-featured Twitter clients. OK, we get it you don’t want people partying on your lawn anymore.

    Then came the outright crippling of the usability of all these apps under the cloak of “security” with the forced change from xAuth to OAuth for DMs.

    Now we get the TweetDeck acquisition that lands another sucker punch to third party developers.

    TweetDeck has a pretty large user base, all while being a pretty crappy Adobe Air app ((Don’t bother emailing me anything positive about Adobe’s Air platform — it sucks and you know it.)) that Twitter is more than talented enough to replicate. Yet instead of going out and making their own version of TweetDeck, they rewarded that developer with a large cash payout (oddly enough more than I bet the poor VCs get back from Twitter in the end).

    Essentially this tells other developers that they now have two options:

    1. Continue developing in a hostile environment with ever changing rules, for a company that doesn’t want you developing for it.
    2. Get your user base big enough that Twitter will pay for you to stop developing your app.

    Of course Twitter has said they will keep TweetDeck around — I for one am not holding my breath on that one. ((I give it two years tops. Yes, I may eat these words.))

    The respectful thing to do would have been to say that they are ceasing to allow full API access in six months time — no exceptions, unless of course they buy you. That would at least show your community the respect it deserves and allow them the time to plan for transitions to the future. Instead Twitter have decided to leave developers wondering: “what’s next?”

    It’s the equivalent to being invited somewhere and saying: “maybe I’ll stop by, maybe.” Answering so is just disrespectful to the host that is trying to plan things. While rejecting third party apps outright would be an outrage for developers and users, it would at least be honest.

    ### Million Directions, No Course ###

    The craziest thing is that even though Twitter is very clearly focused on growth and money — they seem to be going a million different ways with it.

    Add the quickbar with promoted trends in a highly popular client, remove it and apologize. Add cumbersome rules for other developers. Spend tons of money to buy an Adobe Air app.

    Look at these three things and tell me what the strategy is? It looked like with the first one Twitter was going to try and monetize the service with paid ads and the like. Then they decided to put that to bed and start being cranky to the developer community, seemingly to push use back to their free (and ad free) apps. Then they blow a wad of cash on another app that is free and lacks ads.

    So what Twitter now has done:

    1. Annoyed users
    2. Pissed off developers
    3. Bought a free Adobe Air app

    What they are still lacking: money.

    They went from looking for more ways to inject advertising (the revenue model of choice for Twitter) to looking for ways to force users on to their platforms, that lack a revenue model.

    ### User Base Argument ###

    It’s easy to say that they are clearly working on building the user base to make a larger play for money. The problem though is that, as I have talked about, their current strategy of using promoted items is not an ideal option. So it looks like they are building a massive user base and raising costs for the end game of a boost in advertising rates.

    Then of course you better hope there are actually advertisers out there willing to pay those rates so that everything stays in the black. Which of course when you serve very few ads in very discrete locations — well to survive doing that you need to have very high prices. Very high ad prices mean that there are very few companies that can afford to pay you.

    Google makes money off of a volume play, not of a tightly focused play. There *is* a difference.

    I don’t know how often I say this, but I will say it again: lots of users don’t equal money.

    ### Competing Network Argument ###

    Many have stated that if Twitter didn’t buy TweetDeck that it would have joined up with UberMedia to create a rival network. Thus the acquisition was a defensive move.

    Let’s put that to bed right now: you don’t worry about a new competing network that has yet to be built and doesn’t have any current users. That’s like driving down the road constantly worrying that every other car is actively trying to run into you.

    Thus Twitter just paid $40 million to get users that they *already* had and that aren’t *likely* going anywhere…

    ### End User ###

    In the end though it is the users of Twitter that are getting dicked around with the most. They will see cumbersome logins now just to use the apps that they prefer using (thanks to OAuth). They will likely see a reduced choice set of Twitter app offerings (thanks to Twitters strong discouragement). They will begin to see less discrete advertising (thanks to the need for money).

    The walls are closing in, Twitter only wants you to use official Twitter products with their service so they can control every aspect of the service. They have every right to do so, but they should be very cautious of the fact that Twitter, since its inception, has very much *not* been a walled garden. Twitter has very much always been a place where you could participate no matter what your preferred tool was.

    Such a massive change is never met with open arms.

