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Leica Sofort 2June 13, 2024
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  • Microsoft Closes Up Shop on Innovation

    Jay Greene on the three year old Microsoft design studio: >Though Microsoft made little noise about Pioneer, it was once at the heart of the company’s efforts to capture consumer imagination. Rather than having a portfolio of products to develop, Pioneer sought to incubate design that might one day make its way into products. The…

    Jay Greene on the three year old Microsoft design studio:
    >Though Microsoft made little noise about Pioneer, it was once at the heart of the company’s efforts to capture consumer imagination. Rather than having a portfolio of products to develop, Pioneer sought to incubate design that might one day make its way into products. The ill-fated Courier tablet–something of a dual-screen tablet that predated Apple’s iPad–emerged from Pioneer. Though the device won kudos when images leaked, Microsoft decided to shelve the concept.

    Thus one of the few areas in Microsoft that was creating interesting new products is now gone. I just don’t see the logic here, but then again Ballmer is lacking in logic.

  • Amazon Boasts Ebook Sales

    Amazon in a press release: >Since April 1, for every 100 print books Amazon.com has sold, it has sold 105 Kindle books. This includes sales of hardcover and paperback books by Amazon where there is no Kindle edition. Free Kindle books are excluded and if included would make the number even higher. This is all…

    Amazon in a press release:

    >Since April 1, for every 100 print books Amazon.com has sold, it has sold 105 Kindle books. This includes sales of hardcover and paperback books by Amazon where there is no Kindle edition. Free Kindle books are excluded and if included would make the number even higher.

    This is all about the Kindle. There are quite a few people in my life that surprised me by owning a Kindle this year — I doubt Kindle ownership will be uncommon by this time next year. The device is too cheap and too good for people to not buy it at this point.

  • Quote of the Day: Dave Caolo

    “Fellow notebook aficionados would nod approvingly at the guy writing important things in the same notebook once used by famous alcoholics and a psychotic, self-injurious painter.” — Dave Caolo

    “Fellow notebook aficionados would nod approvingly at the guy writing important things in the same notebook once used by famous alcoholics and a psychotic, self-injurious painter.”
  • Devil’s Advocate Take on Twitter’s Policy Changes

    Marco Arment: >It doesn’t matter whether third-party clients helped make it popular. Twitter has reciprocated for years by giving such apps a compelling platform for which to sell software. Successful Twitter-client developers have made a ton of money in exchange for the help they provided in making Twitter popular. That’s a damn good point.

    Marco Arment:
    >It doesn’t matter whether third-party clients helped make it popular. Twitter has reciprocated for years by giving such apps a compelling platform for which to sell software. Successful Twitter-client developers have made a ton of money in exchange for the help they provided in making Twitter popular.

    That’s a damn good point.

  • Apple’s Cloud Music Service

    [MG Siegler](http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/18/apple-cloud-music/): >Think about it. With these agreements, Apple is likely going to be able to do the one thing that is absolutely crucial for cloud music to take off: offer library syncing without uploading. In other words, Apple now likely be able to do what Lala (the company Apple bought in late 2009 and subsequently…

    [MG Siegler](http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/18/apple-cloud-music/):
    >Think about it. With these agreements, Apple is likely going to be able to do the one thing that is absolutely crucial for cloud music to take off: offer library syncing without uploading. In other words, Apple now likely be able to do what Lala (the company Apple bought in late 2009 and subsequently shut down) was able to do: scan your hard drive for songs and let you play those songs from their servers without having to upload them yourself.

    The cloud music stuff (as Shawn and I talked about [here](http://thebbpodcast.com/2011/05/episode-11-never-punch-someone-in-the-forehead/)) is going to be very interesting for the next 8 months — as we see how it all plays out. I think Siegler is right about the way the service will work, but I doubt that it will allow you to do this with non-iTunes purchased content.

    The problem with allowing users to stream everything in their current library (regardless of where it was purchased) is that some of that music may have not been obtained legally. Now Apple likely does not care about that — Apple just wants their users happy — don’t think for one moment this was not a huge sticking point for the music labels during negotiations with Apple.

