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Archive for the ‘technology’ Category

Ignite

07 Mar

So – yet another example of how far behind the times I am … maybe a kind of Networked Ted ?

F910E17C-8E71-4AB5-B217-CEE4B032E9AC.jpg

Ignite goes global
—from March 1-5, 2010, 50+ Ignites will take place in cities around the world. Upwards of 10,000 entrepreneurs, technologists, DIYers, creative professionals, and enthusiastic knowledge-seekers will gather in local pubs, theaters, and other convivial venues for an evening that is a unique blend of networking, information, and fun, encapsulated in the Ignite motto: “Enlighten us, but make it quick.”


Passed on – with thanks to ‘my mate mark’ : Ignite

 

12 Smart, Memorable (and Sometimes Funny) Quotes About Technology

28 Feb

My Thanks to ExecTweets for the original post

“Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that humans can understand.”–Martin Fowler

“Some people worry that artificial intelligence will make us feel inferior, but then, anybody in his right mind should have an inferiority complex every time he looks at a flower.”–Alan Kay

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it.”–Alan Kay

“One machine can do the work of fifty ordinary men. No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man.”–Elbert Hubbard

“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”–Arthur C. Clarke<

“It’s hardware that makes a machine fast. It’s software that makes a fast machine slow.”–Craig Cruce

“The question of whether computers can think is like the question of whether submarines can swim.”–Edsger W. Dijkstra

“No computer has ever been designed that is ever aware of what it’s doing; but most of the time, we aren’t either.”–Marvin Minsky

“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns”–Mitch Ratcliffe

“For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press 3.”–Alice Kahn

“I have an almost religious zeal.. not for technology per se, but for the Internet which is for me, the nervous system of mother Earth, which I see as a living creature, linking up.”–Dan Millman

“The Internet is just a world passing around notes in a classroom.”–Jon Stewart

 
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Posted in humour, quote, technology, thoughts.from.the.web

 

What’s Up With Apple

01 Feb

This post is based on an email I sent to a group of colleagues following the Apple iPad announcement this past Wednesday. Found myself reading it again – in light of another set of threads that I engaged in – and thought – hell – why not – for posterity … so here we go.

Three posts that make for interesting reading

1] http://stevenf.tumblr.com
This post talks about the gap in the market – not between the iphone and the imac – but between

  • the geeks and the not geeks and
  • the youth and the old – who want something simple – and ‘us’ in the middle, who are ‘used to’ wrestling down the problems of technology – and almost enjoy it :)

    2] http://9to5mac.com/apple-flash-ipad-3954934055

    is a report that ‘flash is used on the demos seen on the ipad’

    3] http://www.macrumors.com/2010/01/29/display-of-flash-content-in-ipad-promo-materials-likely-not-indicative-of-actual-flash-compatibility/

    … which is clear – NO flash support according to adobe …

    Apple have also been reported to the FTC for depicting use of flash on the iPad – BUT – the Apple response so far is quiet – and other commentators are weighing in to say if you look REALLY closely – sites like ‘the new york times’ which uses Flash – and used in the Apple ads are in fact not NYT sites – but apple simulations …. hmm …

    So with these comments and other threads, what follows is my take;


    I have long held the belief that as long as ‘Steve’ is at the helm – and probably longer – flash is not getting in on the act in apple’s mobile devices ….. Everyone talks about slowness, bugginess etc of flash – in fact this was posted to my Facebook stream just yesterday

    Here’s a more informed view of the Flash situation from a friend. it’s hard to argue with his numbers:

    “I did a quickie test with the new YouTube HTML5 beta. On a site that embedded a video (so Flash was used), my browser CPU utilization was 22%, and the Adobe Flash plug-in CPU utilization was 55%. (dual core macbook pro, so total CPU% = 200%).

    After the video played, I watched the same video again directly on the YouTube site in HTML5. Adobe Flash plug-in CPU utilization was 4% (what it consumes just sitting on its hiney), and the browser CPU utilization was 17%.

    77% vs 21%. that’s why Apple hates Adobe. There certainly may be personalities involved (with Jobs, there is always something personal), but Adobe Flash is just technically awful (this actually may be the crux of any Jobs’ hatred – he hates inelegance, and Adobe Flash is inelegant).