    ### ? ###

    I can’t decide if Twitter is the chicken aimlessly running around Ozzy, or if they have just lost their soul — maybe both.

  • How PayPal Sees Square

    Austin Carr reporting: >”Existing models don’t go away until they are replaced by models that work better,” PayPal’s Nayar says. “I think people are getting held up in the technical possibilities, and are forgetting that at the end of the day, the consumers have to choose to use it. Unless they can see advantage in…

    Austin Carr reporting:
    >”Existing models don’t go away until they are replaced by models that work better,” PayPal’s Nayar says. “I think people are getting held up in the technical possibilities, and are forgetting that at the end of the day, the consumers have to choose to use it. Unless they can see advantage in doing this versus the existing way of paying, I ask the question: Why would they? The consumer needs to see the benefit beyond, ‘This is just cool.’”

    This sounds an awful lot like [this](http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/management/2007-04-29-ballmer-ceo-forum-usat_N.htm):

    >There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance.

  • David Einhorn Calls for Microsoft’s Ballmer to Go

    A bunch of Reuters reporters ((Honestly there are five credits listed…)) : >An investor who put $100,000 into Microsoft stock 10 years ago would now have about $69,000 worth. That’s pretty bad, Einhorn really nails it though: >His [Ballmer] continued presence is the biggest overhang on Microsoft’s stock[…] Amen.

    A bunch of Reuters reporters ((Honestly there are five credits listed…)) :
    >An investor who put $100,000 into Microsoft stock 10 years ago would now have about $69,000 worth.

    That’s pretty bad, Einhorn really nails it though:

    >His [Ballmer] continued presence is the biggest overhang on Microsoft’s stock[…]

    Amen.

  • When is sharing stealing?

    Bob Sullivan writes a great post about the pros and cons of sharing photos on social sites such as TwitPic and others. The rights the photo takers have and the rights that journalists and the like have. This is a very interesting problem that we find ourselves in right now. In the past I have…

    Bob Sullivan writes a great post about the pros and cons of sharing photos on social sites such as TwitPic and others. The rights the photo takers have and the rights that journalists and the like have. This is a very interesting problem that we find ourselves in right now.

    In the past I have always stayed cautious, not sharing something without making sure that it reasonably cannot be stolen (locking down Flickr settings, making copyrights clear). One great piece of advice in the post from attorney Carolyn Wright offers:

    >If you don’t share your work online, then no one knows to license it.

  • ‘All Decked Out’

    Dick Costolo on the TweetDeck acquisition: >This acquisition is an important step forward for us. TweetDeck provides brands, publishers, marketers and others with a powerful platform to track all the real-time conversations they care about. In order to support this important constituency, we will continue to invest in the TweetDeck that users know and love.…

    Dick Costolo on the TweetDeck acquisition:

    >This acquisition is an important step forward for us. TweetDeck provides brands, publishers, marketers and others with a powerful platform to track all the real-time conversations they care about. In order to support this important constituency, we will continue to invest in the TweetDeck that users know and love.

    Translation: “We realize that ‘social media’ experts are a large customer base for Twitter.”

    Here’s the TweetDeck founder and CEO Iain Dodsworth on [the TweetDeck blog](http://blog.tweetdeck.com/its-official-tweetdeck-has-been-acquired-by-t):

    >I’d like to finish with a big thank-you to all our investors for their support and guidance over the past few years, especially Betaworks, TAG, SV Angel and PROfounders. And of course a huge congratulations to the whole TweetDeck team – I’m extremely proud of you and this is a huge win for us all.

    >Time to celebrate!

    Translation: “Money, money, MONAAAAY!”

  • Verizon Ads for Tablets vs. Apple Ads for Tablets

    This is a fantastic comparison, just so happens that last night my wife and I saw the Verizon commercial he is poking fun at. After seeing it I read this Tweet to my wife and she said something to the effect of: “Wait, that was a commercial advertising a tablet? Why didn’t they show the…

    This is a fantastic comparison, just so happens that last night my wife and I saw the Verizon commercial he is poking fun at. After seeing it I read this Tweet to my wife and she said something to the effect of: “Wait, that was a commercial advertising a tablet? Why didn’t they show the tablet working?”