    The labels do not want you to be able to do this with things Apple can’t verify that you purchased. Doing so would be giving up on the anti-piracy tirade they have been on for most of this century. ((It’s nice that we are at the beginning of a new century — allowing me to make such bold sounding statements.))

    I don’t know what the service will look like, but I doubt that it will work like most of the optimistic audiophiles hope that it will. I doubt that you will be able to play everything in your library using Apple’s cloud service.

    I just don’t see how Apple would have gotten around that in negotiations, unless…

    #### Upgrade ####

    As I talked about in the last B&B podcast episode, I am guessing you will have to pay a one-time cloud upgrade fee on a song by song basis. Perhaps $0.30 a song, maybe less. Once you do that, those songs are available in the cloud. ((This did this before when they started the ‘plus’ music files.))

    This could be where Apple circumvented the labels. If Apple said we want all the music in the users library to be streamable (so long as we have a deal in place with the label for that music) and further told the labels that in doing so they would charge an upgrade fee that the labels get a percentage of (allowing the labels to double dip [charge twice for the same thing] — which we know they love) I could see the labels going for it.

    I could *further* see the labels being muscled into allowing Apple to charge users to “upgrade” the music in their library that they *didn’t* buy from iTunes. Thus, pirated or not, all your music would be in Apple’s cloud for a price. I am guessing they would be OK with this because it is a faster way to get money from pirates than court cases are.

    This isn’t ideal for the users, Apple, or the labels — it’s a compromise. I hope I am wrong and all the dreamers are right, it would be cheaper for me if I am wrong. I just don’t see the labels bending that much without getting their palms greased first.

  • Apple’s Malware Solution

    John Gruber: >So, for the sake of argument, let’s take it as a given that this sort of thing [malware on Macs] is becoming more common. What can Apple do? Think about it. (My guess: think about why the iPhone and iPad, despite being far more popular than the Mac, have no trojan horses.) That’s…

    John Gruber:
    >So, for the sake of argument, let’s take it as a given that this sort of thing [malware on Macs] is becoming more common. What can Apple do? Think about it. (My guess: think about why the iPhone and iPad, despite being far more popular than the Mac, have no trojan horses.)

    That’s a very clever solution, as I assume he is talking about App Stores. If users are trained that where they get apps without worries is from an Apple App Store, then they will be leery about letting any other app install itself.

    (An added bonus also being that the user iTunes account password is different than the Mac admin password. Thus users see the differentiation in the installation methods and become less willing to install outside of the App Store. Of course that is assuming a lot on the users end.)

    UPDATE: As pointed out on Twitter Gruber could be referring to many things, including sandboxing and the like.

  • “Twitter’s Shit Sandwich”

    John Gruber has an excellent take on the changes Twitter will be making to the authentication process. More and more Twitter is cramming changes down third party developers throats — the very group of people that helped to make Twitter popular. I for one would rarely use Twitter had Loren Brichter (now employed at Twitter)…

    John Gruber has an excellent take on the changes Twitter will be making to the authentication process. More and more Twitter is cramming changes down third party developers throats — the very group of people that helped to make Twitter popular. I for one would rarely use Twitter had Loren Brichter (now employed at Twitter) not made Tweetie.

    What Twitter really needs to do is convey reasons why they are doing this, not to users, but to the developer community. They need to show everyone the path they are taking.

    Now you may be thinking that I would never say this about Apple, and that they do similar things. That too has crossed my mind, but the biggest difference is that Apple has a track record of doing amazing things. So far Twitter has a track record of acquiring VC funding and changing CEOs. ((Also: dickbar.))

    Bottom line: this change is bad and Twitter needs to open up about its reasons behind the change, or prove very quickly that they made the right decision.

    (Neither of which I see happening.)

  • Just Works

    ‘It just works.’ It’s a common phrase that Apple and its loyalists use — we all have a general understanding of what it means, but how do you achieve it? I asked [Marco Arment](http://www.marco.org/) how a developer writes a piece of software that a user would describe as “just working”, to which he responded: >Take…

    ‘It just works.’ It’s a common phrase that Apple and its loyalists use — we all have a general understanding of what it means, but how do you achieve it?

