April 10, 2017

economist:

For as long as there have been cars, there has been a need to store them when they are not moving—which, these days, is about 95% of the time. Washington, DC, had a parking garage in 1907, before Ford produced its first Model T.

Parking can seem like the most humdrum concern in the world. Even planners, who thrill to things like zoning and floor-area ratios, find it unglamorous. But parking influences the way cities look, and how people travel around them, more powerfully than almost anything else.

Parking isn’t one of those things you think about until you can’t find a space. But is surprising how it can affect the livability of an area.

Vox:

Astrologers regularly blame Mercury retrograde for a variety of everyday communication problems. But underneath those interpretations lies a much more interesting story about the limits of our Earth-bound perspective and the discovery of the solar system.

Really good explainer of the seemingly bizarre movement of Mars and Mercury in our night sky.

In 2012, Twitter fought the New York District Attorney so protect tweets sent by an Occupy Wall Street protester, and in 2014 it sued the U.S. government so that it could share these kinds of user information requests more publicly. Then in 2015, Twitter successfully protected the identity of two anonymous users who were being sued for defamation.

And the company also gets into legal fights where it doesn’t even have a stake. In early 2016, Twitter signed an amicus brief alongside Google in support of PubPeer, a website that allows people to comment anonymously on scholarly articles. PubPeer was being sued by a professor who received unflattering anonymous comments about his work.

Twitter does deserve kudos for this.

What were you doing when you were 12? Getting quite good at Guitar Hero? Clumsily finding your way around a real instrument? Maybe even attempting a jam session with some of your mates?

Let’s face it, you weren’t going on tour through South America with a Grammy award-winning, platinum-selling metal band, were you? Not unless you’re Tye Trujillo, who has just signed up to play for Korn while their bassist Reginald “Fieldy” Arvizu is unable to tour with them.

Robert Trujillo is one of my favorite bassists of all time and there’s no doubt that his son is very talented too. This is pretty amazing.

I can’t speak to what the other five types of users need, but I have a pretty good idea of what I’d want as an iOS developer who uses a Mac every day. Not that anyone in Cupertino is asking me, but if they did I’d say this is my dream Mac.

A very nice article on what’s needed from a developer’s point of view.

This is just awful. Why do people have to be like this?

Geek Wire:

The Living Computers: Museum + Labs in Seattle is home to some of the most noteworthy machines ever created. But a new exhibit opening this week will showcase what one official at the Paul Allen-founded institution called “the most important computer in history.”

Lāth Carlson, executive director of Living Computers, added to that designation by saying the metal box with a keyboard is “also the most boring to look at.” But for fans of computing and Apple in particular, the Apple I that once sat in founder Steve Jobs’ office is exciting for a whole host of reasons.

This is definitely a museum I’ll check out next time I’m in Seattle.

April 9, 2017

Financial Review:

Apple’s obsessive secrecy, coupled with the extreme demands it makes of its manufacturers and the competition to join their ranks, means its suppliers dare not put a foot wrong. Apple’s patronage is a blessing when everything is going well but it can quickly become a curse. The consequences of a break-up can be devastating, as London-listed chip designer Imagination Technologies discovered this week.

It has been said of being a supplier to Walmart that, “it’s the best and worse thing that can happen to your company”. I’ve heard the same about Apple.

R/C planes land on R/C aircraft carrier

This might be the coolest, nerdiest thing you watch all weekend. But, to be honest, some of the landings were awfully sketchy.

April 8, 2017

Parts Unknown:

Masa begins by grating wasabi—the real stuff, the prohibitively expensive and difficult to grow stuff—not the powder found in many restaurants. After grating, the wasabi gets a caress with a knife, and the care with which it is treated makes one unspoken lesson clear—ingredients, the best of all ingredients, are a prerequisite for impeccable sushi. We chat as he works, turning out beautiful pieces of sushi, works of art in miniature.

I’ve only had the opportunity to be in a “fancy’ sushi restaurant a couple of times but watching the master chef is always an amazing experience.

CBC:

Diller’s act depended on an endless supply of gags. “Someone clocked me one night at 800 one-liners,” Diller told NPR.

Diller’s one-liners didn’t come out of a book. She kept her jokes in a steel cabinet on tens of thousands of index cards, categorized by subject and filed into 48 drawers. In 2003, Diller donated her joke archive to the Smithsonian.

The Transcription Center is enlisting volunteers to enter all of Diller’s gags into a digital database. As data entry jobs go, this one is not typical.

I’ve been doing this for the past week. It’s a lot of fun.

April 7, 2017

My thanks to Daylite for sponsoring The Loop this week.

Want to know what your sales or marketing team is working on without having to interrupt them? Now you can get a quick overview of what each team is working on with Team View in Daylite on Mac.

Daylite is a Mac CRM & Project Management app that helps teams work better, together. Now with Team View, you can see each team’s appointments, tasks, and project deadlines for today and the next seven days – all in one place.

“This new feature is an easy way to get a big picture view of how my teams are doing. It makes it easy for me to delegate tasks, check on task status, compare work loads for individuals/teams, and creates a continuity for me between individuals and teams.”

