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Archive for the ‘thoughts.from.the.web’ Category

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 …

     
  • Tony Robbins @ Ted

    06 Dec

    I have read and listened to the man over the years -and never really got much out of him.

    I just watched this – and WOW !!

    Take 25 minutes of your life and then ‘GO’ ….

     

    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

     

    Milo Minderbinder

    04 Aug

    You know how it is – your mind suddenly veers off on a tangent – and you wonder where did that come from ?
    Case in point. Milo Minderbinder. It has been more years than I care to remember since I read Catch 22 – so other than recently reading Portrait of an Artist as an Old Man (that is ‘old’ – not young – so don’t be confused) … it is filed in my ‘hard drive’ as ‘great book’ – so one day I will need to revisit it.
    Anyway – in it pops to ‘RAM’. So I check out Wikipedia – to see what they have to say … this comment struck me

    Joseph Heller intentionally seeded Catch 22 with “anachronisms like loyalty oaths, helicopters, IBM machines and agricultural subsidies”, all of which only appear in the McCarthy-Era, in order to create a more contemporary atmosphere.

    Likewise, Heller created Minderbinders famous saying “What’s good for Milo Minderbinder, is good for the country” (insert Syndicate or M&M Enterprises for Milo Minderbinder) as a parody of Charles E. Wilson, who said “What is good for the country is good for General Motors, and what’s good for General Motors is good for the country.” during a hearing of a Senate subcommittee in 1952.
    Wilson was the head of General Motors in 1952, but became Secretary of Defense in January 1953, thus being an early example of the military-industrial complex, which the Minderbinder character well represents.

    Hmmm – prophetic … in the light of all we see around us today ?

    Full article here : Milo Minderbinder – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia – and of course thanks to the most awesome ‘free resource’

     

    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.

     

    Think About This

    09 Jul

    Not my original thought – but it made me think.

    In any society, the balance of power between individual rights and government control will be determined by the extent to which government succeeds in convincing the population that an individual engaging in a NON criminal act causes harm to others.

    Every citizen would agree that any person caught causing harm to others as a result of a criminal act deserves to get their collar felt and to have their actions limited/controlled by government.

    So if the politicians can convince you that ANY NON CRIMINAL action (such as, for example, putting your needs for your own life ahead of the needs of others) also causes harm to others, they can demand that you are treated like a criminal and that they should be given power to control non-criminal actions as well as criminal actions.

    If they CAN convince you that EVERY action you undertake causes harm to others – they can demand total control over the entire population.

    This is the basis of power in our current political system.

    Thanks to Perry Offer – good friend and political commentator that you will hear about soon.

    I would go further – there are very clear examples of govt abdicating responsibility to their citizens to other governments – no questions asked. (Think of ‘The Bliar’ signing the unilateral terrorist agreement with the US – which now allows the US to reach its arm across the Atlantic to grab them, manacle them and send them to prison – and we do NOTHING (and BTW – these are not terrorists – those guys are still in the UK – and we continue to invite more.) Oh – and the terrorists hiding in the US we can’t get to because the US never signed their side of the treaty !!

    On the other hand there are other govts who stand up for their own laws – think of the US / Switzerland UBS case that is brewing.

    Not saying ANYTHING about right and wrong – am talking about governments representing their citizens.

     

    Are Global Brands Too Important To Be Hyperlinked ?

    16 Mar

    Leon Benjamin posted the following thought to Twitter – and hence to Facebook.

    “You know you’re a global brand when people don’t bother hyperlinking to you on blog posts coz’ everyone knows where to find you. Thoughts?”

    I started to write a response – and then ran out of space.

    So here goes …

    I think we should flip it – as to WHO links and who doesn’t …

    When a new social network is small, nascient, getting going – the early users are likely early adopters – been around the block a few times with other apps, know the expected behaviours, the etiquette etc – this includes hyperlinking – even for famous big names – the hyperlinks are there.

    As the Social Networks grow, the noobies appear. And – as a ‘nooby’, the inevitable question – who (in the case of Twitter) do I follow ? who (in the case of Facebook) should be my friend ? – and so on.

    Two things then happen

    1) As time marches on the new people that join start to lose the core understandings, rules and etiquette of the original early adopters – forget – don’t know – aren’t as knowledgeable/ schooled in the finer points etc

    2) The higher up the brand / success tree a brand / user is … the more likely the ‘uninitiated’ will be following – so a higher proportion of no hyper linking will be occurring.

    Thus my suggestion would be to flip the research.

