Excellent article by Clay Shirky:
For the moment at least, the most promising experiment in user support means forgoing mass in favor of passion.
Excellent article by Clay Shirky:
For the moment at least, the most promising experiment in user support means forgoing mass in favor of passion.
Believe it or not, I was a guest on not just one, but two podcasts this week. The second was episode 100 of Enough — The Minimal Mac Podcast. I, along with, 9 other handsome nerds joined in to talk tech and what not. It was a lot of fun.
And congratulations to Patrick Rhone and Myke Hurley on this, their 100th episode of Enough.
Chris Bowler asked me to come on as a guest for his most recent episode of Creatiplicy. As you no doubt remember, I used to be the co-host with Chris Bowler for the show’s first 20 episodes. It was fun to jump back in for a week as Chris asked me some very good questions about balancing priorities between work and family life, how it feels to be a tech writer in such a crowded space, and more.
News to me is that some iPhone and iPad Home buttons become unresponsive. Both Marco and Khoi have had trouble with theirs. Marco tried a software recalibration which didn’t fix anything, but Khoi sprayed his Home button with WD-40 and it did fix it.
Never in a million years would I have thought to spray WD-40 on a gadget. Even after hearing Khoi’s testimony I still don’t know if I could bring myself to do it.
Five years ago, when Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone, he said the software was 5 years ahead of what was on any other phone:
Now, software on mobile phones is like baby software. It’s not so powerful. And today, we’re going to show you a software breakthrough. Software that’s at least 5 years ahead of what’s on any other phone.
This is a tough thing to answer because you can’t just set iOS down next to Windows Phone and webOS and Android and make a clear cut judgment that yes they have finally caught up to iOS or that no they haven’t.
Dan Frommer takes a swing and writes some good thoughts:
So, was the iPhone really 5 years ahead of everyone? Have any of Apple’s competitors caught up to the original iPhone, let alone today’s?
Yes and no.
It’s true. If you were to compare feature to feature only, then Android and iOS come out pretty much even. They are both touch-screen operating systems. They both have scrolling list views, Web browsers, and email clients. And they both have an app store.
But in many ways, iOS and Android are on two different planets.
The user experience is certainly different between the two. And while Android is much more responsive in version 4.0, there are still no killer 3rd-party apps, and Android still feels a bit awkward.
And that is what I think Steve Jobs was talking about when he said that the iPhone was at least 5 years ahead.
For Steve and for Apple, software is not just about the feature set. It’s about the entire user experience. The fact that the original iPhone didn’t have copy and paste is a testament to how Apple sees the user experience as more important than the feature set. In that regard, 5 years later, iOS is still ahead.
You can use Apple’s ideas and you can copy their products, but you cannot copy the time and energy they put into those products, and you cannot copy their attention to detail. Those you have to do on your own. Five years later, some companies still haven’t figured that out.
Speaking of Kickstarter, what strikes me as one of its primary benefits to someone kickstarting a project or product is not just in the ability to raise capital. Kickstarter is also a great way to simultaneously send your product to market.
In more conventional funding methods, once you’ve raised your capital funding you still have to get your product to market and hope you have success selling it. With Kickstarter, however, a successful campaign not only raises its needed capital but it also goes to market successfully at the same time.
I wonder how much of Instagram’s traffic is via Twitter and Facebook, as people publish their ‘Gram and auto-post a link to it on their other social network(s).
Great piece by Jeffrey Zeldman:
The first thing I got about the web was its ability to empower the maker.
From this context, the web hasn’t changed a bit over the past 15 years.
Some things change, some things stay the same. The phone and car keys are long gone, the moleskin is retired, the wallet and wedding ring are with me as I type this.
The first B&B Podcast episode of 2012. Ben and I kick off the new year by chatting about the latest iPod nanos and why Ben says they aren’t that great. We talk about blogging via the iPad and using an iPad as your only computer, and we round out the show with a few speculations on what the next iPad may be like.
This month’s sponsor, Verses, is doing a giveaway. Check out the show notes for the details.
I am Brian Stucki. I live in Las Vegas with my wife and 2.6 kids. (We’re due in April with our first girl.) I’m a fan of history, travel and golf. Though, I’m so bad that my golf game probably deserves to be history. Most of my stuff is located at BrianStucki.com and I’m @BrianStucki.
I enjoy starting new projects, building them out, and then selling them for funds to invest in something else. My first time was my golf club cleaning business when I was 11. I had 6 customers that would golf then leave their clubs with me to clean up and have ready for them. More recently it’s been blogs about software, TV show fansites, and even a successful iPad app. The projects have all been great reasons to learn new technology and improve business acumen.
I own Macminicolo, which is my main work focus. We’re turning 7 years old soon. When we first introduced the company, there was quite a bit of doubt (Hi, slashdot friends) but now thousands of minis later, the little machines roll on more powerful than ever.
I work from my home office nearly all of the time. I have other locations to be “more business official” but the truth is that seeing my wife and kids often is really important to me. In my home, my office is at the end of a long hall where I can close the door and have quiet. (There is usually James Taylor playing to keep me focused.) However, I’ll regularly step away from the desk to play some catch or color the super-hero of the day. I think this balance is critical.
When I’m in my office, I’m working on a black-brown Galant Desk from Ikea. By design, there is a lot of desk space, and it’s nearly always clean. I really, really struggle to think when surrounded by clutter.