    I asked [Marco Arment](http://www.marco.org/) how a developer writes a piece of software that a user would describe as “just working”, to which he responded:

    >Take every support email you get, and try to avoid getting the same ones in the future.

    I think he is talking about much more than just squashing bugs — he’s also talking about listening to things that annoy the crap out of users and fixing those issues.

    ### What it Means to Me ###

    For me ‘just works’ comes down to three factors:

    1. Understanding how customers use your product. This is likely helped by the ‘support emails’ Marco mentioned.
    2. Using your own product often.
    3. Not adding stuff, for adding stuff’s sake. (Feature bloat.)

    Those three factors are key to a product that gives users a great, frictionless, experience — the experience that is often described as ‘just working’.

    #### Creation ####

    The fastest way to achieve this is by creating something *you* need.

    Some of the best products (software or otherwise) are the result of a person scratching their own itch. This is why a brand new smartphone that lacks 3rd party apps and simple things, such as copy and paste, can survive *and* succeed. It’s not about features, specs, or bullet points – it’s all about experience.

    When the iPhone launched in 2007 it was pretty bared bones, but it succeeded in the market because it was evident that the people who designed and made the phone, designed and made the phone for themselves to use.

    Or as I like to think of most inventions: *I highly doubt the riding lawn mower was invented by a man with a small lawn.*

    [Here’s Marco again on why he created Instapaper](http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2011/01/25/interview_marco_arment.html):

    >In the fall of 2007, I had just switched to the iPhone, and I had a long train commute every day. I never knew what to read on the train, but I’d find stuff all day at work that I didn’t have time to read, so I made Instapaper as a simple, one-click link-saving service for myself to time-shift links from the work day to my train commute.

    That’s why Instapaper is one of those services/apps that ‘just works’ — Marco needed the service to be drop dead simple and highly useable — not for customers — for himself since he was the initial customer, thus he eliminated all of his own support complaints first.

    #### Omni ####

    One company that seems to exemplify this more than any other is the OmniGroup — specifically in their iPad apps. Both OmniFocus and OmniOutliner are *better* on the iPad than they are on the Mac, and those are two excellent Mac apps to begin with. The feeling that I always get with an OmniGroup iPad app is that they not only tested the app, but that they *tested* the app. Read: they actually use the product.

    #### Friction ####

    When I asked [Sean Sperte](http://seansperte.com/), one third of [Sky Balloon](http://skyballoonstudio.com/), how they achieve such “just works” status — he responded:

    >Most of what we do is take cues from Apple’s default apps. We strive to remove as much process friction from the user’s end goal.
    >And we start by defining what the user’s end goal is — not their technical end goal, but their *real* end goal …

    The difference is subtle when expressed, but huge in practice. It means that they made the app that you wanted and not that app that they thought *you* wanted — they made the app work the way you wanted too, not the way others apps say it should work.

    I give a lot of apps hard times on this site for little problems and some oversights ((Also about icons.)) , but I can usually tell within the first minute of using a new app whether it is an app made by people who actually made the app for themselves or for others — it shows, take note.

    Apps that people make to sell, look like apps made to make money. (Often ad laden, standard everything, little documentation and no support.)

    Friction, as Sperte calls it, is something that I see in products that aren’t being used by the people who developed them — friction is caused by competing on features and not experience. Friction happens when you don’t use your own product anymore. ((iCal anyone?))

    #### User Perspective ####

    I asked [Justin Blanton](http://hypertext.net/) what “it just works” means to him:

    >Consistency. The software/hardware (re)acts as I expect it to, and no differently. Every time. And if it breaks, it breaks in a consistent and predictable manner, from which I can recover. Once I’ve done all the thinking on the front and back ends, and set things up just right, I expect to not have to *think* again—’it just works’ is muscle memory’s enabler.

    [Shawn Blanc](http://shawnblanc.net/) responded to the same question saying:

    >For an app to “just work” for me I suppose it boils down to a combination of two things: there is a low learning curve and there is long-lasting utility. Put another way, the app slides right in to my area of need.