    I contend that the less aware a user is of the etiquette – the more likely they are not to hyperlink – and the more likely to follow big names.

    @stephenfry and britney (i am sorry – I don’t know her ‘@’ off the top of my head – are sitting there on twitter with hundreds of thousands of followers – out of however many millions of twitterers there are.

    I am betting that a lot of those followers are ‘noobies’ – just think of some of mr frys’s frustrations posted to twitter …

    @PTPayne What!!!!??? Have you read nothing I’ve posted in the last 24 hours???
    8:56 PM Mar 14th from TweetDeck in reply to PTPayne

    It’s not instantaneous. You tweet ONCE ONLY, including the string #followmestephen After hours/days/weeks you’ll see me added to your list
    8:55 PM Mar 14th from TweetDeck

    Sigh. So many of you just don’t get hashtags and aren’t using them. It’s so simple. I’m afriad I can’t follow anyone who doesn’t do it right
    8:30 PM Mar 14th from TweetDeck

    .. and I can’t find it now – but a cracker a few weeks ago when he blacked out his image – I paraphrase :
    ” really – it would only take you a scroll down the page to answer that question for yourself”

    Bottom line – all of the above is fully laced with 100% opinion – and no absolute data – but to me it makes sense.

    I’d welcome a debate.

     

    Innovation – according to Guy

    09 Mar

    Just found this locked up in my blog softWare ‘PENDING’ .. thought I should actually post it! Bottom line – Mr. Kawasaki talking about innovation.

    In his words:


    “Don’t be afraid to polarize people.” For radio, he said, an attempt to please everyone will only “create mediocrity.”

    The full monty …


    SAN JOSE — February 9, 2009: Guy Kawasaki — an original Mac “evangelist” in the ’80s and now Managing Director of Garage Technology Ventures — opened Radio Ink’s Convergence ’09 with a keynote that focused on innovation: what it is and how to get it. He said, “True innovation occurs not when it’s motivated by the desire to make money, but the desire to make meaning — that is, to make the world a better place.”
    Kawasaki said most of the entrepreneurs who come to him and say their primary motivation is to make money end up with failing companies because they attract employees with the wrong motivation. He asked attendees, “How do you take the radio business and make people’s lives better? That is the true foundation of innovation.”

    Kawasaki noted that most businesses define themselves by what they make today rather than sufficiently broadly, and urged attendees to jump past radio’s current “curve of local transmitters broadcasting 30s and 60s for local advertisers.:
    He recommended that companies seek a two- or three-word “mantra” instead of a mission statement and said innovators should be guided by the idea of “Don’t worry, be crappy” — that is, understand that a valuable innovation will be so much better than what came before that it won’t matter if it’s not perfect out of the box. But then, he said, the innovator must be willing to open his or her mind to ideas for improvements — which can be the most difficult step.
    Kawasaki also said to radio specifically, “Don’t be afraid to polarize people.” For radio, he said, an attempt to please everyone will only “create mediocrity.”

    … with thanks to : Radio Ink Magazine, for the source.

     

    Human Capital Management

    06 Feb

    This extracted from a recent Economist article ….


    During the relatively modest downturn at the start of this decade, many professional-services firms cut too deeply, especially in their lower ranks, and found they were poorly positioned when strong growth resumed sooner than expected, says Heidi Gardner of Harvard Business School. Firms built on pyramid structures in which senior managers mentored larger numbers of employees below them suddenly found that, in a growing economy, they lacked the mentors needed to manage the army of new recruits. Instead, they had to re-hire ex-staffers at higher salaries and, in some cases, abandon proven policies of hiring senior managers only from within, says Ms Gardner, who worked for McKinsey at the time.

    This crisis is revealing how few firms have really thought through their talent strategies, says Mark Spelman of Accenture. Claims that ‘our workers are our most valuable assets’ are too often platitudes, the emptiness of which is now being revealed. But those firms that have thought seriously about their talent needs have the opportunity to get ahead of those that haven’t, says Mr Spelman, not just by shedding poor performers but also hiring scarce talent from outside, in what is now a buyer’s market. Other tips from Mr Spelman include avoiding voluntary redundancy programmes, which encourage the most employable people to quit, and not firing the newest recruits on a crude first in, first out basis, as this cuts off the supply of future talent. Instead, firms should identify which workers they need to keep, and do what they must to retain them.

    Haven’t found the article in full other than here ….

    The solution : Expert Alumni

     

    Welcome to 2009

    01 Jan

    … and a Happy New Year to You … just click on the link to access the new year microsite.

    2009.jpg