    I don’t hate Adobe, and it does bother me that I can’t see Flash on the iPhone or iPad, but Adobe has acted very awfully in this area and doesn’t appear to be doing anything to address it. Google and Apple have the muscle to squeeze them out.” (my bold)

    “Google and Apple have the muscle to squeeze them out.” … and make no mistake – the public noise of their competition aside – they are still working together – one example is Apple’s WebKit (Safari and Chrome) … and Apple / Google are leading the way in the HTML5 stakes – and in fact not just contributing to writing the standard – but are the leads. To me this world is a mystery – but the ‘wisdom’ i read is that with HTML5, Flash is not needed ….


    Market Cap of ‘infrastructure’ companies sometimes give an idea of the weight they pull

  • aapl – 175 billion
  • goog – 168 billion
  • orcl – 115 billion
  • msft – 250 billion

    and think about that – apple are sitting at a market cap of 70% of microsoft – and ten times adobe.

    meanwhile for comp and perspective – the ‘app’ companies

  • sap – 54 billion
  • adobe – 17 billion
  • intuit is 9 billion
  • autodesk is 5 billion
  • electronic arts 5 billion

    Wired writes “Many were expecting cameras, kickstands and some crazy new form of text input.” – see item 1) above – the many who whipped into the frenzy and were setting the expectations were the geeks – but that isn’t apple’s market – they put a LOT of effort into technology, design, complex and clever software – all with one single focus – to HIDE that complexity – so that ‘it just works’. Listen to steve’s wrap up at the end of the keynote where he talks about the fact that they sit at the integration of technology and liberal arts – i am not sure i would put it that way – but there is no doubt they sit at the intersection of technology and ‘getting things done – easily’.

    One comparison is the motor car – even as recently as the 70s and even 80s – kids would learn how to fix their own cars – they don’t today – why ? two reasons ….

    one

    : because the cars are too complex

    [underneath I mean, not to the driver - that hasn't changed - three (or two if automatic) pedals and a steering wheel]- but under the hood – a different world that makes the experience more pleasurable, more reliable – but also IMPOSSIBLE to get into without knowing a lot and having the right tools.

    two

    : they tend to ‘just work’

    Think of the iphone / itouch / ipad’s removal of a file system – its there – somewhere – but god knows where – we just use the apps and the files it needs are just there … the complexity is being hidden because the majority of us don’t need it.


    Further – under ‘Steve’s’ direction – Apple has often been in the vanguard of eschewing ‘common wisdom’ – and they are rarely wrong. Sometimes it takes a couple of goes – but the adoption of their stuff – is working. (Interesting note – Apple TV is presented to the world generally as a failure – and the KIndle – a success – guess what, according to Piper Jaffray, Apple TV has outsold the Kindle 2 to 1 !!

    Even the ‘walled garden’ of apps that ‘everybody’ hates because it isn’t open and that unlocked phones can’t talk to iTunes – is seen as unfair – but it is a stunning success. The fact is MOST of the world doesn’t care what we the geeks think. They want their stuff – they want it simple – and Apple is giving them that … by offering a range of devices that work seamlessly with software – their TCO is way below a windows based PC – the integration is seamless from the device in your hand on your desk to stores that deliver what you need.

    Finally – I think the iPad is designed as a consumer device – and I don’t mean by that ‘for the consumer’ – I mean it is a device to consume – video, tv, books, music, documents, spreadsheets, photos – and IF you want to post back into it – a clever little keyboard pops up that allows you to do that – it is recognizing that MOST of the world consume – even in this brave new world of collaboration – MOST people read the blog posts – and occasionally, if ever, comment. And – though they might have a blog – they rarely drive it and post to it on a daily basis – it is – as we were saying yesterday – just too hard !!

    Benny Parsons – Nascar Driver once said “Everyone can’t be stars. Someone has to sit on the sidewalk and clap as they go by” … and its just the same in the collaborative world – it will continue to be that the majority consume – and the few create the content – and though right now the ‘message’ is that everyone can contribute, while it is true – they don’t (this is the blog angle that we have been talking about) .. fact is you don’t need a full on pc / laptop to do that – you just need a consuming device – with the ability to pop stuff out when you feel like it …

     
  • Roambi – Your Data, iPhone-Style

    18 Aug

    Now this is a little ‘doo hickey’ wot i like ….