    Consistent, frictionless, seamless apps. That’s what make the user not notice the UI, the icon, the price, the lack of features. Why? Because they just work.

    ### Things that Just Work ###

    All of this started when I was writing up my review of OmniOutliner for the iPad — I kept wanting to just say: “it just works the way you think it would and it’s really great.” That of course would be helpful to no one, so I had to sit back and think about why I felt this way about the app.

    I started to think about all the things that I report as “just working” and I think these four guys hit the nail on the head. Before the iPhone switching phones was a bear, you had to hope the sync would work with your Mac, then hope that the new phone would in some way recognize that data. Maybe you had to buy a MissingSync utility, or install some crazy hacked together after thought software from the vendor. Maybe the new phone really only worked with Exchange — though you didn’t know *that* before you bought it.

    When I bought the iPhone it just worked. It fit into my workflow and life seamlessly as Shawn talks about above. There was no friction — yes it lacked some features I would liked to have, but the stuff it did have were so good it was like I had been using the phone all my life.

    I haven’t used outlines since college, but when I popped open OmniOutliner for the first time I knew how to work everything. The app just fit in my workflow all of a sudden with very little thought and very little problems.

    It just worked.

    ### Things that Just Don’t Work ###

    We hate printers so very much because they just *never* work. Playing off of what Justin said printers fail often and always fail in different ways. ((PC Load Letter)) Printers don’t work as expected and if you are on Windows you have to figure out which software to install before you actually plug in the printer — otherwise you face the wrath of scary warning stickers.

    In the same genre fax machines rarely, if ever, just work because they rely on too many other services to work. Even if everything goes through there is still no guarantee that the guy on the other end has a decent enough machine to be able to read 11pt type. They were never built to be great, just adequate — yet they truly don’t work.

    If you have ever added on to a home, or lived in a home that was added on to, you likely know exactly where the addition is. These additions always feel like additions. ((With exception to the 1% cases that are actually done very well, but those are fringe outliers and are usually much more involved than a standard addition. If you don’t know which happened in your home, or any home, as yourself if you could have lived in the home while the addition was being done. If the answer is yes, then it will always feel like an addition. If you can’t tell? You are the 1%.)) Adding on becomes a problem because you are building on top of something else, instead of integrating a new part. You are adding layers, not integrating features.

    Integration versus layering: integration makes a good product, layering makes an average product.

    Layering never gives you the ‘it just works’ feeling.

    ### Ive ###

    One last quote, this time from [Jonathan Ive](http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0fe800C2CU&feature=youtube_gdata):

    >A lot of what we seem to be doing is getting design out of the way. And I think when forms develop with that sort of reason, and they’re not just arbitrary shapes, it feels almost inevitable. It feels almost undesigned. It feels almost like, ‘well, of course it’s that way. Why would it be any other way?’

    In other words: it just works.

    ### Who Cares ###

    This entire philosophy is of crucial importance right now because for the first time we are hitting a sweet spot in consumerism. We have the means to build, sell and buy very high quality goods. More to the point I am starting to hear people exclaim: “I like it because it just works.” Yet when you ask them what they mean you are met with a blank stare.

    The better question is why is it right for person X. To which people can usually come up with some great reasons: “they won’t have to worry about common problem X.” Just works mentality is permeating its way through to the general consumer, and if you want to be successful you are going to have to figure out how to make your product/service ‘just work’.

  • Parallels Transporter

    From the App Store description: >Use your Windows documents, pictures, music, downloads, and Internet bookmarks on your Mac without installing Windows. Parallels Transporter for App Store is all new! >Parallels Transporter allows you to copy documents, pictures, music, videos, downloads, and Internet bookmarks from a Windows computer to your Mac. Sounds killer. [MacStories](http://www.macstories.net/news/parallels-transporter-makes-pc-to-mac-migration-dead-simple/) reports the…

    From the App Store description:
    >Use your Windows documents, pictures, music, downloads, and Internet bookmarks on your Mac without installing Windows. Parallels Transporter for App Store is all new!