  • BookBook for Air

    I’ve had my complaints about Twelve South in the past, but that doesn’t change the fact that they make beautiful products — this one is no exception. Love it, sadly I am far over budget on bags from back in 2010 still… Also if you have used one of these cases (they make them for…

    I’ve had my complaints about Twelve South in the past, but that doesn’t change the fact that they make beautiful products — this one is no exception. Love it, sadly I am far over budget on bags from back in 2010 still…

    Also if you have used one of these cases (they make them for the Pro too) drop me a line and let me know how hot your computer runs while using it with the case on. Very curious.

  • Quote of the Day: Michael Scott

    “It’s always been Apple’s goal to ship something we were proud of and something people would be proud to own, and I think that’s still true from thirty years ago.” — Michael Scott (Apple’s first CEO)

    “It’s always been Apple’s goal to ship something we were proud of and something people would be proud to own, and I think that’s still true from thirty years ago.”
  • Daedalus touch

    A very nice looking new writing app from The Soulmen. I have been beta testing it for a little while now. What I like best is the overall look of the app, which I am sure certain people will point out is not a feature — it certainly isn’t. What is a feature is the…

    A very nice looking new writing app from The Soulmen. I have been beta testing it for a little while now. What I like best is the overall look of the app, which I am sure certain people will point out is not a feature — it certainly isn’t.

    What is a feature is the stack interface — perhaps the best feature of the app in my book. You can have multiple stacks, each containing multiple documents — each stack can sync with Dropbox, in a different location. That’s huge.

    The files that Daedalous syncs are plain text. There are a lot of other great features so be sure to hit the link to find out more, it’s on sale right now for $3.99.

  • Site Navigation

    A couple of weeks ago [Shawn Blanc posted](http://shawnblanc.net/2011/05/previous-entries/) about his thinking for changing how a reader navigates his site. The biggest of the changes was the removal of blog pagination — the little link at the bottom of the main page that takes you to the next page, which is laid out identically to the…

    A couple of weeks ago [Shawn Blanc posted](http://shawnblanc.net/2011/05/previous-entries/) about his thinking for changing how a reader navigates his site. The biggest of the changes was the removal of blog pagination — the little link at the bottom of the main page that takes you to the next page, which is laid out identically to the first.

    Pagination is the way a lot of sites work.

    When Shawn made the switch, I had already been working on a similar switch for this site, testing it on a local build I have. The main reason I wanted to switch is because I always found the navigation on this site to be hideous — I hated the way the buttons looked. I wanted to switch to some nicer looking buttons and as these things do, it started spiraling into a much larger navigation rethink.

    Shortly after Shawn changed his navigation I changed it on this site as well as part of the larger rethink I was working on. Why? Well as [Shawn puts it](http://shawnblanc.net/2011/05/previous-entries/):

    >The goal is to offer the best choice for the reader, based on what I, as the publisher of my site, consider to be the most valuable.

    Link blogging is only a part of what I do and if a new reader stumbles along the way I want to encourage them to read my articles, not my quips on link I posts. So I removed pagination on the home page, opting for the link that you see now, which takes you to the Archives page.

    I made the change and only announced it on my personal Twitter page, wanting to see what kind of feedback I received. I have yet to receive any significant complaints via email and only a few on Twitter (most of which has been fixed as a result).

    ### The Result ###

    My results are much [similar to Shawn’s](http://shawnblanc.net/2011/05/previous-entries-update/), no real difference but maybe a bit more reads on articles. I am keeping my site the way it is, so for those that have not noticed, here is how the navigation works.

    #### Main Page ####

    At the bottom of the main page is a button that simply says: “older”. This button takes you to the Archives and no where else.

    #### Archives ####

    I have decided rather forcefully that if you want to navigate the site you need to start at the Archive page. From this page there are four categories that you can peruse:

    1. Recommended Reading — where you will find links to content all sorts of people wrote (including me) that I love. This is like my Macy’s moment where I show you other great sites and take the “if you love it, set it free” approach. The response on this section so far has shown me that people love this section.
    2. The Linked List — I realize that some people still want to browse my links, this is the only place that you can do that. Clicking here shows you only linked posts, but these posts are paginated so that you can continue to move through them.
    3. Quote of the Day — Same options as the linked list, you get to browse through all the quotes that I post in a paginated manner.
    4. The Articles — This redesign was launched a while back and offers you the article titles in a chronological order, which you can view by month.