    Your Data, iPhone-Style


    Passed on – with thanks to : Roambi

     

    Social Media Fails To Manifest As Marketing Medium

    18 Aug

    Ok this is a little old on the ‘news’ front – BUT … what the ‘ …. I couldn’t decide whether this should be filed under

    Humour, That Would Be An F or Webservations

    In the end – Webservations wins out – but – really – does the guy still have a job ? How about his editor ?

    To save you clicking through – the report likens Twitter to TiVo: ‘More Hype Than Reality’ … you read it right.


    Full Post

     

    Creativity Through Collaboration

    24 Jul

    I am not usually one to promote someone’s PR – however the thought of the promotion of Creativity Through Collaboration stopped me for a couple of minutes to even read the piece.


    Aedas Architects

    At Aedas, designers and architects work in an almost continuous stream of communication, snapping images of designs, models, and construction sites with the camera on iPhone and then sending those photos—along with emails, text messages, and documents—around the office. It’s a highly collaborative process, enabled by iPhone.

     

    European Entrepreneurs Need To Be More Aggressive

    22 Apr

    … and follow up more

    Passed on – with thanks to : Techcrunch

     

    It’s Not About The Software Anymore

    15 Apr

    Now here’s a little ‘doo hickey’ that I picked up this morning. Bottom line – right on …

    “Value, in the form of enhancement and improvement of their business, is what the customers want to buy, not code. To deliver on that new product requires a manufacturer that knows how to design, produce, brand and deliver a relationship of mutual profitability to both parties, something worth maintaining over the long haul. That can only be done when relationship-thinking is embedded in the DNA of every department and member of the company.”

    Read The Full Article – It’s Not About The Software Anymore – Here

    It’s an old message, I would argue that is never been about the technology, and has always been about the customer – and the customer’s customer.

    That is is about the shifting power base from producer efficient supply chains to customer effective demand networks.

    Of course – in the past – focussing on a ‘technology edge’ could overcome shortcomings in that knowledge, and often it did, but – finally – the tipping point has been reached. To have good, efficient, technology that works, is efficient, keeps costs down, allows a customer to understand their customer …. in fact whatever it is that the technology does … that’s table stakes. It’s what you do, how you do it, who your team are – all that people and associated knowledge stuff that companies are (re) discovering – across the virtual corporation and into the virtual networks – that’s what counts.

    To a large extent, that shift has been lead and demonstrated by the ‘social network’ phenomena – but really isn’t one of the SN benefits that the customer has now been given a voice. Of course the single customer always had a voice. And occasionally a business listened. But now the enterprises cannot turn off the cacophony of millions of networked customers. They shouldn’t. But having heard – what do they do ?

    The rules have changed – again.

    Todays’ winners are about understanding, implementing, driving customer focussed business. Of course – everyone says that don’t they ? But how many implement it ? Make it happen ? That is the real difference.

    Passed on – with thanks to : SandHill.com

     

    Cisco Buys Pure Figital (Flip Video) For $590 Million

    19 Mar

    It all makes sense to me … and in case you haven’t got one already … get one !

    Cisco Buys Pure Figital (Flip Video) For $590 Million

    Pure Digital will become part of Cisco%u2019s consumer business group, which includes Linksys home routers and set-top boxes from its acquisition of Scientific-Atlanta. Cisco is calling the Flip cameras a new form of %u201Cvisual networking,%u201D whatever that means. In reality, the Flip is built for the YouTube generation. It is designed to take videos and immediately upload the to the Web. (Its output is a handy USB stick that flips open and plugs in directly to a computer). In other words, it is a device that encourages activities that consume a lot of bandwidth. As a networking company, Cisco wants you to use as much bandwidth as possible.

     

    Should CEOs Facebook And Twitter ?

    16 Mar

    ‘Yes’ says Forbes … me I am not so sure.

    Yes their companies should. Yes they need to understand how this new world works. And I totally agree with @mariasipka – asking ‘what is youtube’ – is definitely not acceptable. But they themselves use Twitter ? Methinks not yet.

    Seemingly Forbes agrees …. on Twitter at least @steveforbes does not exist @forbes (and coincidentally @stephenforbes) have 5 followers, no posts and is following no one – at least at this time of writing.

    Comments ?

    Yes, CEOs Should Facebook And Twitter – Forbes.com