    >Parallels Transporter allows you to copy documents, pictures, music, videos, downloads, and Internet bookmarks from a Windows computer to your Mac.

    Sounds killer. [MacStories](http://www.macstories.net/news/parallels-transporter-makes-pc-to-mac-migration-dead-simple/) reports the price will go from the current $0.99 to $39.99 soon. That’s not bad for how much time this will likely save most users.

  • The Tent That Turns Into Concrete in Less Than 24 Hours

    The BBC: >Among new innovations which could help relief efforts is a fabric shelter that, when sprayed with water, turns to concrete within 24 hours. That is really all you need to know about it, there is a nice Flash only video though. This kind of thing is incredibly cool, very un-sexy, but will make…

    The BBC:
    >Among new innovations which could help relief efforts is a fabric shelter that, when sprayed with water, turns to concrete within 24 hours.

    That is really all you need to know about it, there is a nice Flash only video though. This kind of thing is incredibly cool, very un-sexy, but will make far more of an impact than the latest SSD controller will. ((One would hope at least.))

  • Fantastical

    I am sure you have all heard or seen Fantastical by now — it’s a little menubar app that shows you upcoming appointments and allows you to create new appointments in natural language. It’s very neat, pretty nice looks (though why make that month calendar look like a crappy paper one?!?). It will set you…

    I am sure you have all heard or seen Fantastical by now — it’s a little menubar app that shows you upcoming appointments and allows you to create new appointments in natural language. It’s very neat, pretty nice looks (though why make that month calendar look like a crappy paper one?!?). It will set you back about $15 and I like it, but [Justin Blanton makes a killer point](http://hypertext.net/2011/05/fantastical):

    >While it most certainly is pretty and likely a joy to use, I’m a bit confused as to why anyone would use a calendaring app and a task-management app, unless maybe they’re sync’ing their calendars with other people.

    After reading that I am going to stop using calendars and see what it would be like to do everything in OmniFocus — should be interesting. At the very least I think Justin makes a pretty strong point, because with Fantastical you would have two calendaring apps on your Mac that do more or less the same thing (iCal and Fantastical): show you where to go and when.

  • The Oona

    I just backed this clever little iPhone stand. If for no other reason that to replace the dock I use on my nightstand.

    I just backed this clever little iPhone stand. If for no other reason that to replace the dock I use on my nightstand.

  • How People Really Use the iPad

    They asked a bunch of great questions and present it all in bar charts, my favorite question was: “Did you consider buying an Android tablet before buying the iPad?” To which a staggering 87.4% said no.

    They asked a bunch of great questions and present it all in bar charts, my favorite question was: “Did you consider buying an Android tablet before buying the iPad?” To which a staggering 87.4% said no.

  • Encrypting Dropbox

    This is an on-the-fly encryption tool that works with Dropbox. You would need it installed on every computer that syncs with Dropbox, but that is easy enough. Drop your files into a specific folder inside of Dropbox and they are encrypted client-side to prevent unauthorized access. For now it is Windows only so I haven’t…

    This is an on-the-fly encryption tool that works with Dropbox. You would need it installed on every computer that syncs with Dropbox, but that is easy enough. Drop your files into a specific folder inside of Dropbox and they are encrypted client-side to prevent unauthorized access. For now it is Windows only so I haven’t had the chance to try it.

    [via GigaOm]
  • Bill Gates Backs Ballmer

    Bill Gates has come out saying he urged the Skype deal to be done, which is executive speak for saying that Ballmer is still his man. Gates: >It’ll be fascinating to see how the brilliant ideas out of Microsoft research, coming together with Skype, what they can make of that. I too look forward to…

    Bill Gates has come out saying he urged the Skype deal to be done, which is executive speak for saying that Ballmer is still his man.

    Gates:

    >It’ll be fascinating to see how the brilliant ideas out of Microsoft research, coming together with Skype, what they can make of that.

    I too look forward to all the prototypes that Microsoft comes up with, only to kill the minute people applaud them. ((I’m looking at you [Courier](http://www.engadget.com/2010/03/05/microsofts-courier-digital-journal-exclusive-pictures-and-de/), oh what could have been.))