    #### Single Post Pages ####

    I also made a few small tweaks to the single post pages — the pages that Shawn correctly stated as the ones that new readers are most likely to come to your site on.

    ##### Linked Pages #####

    For pages that are the permalinks for the linked list items there is a simple link at the bottom of the post to view “All Posts”, this sends you straight back to the archives and the process starts again.

    ##### Article Pages #####

    Since I assume most new readers come to the site to read an article, I offer two forms of navigation at the bottom of the article posts:

    1. Page by page navigation between articles, allowing you to step between each post.
    2. All Posts, where once again you are kicked back to the archives page.

    ##### Quote Pages #####

    Quotes work the same way article pages do, only you move between quotes only.

    ### Theft ###

    Like Shawn I have put a lot of thought into how navigation works. Personally I rarely use site navigation, opting for search boxes instead (conveniently located at the bottom of every page). However nothing I am doing here is new, it has all been done on other sites that I love to read and I have taken what I like best from each site. Don’t email me saying that you have seen this elsewhere — you have and I know that.

    ### Goal ###

    In the end my goal is to help you, the reader, read more. If you see something I didn’t think of, a glaring omission, or just have thoughts on this layout — feel free to get in touch.

  • Square Not So Great Outside of Restaurants

    Ed Oswald with an interesting take on why Square is not a good option for most businesses: >I’ve taken a look at the app and its kind of disappointing. First off there’s no barcode support at all, thus this is useless for just about any business outside of restaurants. There’s also no easy way to…

    Ed Oswald with an interesting take on why Square is not a good option for most businesses:
    >I’ve taken a look at the app and its kind of disappointing. First off there’s no barcode support at all, thus this is useless for just about any business outside of restaurants. There’s also no easy way to run end-of-day reports — something most bookkeepers will tell you that is necessary to make sure your books are straight. Businesses need point-of-sale systems to be fully functional, and Square isn’t.

  • What Digital Task Apps Are Lacking

    Michael D Hopkins on digital versus paper task management: >When a paper list is finished, it can be crumpled up and thrown across the room, burned, shredded, turned into a paper airplane, etc. Completing a digital task list doesn’t earn the task-keeper anything more than a brief jQuery color change and a fade. He has…

    Michael D Hopkins on digital versus paper task management:
    >When a paper list is finished, it can be crumpled up and thrown across the room, burned, shredded, turned into a paper airplane, etc. Completing a digital task list doesn’t earn the task-keeper anything more than a brief jQuery color change and a fade.

    He has a really great list going on, with a lot of shortcomings that digital solutions have over paper. He neglected to mention any strengths that digital has over paper — like backups — but that wasn’t the point of his post.

    For what it’s worth I don’t agree with any of the “solutions” that he lists to solve these problems. His second solution in particular sounds like a terrible, *terrible* solution.

  • Twitter buys TweetDeck, so now make it consistent?

    Craig Grannell makes some interesting points about the TweetDeck purchase. I have been asked many times if I think that Twitter bought TweetDeck to have an ‘official’ Windows client. Personally I don’t think that is the case, TweetDeck is a pretty ugly looking, crap running Adobe Air app — Twitter could do better from scratch.…

    Craig Grannell makes some interesting points about the TweetDeck purchase. I have been asked many times if I think that Twitter bought TweetDeck to have an ‘official’ Windows client.

    Personally I don’t think that is the case, TweetDeck is a pretty ugly looking, crap running Adobe Air app — Twitter could do better from scratch. That said, as Grannell points out, I wouldn’t put anything past Twitter at this point.

    Most likely I think TweetDeck is absorbed and slowly forgotten about over the next few years — this purchase feels like a way to bring those uses back “into the fold.”

  • Wired Implements Apple’s In-App Subscriptions

    Graham Spencer: >Wired now offers users four ways to consume the Wired magazine on the iPad, they can continue to purchase individual issues for $3.99, pay $1.99 for a monthly subscription, $19.99 for a yearly subscription or if they are already a print subscriber, access the app for free. Nice to see reasonable pricing.

    Graham Spencer:
    >Wired now offers users four ways to consume the Wired magazine on the iPad, they can continue to purchase individual issues for $3.99, pay $1.99 for a monthly subscription, $19.99 for a yearly subscription or if they are already a print subscriber, access the app for free.

    Nice to see reasonable pricing.