– Libby Flores, COO of E.L. Achieve

Team View is another way Daylite makes managing projects and clients easier as a team. Want to learn more? Visit marketcircle.com/daylite and start your free 30-day trial.

The Dalrymple Report Podcast: With special guest Shawn Blanc

This week I’m joined by Shawn Blanc, who has built a business through blogging, setting up speciality web sites, and designing courses for people to purchase. He is a really interesting guy and has some valuable opinions on efficiency in your life.

Subscribe to this podcast

Links:

shawnblanc.net

The Sweet Setup

Tools & Toys

theverge:

It was a June day when I began my career as a national journalist. I stepped into the Detroit Bureau of The Wall Street Journal and started on what would be a long, varied, rewarding career. I was 23 years old, and the year was 1970. That’s not a typo.

So it seems fitting to me that I’ll be retiring this coming June, almost exactly 47 years later. I’ll be hanging it up shortly after the 2017 edition of the Code Conference, a wonderful event I co-founded in 2003 and which I could never have imagined back then in Detroit.

I didn’t make this decision lightly or hastily or under pressure. It emerged from months of thought and months of talks with my wise wife, my family, and close friends. It wasn’t prompted by my employer or by some dire health diagnosis. It just seems like the right time to step away. I’m ready for something new.

“Uncle Walt” as he was known (sometimes disparagingly) to many in the tech media has been around for a very long time. His retirement is hard earned and very well deserved. It’s doubtful his like will be ever seen again in the tech media. The “I’m ready for something new” is interesting. Don’t be surprised to see Mossberg turn up elsewhere in a management role at some Silicon Valley company.

Gizmodo:

Alas, all good things must come to an end. Today, NASA will announce the details regarding its Cassini spacecraft’s Grand Finale—a resplendent ending to its 20-year-long adventure in space, which will begin later this month. From late April to September 15th, Cassini will perform 22 dramatic dives between Saturn and its rings. Then, the brave little orbiter will plunge itself into Saturn’s atmosphere and burn up like a meteor—all while sending information back to Earth.

To be fair, going out in a blaze of glory (literally) is the most dignified way to go. Before she leaves us forever, let’s take a look back at some of Cassini’s greatest hits.

When I was younger, I would have wanted some of these gorgeous images as posters on my bedroom wall.

The Fender Custom Shop

This is such a great video. I visited the custom shop for a look around with Fender a few years back and it was incredible.

The Dream Factory (dir cut) from Ross Haines on Vimeo.

The evolution of “The Fast And The Furious” movies

Fate of the Furious is about to be released in theaters and we are excited. The Fast and The Furious franchise is one of our favorite guilty pleasures, so we knew we’d have to make a video looking back on the history of the series. Here at Burger Fiction, we live our lives a quarter mile at a time.

There is no better example of a guilty pleasure for me than these movies. Objectively, they are not very good and sometimes, they are downright awful but the stunts and the general “so bad it’s good” feel makes me love them all the more.

Wow. Take a moment to click through and check out the pictures. This is some beautiful work.

A bit of real-world Clips experience

So I’ve been playing with Apple’s new Clips app, had a few thoughts.

First things first, I had zero expectations for Clips. My experience was almost universally positive. Clips is both easy to use and fun.

To get started, I downloaded Clips here. I launched the app, and immediately was in video creation mode, with the camera facing me. To start recording, press the big red “Hold to Record” button. Let go when you are done recording. Dead simple.

To add captions, tap the first of the four tool icons above the video pane (looks like a cartoon balloon). Drag up and down and select from 8 caption formats (bottom right is none). Now, as you record, your words are parsed and appear in your selected format, perfectly synced to your lips. This is really well done, perfect use of iOS’s speech-to-text engine.

The other tool buttons let you select a look (the video I post below was done using the Comic Book look), add a sticker (drag it around the frame), and a canned clip (I used The End in mine). You can also add music to the background and combine multiple clips into a single, exportable clip.

Here’s a quick sample I did, just to give you a sense of things:

Clips does a nice job packaging all this together in an easy to use format. I appreciate being able to share this to Twitter without having to render the video or stage it in some intermediary format or site. Of course, Twitter does impose a size limit here, so this only works with small videos, but I suspect we’re going to see a lot of these.

A few side notes:

  • Clips gained full access to my photos and videos without ever asking permission. Seems to me Apple is bypassing their own privacy rules here, though this might be standard for Apple’s own apps.

  • The Clips icon looks very similar to the FaceTime icon. Different colors, but close enough to make them hard to distinguish. My 2 cents? Apple should change one of them.

Bottom line, I love Clips and look forward to making more of them.

Dan Moren, writing for Macworld, starts with this Phil Schiller comment:

“The Mac mini remains a product in our lineup. Nothing more to say about it today,” Phil Schiller told reporters, according to John Gruber.

and then digs into the past and potential future of the Mac mini. Good read.

