January 2012
2 tags
A Plea for Better iOS Text Facilities →
buzz: Some (e.g. Facebook and Instagram) have dealt with this problem by abandoning fully native apps and instead building hybrid apps that rely on UIWebView for all but the simplest content presentation. Other, less ambitious companies have dealt with it by essentially distributing 200 MB PDFs disguised as general purpose software. The really crazy ones, like Joe Hewitt with his Three20...
Jan 31st
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The Perils of Prescriptive Design
Customer: Excuse me, would you mind heating up this pastry some more? It's cold in the middle.
Starbucks Employee: Um, let me check... [Turns around and looks at their oven. Each button on the oven's face is labeled and preset to correspond with a specific pastry. The employee seems to be realizing she is unable to warm this pastry just a little bit.]
Customer: It's fine on the outside, just cold in the middle. Just throw it in for a few seconds.
Starbucks Employee: [Throws the semi-warm pastry in the trash] I'm going to have to make you another one...
Jan 31st
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“[Android and iOS] are in a pickle. Their pickle is security. When the first big...”
– RIM CEO Thorsten Heins, another CEO who’s betting the company on a conditional event that will probably not happen and is totally out of his control. (Via NYTimes.com)
Jan 30th
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Putting French instructions on shampoo bottles is a branding move, right?
Jan 30th
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“[The idea that markets are rational and can regulate themselves] assumes perfect...”
– George Soros, via The Daily Beast
Jan 29th
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Jan 29th
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“[Barnes & Noble] have figured out how to use the store to sell e-books. Now,...”
– Carolyn Reidy, president and chief executive of Simon & Shuster. This is the delusional logic entrenched publishers are betting on: a magical future will appear where iPods will drive people to buy CD players, smartphones will sell Franklin day planners, Nooks will help sales of paper, and...
Jan 29th
45 notes
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“We see a future where world-leading educators are at the center of the education...”
– Stanford professors Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng, whom worked on Stanford’s free online classes, succinctly sum up the digital educational opportunity I’ve been trying to describe. Koller and Ng are starting a new company to help things along.
Jan 29th
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“When an Apple employee approached Pixar for a “Mac Tools Programming...”
– Court documents from the anti-poaching collusion trial involving Apple, Google, Adobe, Intel, Intuit, and others. I know it isn’t comparable to factory conditions, but this evidence directly conflicts with Tim Cook’s email in response to worker issues, which states: “We are...
Jan 28th
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“More likely, he said, is that someone had the idea to use the counterfeit...”
– 30 Pounds of Cocaine Turn Up in U.N. Mailroom, NYTimes.com
Jan 27th
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“The cost in increased complexity is constant while the cost of throwing hardware...”
– 37Signal’s Kyle Drake on why not sharding Basecamp’s database works for them.
Jan 27th
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What "Big Data" can Learn from Dubai's Skyscrapers...
Suddenly, we love data. It’s the hero in our TV shows, saves our baseball teams, generates our art, and is the topic of the moment at Davos. Our obsession borders on religion: we believe data is infallible, containing a single, emergent truth (the Guardian’s Datablog’s subtitle is “Facts are Sacred”). If our businesses or institutions are failing we say they need more...
Jan 27th
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“So where do you get the songs for your digital music library? You probably own...”
– Apple, explaining iTunes in January of 2001. Remember: the iPod wouldn’t arrive for 10 months and the store would take more than 2 years.
Jan 27th
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“Last year, about 70 percent of its estimated $237 million operating profit went...”
– Bloomberg on troubles at the New York Times. There is no good answer to this problem that doesn’t involve a time machine. Better answers, yes, but not good ones.
Jan 27th
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Symantec's Source Code was Stolen 6 Years Ago →
From Wired’s Threat Level: The company surprised the public last week when it disclosed that hackers had obtained source code for its pcAnywhere software and other products, and that the code had likely been stolen in a six-year-old breach that Symantec had never disclosed. Symantec said in its announcement that users should disable pcAnywhere until the company had time to update...
Jan 27th
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“In this issue we launch a weekly section devoted to China. It is the first time...”
– The Economist is beginning dedicated weekly coverage of China. This article is a succinct overview of why China matters. I heartily suggest you take 5 minutes and read the whole piece.
Jan 27th
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“With regard to category interests, the demographic profiles easily pick up on...”
– Ars Technica editors share their Google ad preferences. To be fair, “computers and electronics, video games, and cats” probably describes 75% of the internet. To be unfair, Google pegs me as someone interested in “CD Audio Shopping”.
Jan 27th
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History as a List →
NPR and Radiolab’s Robert Krulwich runs with my Frontiers through the Ages thought experiment, spinning it into a game we can play everywhere. This makes my week.
Jan 26th
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What will phishing attacks against AI look like? Will they be the same or play off the computer/human tension?
Jan 26th
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The Atlantic: The Zynga Abyss →
90wpm: The Atlantic published an excerpt from my essay for Distance today. It’s a little over 1500 words, and covers some of the main points in the essay. It also includes a fantastic photoshopped stock photo of a lab rat playing FarmVille in a Skinner box. Here’s a small snip: In the 1890s, while studying natural sciences at the University of Saint Petersburg, a Russian mathematician...
Jan 25th
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Education on a Digital Scale
Felix Salmon provides us with an update on Sebastian Thrun’s free Stanford class “Introduction to Artificial Intelligence”, which wrapped in last year: Just a couple of datapoints from Thrun’s talk: there were more students in his course from Lithuania alone than there are students at Stanford altogether. There were students in Afghanistan, exfiltrating war zones to grab an...