  • What Happens When It’s Google/Android Vs. Amazon/Android?

    MG Siegler on the coming of Amazon tablets: >Google has succeeded in building a massive platform that doesn’t fully rely on them. That’s awesome on paper. But it can work both ways. If others start to realize that they don’t need Google, what does Google do? Just sit there and take it?

    MG Siegler on the coming of Amazon tablets:
    >Google has succeeded in building a massive platform that doesn’t fully rely on them. That’s awesome on paper. But it can work both ways. If others start to realize that they don’t need Google, what does Google do? Just sit there and take it?

  • On Dropbox Security

    Dropbox (everyone’s favorite utility) has been taking a lot of heat lately from users, privacy nuts, and now the FTC over its encryption and data security practices. The two points that people seem to have trouble with are the following, from the FAQ Dropbox [posted](http://blog.dropbox.com/?p=735): >Like most major online services, we have a small number…

    Dropbox (everyone’s favorite utility) has been taking a lot of heat lately from users, privacy nuts, and now the FTC over its encryption and data security practices. The two points that people seem to have trouble with are the following, from the FAQ Dropbox [posted](http://blog.dropbox.com/?p=735):

    >Like most major online services, we have a small number of employees who must be able to access user data when legally required to do so. But that’s the exception, not the rule. We have strict policy and technical access controls that prohibit employee access except in these rare circumstances. In addition, we employ a number of physical and electronic security measures to protect user information from unauthorized access.

    The above is likely due, in part, to this (from the same FAQ):

    >That said, like all U.S. companies, we must follow U.S. law. That means that the government sometimes requests us (as it does similar companies like Apple, Google, Skype, and Twitter) to turn over user information in response to requests for which the law requires that we comply.

    Basically Dropbox can look at any file you have stored on it’s service if it wants to and will turn over those contents (unencrypted) if compelled by court order. For law abiding citizens this is of no concern, for nefarious folk this is probably a deal breaker. The real question I have, I stated earlier when commenting on the [matter](https://brooksreview.net/2011/04/dropbox-security-2/):

    >Is this like setting off a nuke — where two people need to turn two different keys to make it happen? If not, why not? That’s what I want to know.

    Basically of the employees that can access my data — what security protocols must they go through to access it.

    It seems though this issue runs a bit deeper than I originally thought as Mathew J. Schwartz for Information Week [reports](http://www.informationweek.com/news/storage/security/229500683):

    >In particular, Dropbox–unlike some of its competitors, such as Spideroak and Tarsnap–uses file deduplication when files are first uploaded. As a result, when a user uploads a file, the Dropbox site first studies the file to see if it’s been uploaded by a different user. If so, Dropbox just links to the previously uploaded file.

    I knew about the file deduplication methods that Dropbox is using, but never thought about how that could be a bad thing from a privacy standpoint, Schwartz adds:

    >For starters, deduplication can make it easy for outsiders to know what’s already on Dropbox’s servers, since the website studies a file to see if it’s seen it before. “While this doesn’t tell you which other users have uploaded this file, presumably Dropbox can figure it out. I doubt they’d do it if asked by a random user, but when presented with a court order, they could be forced to,” he [Christopher Soghoian] said. “What this means, is that from the comfort of their desks, law enforcement agencies or copyright trolls can upload contraband files to Dropbox, watch the amount of bandwidth consumed, and then obtain a court order if the amount of data transferred is smaller than the size of the file.”

    Again, not a problem unless you are breaking the law by storing illegal songs, videos, and the like on Dropbox.

    Another thought this entire debate has set off is that Dropbox, I believe, uses Amazon’s S3 storage — what access does Amazon have to the data if compelled by law?

    ### Server Side ###

    I am going to get out of my knowledge base for a little bit, but when all these issues came to a head a while back I had an interesting email conversation with someone that has intimate knowledge of these systems. The gist of the conversation is that Dropbox does server-side decryption and encryption — that’s why the key is stored with them and that is how they have access. Competitors like Spideroak, for instance, do client side encryption and decryption.