For office hardware, I use a Mid-2011 27″ iMac with 16GB of RAM and a 2TB SATA Drive+256GB SSD combo. Sitting beside the iMac is a 27″ Cinema Display, an iPad 2 16GB+3G, (AT&T because coverage is quite good in Las Vegas). I use an iPhone 4S (AT&T). I use an Apple Wireless Keyboard, An Apple Magic Mouse, and have a Magic Trackpad stuffed in my drawer that I used for twenty minutes and haven’t touched since. I use an Airport Extreme to spray wireless throughout the house. I back up to a media Mac mini that’s hard wired to the router, making up one-third of my tri-approach to backups.
For the Macminicolo data center, it’s minis, minis and more minis. Within the next month, there will be one thousand operating Mac minis in the data center. We have some minis that have been here since day one serving for seven continuous years. (1.25 G4 with 256MB of RAM and a 40GB hard drive). And of course, the new i5/i7 machines have been very popular. (1.5TB disk space, 16GB of RAM.)
While in the data center, I use a Mid-2011 MacBook Air. It’s the base version with 1.6 GHz Intel Core i5 processor and 2GB of RAM.
Two non-Apple hardware items that I use all the time for work and couldn’t function without are a ScanSnap S1500M and a base Kindle. I document all of my travel in the Field Notes County Fair Box Set of all 50 States and keep a good supply of my favorite pen.
I love the HDD/SSD combo. Nearly all of my everyday stuff is on the SSD (Mail, Apps, iPhoto, etc.) and then I symlink to the HDD for the large data items (iTunes music, iMovie footage, software disk images.) But the best use of the HDD is a nightly place to clone the SSD boot drive without having to have a hard drive plugged into the back of the iMac. It keeps things clean, and keeps me with a bootable backup.
I purchased the 27″ iMac and 27″ Cinema Display because I think any cost in desktop space is proportional to increase in productivity. The iMac screen is showing whatever I’m working on right now. On the Cinema Display, I keep my staple apps open and viewable (i.e. Mail, Twitter for Mac, iChat Buddy list, etc.). Easy to view, quick to reply with customers, etc.
If I am sitting at my desk, the iPad is usually streaming that day’s Red Sox game. When I have a full desktop at my fingertips, I prefer to use it. But if I’m in a meeting the iPad is my main tool. It lets me control Mac minis in the data center, and keep up with all news and messages. I intended to tether my iPad to my iPhone when on the road but that hasn’t happened. It turns out that I still have not disabled the 3G on the iPad itself. It is too convenient to have it always on.
If I am on the move or traveling, my iPhone is nearly always the only technology I have on me. I use to bring around a laptop, and then the iPad, but I later realized that the iPhone can hold me over for an extended period of time. I had an iPhone moment the other day. As I pulled into a parking spot at the store, I was: (1) streaming music to my car via bluetooth; (2) controlling a Mac mini in the data center with Screen Sharing; (3) seeing Twitter notifications drop down; and, (4) beaming my location to my wife (via find my friends) as we were meeting at the nearby restaurant. From a phone. Seriously.
I purchased this laptop for use in the data center. I wondered if the 11-inch screen might be too small but that has proven inaccurate. With Mission Control, full-screen apps, screen sharing, and an incredible battery life, it has been a perfect tool.
I do not think it is possible to list all the activities that the Mac minis are being used for in the data center. We have popular iOS developers hosting here (Bjango.com), numerous Apple employees (who shall remain without name unless they so choose), quite a few Filemaker resellers and small businesses/tinkerers in 47 different countries around the world.
When I say the Mac mini is a great server, I practice what I preach. Our main site, our support site, and our stats/monitoring all run on Mac minis here. I also have some other services running on minis that you may have used in the past Fireballed.org (a mirror for DaringFireball.net), DayliteHosting.com, and our lesser known iPadcolo.net.
I suppose it’s easiest to break this up by product line.
I do wish that you could set a recurring “friend” in the app. In other words, all the MMC staff would share location during business hours on weekdays, but not other times. That’d be very convenient.
There is no doubt some overlap in my Apple products. I have reasons for picking each (which I’ve tried to list) but it’s clear I could do without one or two of them. The truth is, I don’t want to. I’m not wealthy, but technology is the one place I’m comfortable to splurge a little with money. My shoes are usually a couple years old, I’ve worn the same brand/style of clothes for 20 years, I’m fine with grilled cheese and a pickle for dinner. Like a lot of you, it doesn’t take many possessions to keep me going. But, I do like cutting edge technology, and I like learning what it can do.
So ideal? I suppose it’s whatever is coming next. And I’ll use it while wearing my old clothes and eating my sandwich dinner.
Brian’s setup is just one in a series of sweet Mac Setups.
Macminicolo has previously been a sponsor of the RSS Feed here, but this Sweet Mac Setup post is in no way related to that sponsorship.
My thanks to Carnegie Mellon University for sponsoring the RSS feed this week.
Carnegie Mellon University’s Master of Information Systems Management (MISM) degree with a Business Intelligence and Data Analytics (BIDA) concentration is developing an elite set of graduates cross-trained in business process analysis and skilled in predictive modeling, GIS mapping, analytical reporting, segmentation analysis, and data visualization.
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Learn more at Carnegie Mellon Heinz College.
Creatiplicy, the podcast I used to co-host with Chris Bowler, has continued on with amazing excellence. This episode from a few weeks ago with Frank Chimero is just stellar. It’s especially worth a listen if you are a writer.
Until recently I didn’t realize there was any way to dismiss the roll-over banner notifications in iOS 5 other than to wait for them to roll away. You can swipe from right to left on the banner, or you can grab it, pull it down, and then fling it back up.