Jan 25th
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“Remember back in October when after a rare “miss” by Apple (which was only a...”
– MG Siegler on Apple’s beyond blowout quarter beyond blowout quarter. 37 million iPhones, 15.43 million iPads, and 5.2 million Macs were sold. The stock is hitting $460 in after-hours.
Jan 24th
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In the future we’ll only discuss daily deal sites as a brief symptom of the gradual realization that online populations are populations unto themselves.
Jan 24th
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“None of the companies that produce liquid crystal display (LCD) panels—Samsung...”
– The Economist The Economist identifies 3 reasons for the situation: televisions are commodified, manufacturers expanded capacity and created a glut, and all this coincided with a downturn in rich countries. Companies are trying to fight commodification with GoogleTV, custom Android builds, and...
Jan 24th
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Jan 24th
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Jan 23rd
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“In the U.S. we were very, very successful coming from the core enterprise...”
– Newly minted RIM CEO Thorsten Heins, whom doesn’t think RIM needs to make “seismic” changes. I hope he realizes marketing isn’t the key to consumer growth. It’s the product and platform. If marketing could solve the problems created by loyal consumer myopia, Jerry...
Jan 23rd
2 tags
Jan 23rd
106 notes
I propose a new rule for internet hygiene: there is no need to via, hat tip, or otherwise credit someone for simply pointing out an article from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, or any other widely read mass market publication, unless citing the actual author of the piece.
Jan 22nd
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“When Newt Gingrich tore into CNN’s John King for kicking off Thursday night’s...”
– David Horsey (via azspot)
Jan 22nd
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“The Muin is The Yird’s ae naitural satilyt (or muin), an the fift...”
– During the blackout, Megan discovered the fantastic Scots language wikipedia. Enjoy this selection from the Muin.
Jan 21st
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Thoughts on Apple's Textbook Announcement
iBooks has always struggled to find a unique market to help Apple turn it into a unique product. After today’s announcement, I think Apple’s finally found such a market in education. Education checks all the boxes: it’s a market that feeds Apple’s funnel (students have been very good to Apple in the past, especially between Jobs), is sufficiently valuable (worth...
Jan 19th
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“In addition to paying the lower tax rate on his investment income, Romney has as...”
– ABC News illuminates Romney’s tax tactics. Gawker’s right: this stereotypical rich guy behavior isn’t exactly surprising. But, it’s incredibly disingenuous. Avoiding taxes on this scale raises an important question that Romney should answer: why does he want to be...
Jan 19th
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Jan 18th
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Jan 18th
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“The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has looked at tomorrow’s...”
– Ars Technica. “A dangerous and troubling development” and “abuse of power” is the amount of money established industries invest in creating protective laws instead of directly developing businesses and markets. Also, SOPA’s not dead. Hearings are resuming in...
Jan 18th
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Jan 17th
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New theory: Manhattan’s obsession with burgers has to do with their lack of backyards in which to grill.
Jan 17th
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“Will Apple launch a sort of GarageBand for e-books? “That’s what we...”
– Ars Technica on Apple’s textbook event this week. My hopes for this announcement, if it is a “GarageBand for eBooks”: It’s free It’s not just for text books It is able to tie into a boilerplate Newsstand app, allowing publishers to more easily layout periodical...
Jan 17th
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In India, a "Missed Call" is Ad-Hoc Infrastructure →
More on the growing toll-free missed call ecosystem in India: This week Pluggd.in, an Indian site focused on Indian entrepreneurs and startups, profiled a startup called RealTech Systems which has developed an irrigation control system for farmers that uses cell phone networks and missed calls. Essentially a farmer installs the company’s Real Mobile Starter Control product at an irrigation...
Jan 17th
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“Put simply, the old idea was that these smallish states were largely...”
– Josh Marshall (via ericmortensen) I’ve been wondering why these states were chosen. This not only makes sense, but is a clear example of just how far our media environment has grown, subsuming local cycles and markets.
Jan 16th
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Jan 13th
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Jan 13th
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“They didn’t write Angry Birds and become a billionaire. They wrote Angry...”
– Horace Dediu on the writer behind Shit My Dad Says and the lack of innovation in old media. The creators disrupting old media aim to be hired by the the film studios, television networks, publishing houses, and newspapers they challenge. Creative tweeters angle for sitcoms, bloggers dream of...
Jan 13th
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"Content" Creep
Publishers have stopped referring to their products as journalism, writing, literature, photography, or art. Today, everything is simply “content”. Those working in media, especially digital media, can attest to the word’s popularity. Quantitatively we can observe this trend in the chart above: over the last ten years, annual financial reports from The New York Times have...
Jan 12th
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Jan 12th
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SOPA's Main Targets are Immune from SOPA →
In short: SOPA doesn’t apply to .com and .org, because those registrars are within US jurisdiction and theoretically covered by existing measures. The authors of this heavy handed bill don’t understand the internet enough to make the law effective: So, based on the law as written… The Pirate Bay is immune from SOPA (though, potentially not from ICE just seizing the domain)....
Jan 12th
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“Our Milky Way galaxy contains a minimum of 100 billion planets, according to a...”
– NASA.
Jan 12th
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I wouldn’t be surprised if there was some government representation at Apple’s event next week.
Jan 12th
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Has the Verge ever disliked something?
Jan 11th
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