    Client side means that they don’t have access to unencrypted data — it means that even if they turned over your data, the government agency would have to work to decrypt it because the don’t hold the key — you do. Dropbox (to the best of what I understand) doesn’t use this method because it would significantly slow down the user computer — as that is the computer that would be encrypting and decrypting data on the fly.

    To add more complications, mobile apps — such as Dropbox on your iPhone — would have quite a bit of trouble (if it is even feasible/possible) to do this on the device. Meaning that with services like Spideroak the mobile devices sends the encrypted password back to Spideroak to decrypt the data first, thus breaking the security chain.

    It’s a tough nut for these companies to crack because the heavier and more secure the system the slower it is — the slower the utility, the less utility it actually has to users.

    ### Solutions ###

    Back when this all came out I mentioned that I will begin storing sensitive data in Dropbox inside of encrypted DMG files. This works and keeps your data secure, but again causes a massive inconvenience when you need to get that data because you need to open the file and enter a password.

    Patrick Rhone recently [commented](http://minimalmac.com/post/5534765499/dropbox-lied-to-users-about-data-security-complaint-to):

    >If you want your data to be 100% secure, here’s the solution:
    >Don’t have data.

    He’s absolutely right. The point is really this: don’t assume the data you store in the cloud is ever only accessible to you, thus don’t store sensitive data in the cloud. In other words: don’t be the villain telling the hero all your plans right before the hero escapes.

  • California Bill To Give Parents Access To Kids’ Facebook Pages

    John Biggs: >California SB 242, proposed by Sen. Ellen Corbett, would force social networks like Facebook to allow parents access to their child’s account(s) and, more importantly, force all privacy settings to their maximum level by default. Parents can request that images or text be removed from any social network page “upon request … within…

    John Biggs:
    >California SB 242, proposed by Sen. Ellen Corbett, would force social networks like Facebook to allow parents access to their child’s account(s) and, more importantly, force all privacy settings to their maximum level by default. Parents can request that images or text be removed from any social network page “upon request … within 48 hours upon his or her request.”

    This is nuts, not only is it bad for Facebook’s business — it sets a bad precedent for other states to follow. The best move for Facebook is to tell California that if this law is passed two things will happen:

    1. Facebook will not allow accounts to minors in California (have fun dealing with that backlash CA).
    2. Facebook will relocate its base of operations to somewhere else — Redmond should have extra room soon enough.

    Now, I doubt either of those things would happen — but if somebody told me that I need to help parent their children, well that’s the stance I would take. Also you may be thinking that this would be great for parents because Facebook is evil — to which I respond: if that is your thinking don’t allow your kids to have Facebook in the first place. ((I am fully aware of how hard that is to limit, but there are far worse things your kid can Google than there are on Facebook.))

  • Outlook Metro UI

    Outlook 15 is getting a revamp with the Metro UI, WinRumors has the screen shot. I must say Metro UI is one of the best things to come out of Redmond lately. Here’s to hoping that they make Windows 8 look something like this and ditch the “ribbon” in Office all together.

    Outlook 15 is getting a revamp with the Metro UI, WinRumors has the screen shot. I must say Metro UI is one of the best things to come out of Redmond lately. Here’s to hoping that they make Windows 8 look something like this and ditch the “ribbon” in Office all together.

  • Notesy 2.0

    David Findlay on the latest Notesy release: >While working on 2.0 I came across Ethan Schoonover’s wonderful Solarized color palettes on the blogosphere. 2.0 adds background and pen options for Solarized Dark and Solarized Light. I’m a big fan of Solarized Dark myself. He’s also added a ton of other features like subfolders and markdown…

    David Findlay on the latest Notesy release:

    >While working on 2.0 I came across Ethan Schoonover’s wonderful Solarized color palettes on the blogosphere. 2.0 adds background and pen options for Solarized Dark and Solarized Light. I’m a big fan of Solarized Dark myself.

    He’s also added a ton of other features like subfolders and markdown preview with custom CSS. It’s a great update to my goto iPhone note app, Solarized makes it that much better.