Jeff Benjamin, writing for 9to5Mac:

I’m currently in the process of building a new Hackintosh rig for 2017, so imagine how surprised and happy I was to hear that Nvidia is working on beta drivers for its GPUs with the latest Pascal architecture. Up until today, I had just settled on being relegated to a Radeon RX 480, or a Maxwell-era Nvidia card.

And:

With today’s announcement, the Hackintosh just got exponentially more appealing. Nvidia’s announcement is positive for a variety of reasons: there’s the prospect of using an eGPU setup with a MacBook Pro, along with future prospects of Nvidia cards powering future Mac Pro hardware.

As I’ve mentioned before, if you do decide to build a Hackintosh, start here.

YouTube Creator Blog:

> Starting today, we will no longer serve ads on YPP videos until the channel reaches 10k lifetime views. This new threshold gives us enough information to determine the validity of a channel. It also allows us to confirm if a channel is following our community guidelines and advertiser policies. By keeping the threshold to 10k views, we also ensure that there will be minimal impact on our aspiring creators. And, of course, any revenue earned on channels with under 10k views up until today will not be impacted.

YPP is the YouTube Partner Program. That’s the YouTube arm that gets you paid for your ad related views.

On the plus side, this is going to make it easier for YouTube to vet, to validate their channels. They won’t have to look at any content with less than 10K views. This should eliminate a lot of copycats and landgrabbers, making search easier for visitors. Visit Social Media Daily’s website to learn how to maximize viewer engagement. And then, you can purchase high quality and active YouTube subscribers from Zeru.

On the down side, this will make it harder for indie YouTube creators to make money any money before they grow their audience. VidIQ is what most Youtubers use to grow their following. But given that 10K views translates (very, very approximately) to about US$10, this seems a reasonable threshold.

April 6, 2017

The 1982 alumnus jumped right into the subject of his discussion. He advised students – of all backgrounds and majors – to prepare to encounter people with diverse backgrounds in every career field.

Macworld:

Head on over to the App Store—Apple launched its new Clips video-editing app for iOS on Thursday. Clips is essentially a streamlined version of iMovie for creating short mobile videos with filters and text overlays. The app also lets you stitch together several clips from your camera roll “without timelines, tracks, or complicated editing tools.”

Like other mobile video editing apps, users will be able to record video or take photos from within the app, and then stylize them with text, filters, speech bubbles, and emoji. You can also add elevator music as a soundtrack and create animated backdrops.

Downloading now.

J.D. Power:

Microsoft ranks highest in overall satisfaction in the J.D. Power 2017 U.S. Tablet Satisfaction Study, doing so for the first time since the study’s inception. With an overall satisfaction score among tablet owners of 855 (on a 1,000-point scale), Microsoft’s achievement is largely due to its top rankings in the features and styling & design factors.

In features, Microsoft is the highest performer in three areas: variety of pre-loaded applications; internet connectivity; and availability of manufacturer-supported accessories.

This is actually very good news. It means there’s competition in the tablet space. Competition breeds better tablets for all of us. And, make no mistake, Apple’s iPad still ranks very high in this study.

The Verge:

When a song is compressed, an algorithm removes bits from the track that it believes the human ear can’t pick up, which reduces the overall file size. So objectively speaking, there’s less audio there for your ear to interpret. Lossless audio cuts less bits.

But in actuality, the difference is very difficult to discern. Couple that with a range in the quality of soundcards and speakers, and it’s almost impossible for the average listener to pick which is which. Can you tell the difference?

Jim posted about this back in March but now Spotify has posted an actual audio test for you to try to see if you can actually hear the difference.

Mic:

So, what does realistic healthy eating really look like? While eliminating entire food groups isn’t always necessary, we talked to nutritionists about the foods they never eat to give you a better idea of a well-rounded, nutritious diet. Ditch the soda and hop on the seltzer train and you, too, can be eating like a nutritionist in no time.

I don’t eat any of these of these except “processed meats”. No way I’m giving up bacon or sausage.

Bloomberg:

All too often, and to the dismay of everyone who knows better, Jewish food gets boiled down to bagels, matzo balls, and brisket.

These are staples, to be sure, but they all hail from the same part of the world—Eastern Europe—while Jews have, at one point or another, populated almost every corner of the earth. Thanks to their historic roles as both merchants and, often, refugees, Jewish cuisine encompasses flavors from Tunisia to Toronto, India to Israel, Babylonia to Brooklyn.

I’m a big fan of food in general and a bigger fan of “ethnic” food and, while I haven’t had a lot of it, I really enjoy Jewish food, especially for the stories behind it.

High Snobiety:

Several years ago I came across an interesting statistic: nearly half of all musicians that created a chart hit in the half-century in between 1955 and 2005 never did so again – 47.5 percent, to be exact.

This Hollywood Walk of Shame includes the likes of Los Del Rio (Macarena), A-ha (Take On Me), Nena (99 Luftballoons), Chumbawumba (Tubthumping) and, more recently, Psy (Gangnam Style,) not to mention countless other has-beens.

So what is it about pop stardom that makes it so difficult to sustain?

Is it because pop music is so ephemeral and music tastes change so rapidly?

A solid list. Got more of these? Leave them in the comments.

[H/T John Kordyback]