June 6, 2014
Written by Shawn King
Roads and Kingdoms:
Intrigued by the enduring mystery of carnival culture, photographer Eric Kruszewski wanted not just to shoot the carnival, but to experience it from the inside. He documented life as a “carny” in off hours. His photography blends the poeticism of the lit-up carnival with the reality of the road, where hard work and family living combine.
These shows are familiar to those of us who lived in small towns in the US and Canada (are these kinds of carnivals popular/still around in Europe?) and it’s interesting to see the story from the inside out.
Written by Shawn King
Dan Frommer:
Many of the most interesting and potentially useful features unveiled this week at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference rely on the company’s iCloud service or otherwise involve network-connected devices talking to each other. The masses will be able to take advantage of these additions on their Macs, iPads, and iPhones later this year. For Apple customers and developers, this has been a long time coming. iCloud—the last product Steve Jobs announced before he died in 2011—is an incredibly important strategic piece of Apple’s future. Yet its usefulness has always seemed underwhelming, as if cloud services were Apple’s lowest priority.
But this year’s WWDC keynote carried a different tone, with a notable uptick in useful, cloud-centered announcements and more competitive pricing.
Unlike Frommer, I’m not jumping to the headline’s conclusion until I’ve seen it in action with average users.
Written by Shawn King
The Next Web:
Yahoo earlier this year announced plans to phase out Google- and Facebook-based sign-in from its services. The feature was initially removed from a sports service and now it is Flickr’s turn, after Yahoo emailed users of the photo site with notice that Google and Facebook IDs will no longer be accepted there after June 30. Instead, Flickr users must create a Yahoo account and connect it to the photo storage site. Those with an existing Yahoo ID which is not connected to Flickr are encouraged to link it up before the end of this month.
I just went to the site to make the changes to my Flickr log in and OMG that Yahoo! page is butt ugly.
Written by Shawn King
Grantland:
With this summer’s World Cup just around the corner, it’s time for you to find out just how much you already know about how soccer is played.
Soccer is a seemingly simple game but very nuanced.
Written by Dave Mark
Apple has an incredibly strong corporate culture. That culture remained fairly constant under the black-turtlenecked tutelage of Steve Jobs. Tim Cook eased the company into his own style of leadership, and the acquisition of Beats has the chance to expand that evolution in a very positive way.
None of the streaming-music companies have a leader who built one of the most dominant labels in the past 20 years, like Iovine did. Nor do they have someone who invented a new music genre, developed the talent, and then blew it up for a commercial audience, like Dre did. That’s a massive difference between Apple and Spotify, Google, Amazon and any other tech company dipping their toe into music.
And Ian Rogers?
Beyond the gravitas of Iovine and Dre, there’s another talent coming on board in Beats Music CEO Ian Rogers, a talented digital marketer who has spent a great deal of his career figuring out how to exploit new media channels to build revenue streams for artists.
Rogers understands technology and how it can be used to help artists market to fans. From his days building the Beastie Boys’ website to his time as CEO of Topspin, he has been on the leading edge of new ways to communicate directly with fans. And there has never been a better potential platform for artists and fans to connect than streaming services.
He represents Generation Next of digital-music execs, those who understand the life cycle of artists, marketing, customer demand, and the technology that powers all these. Rogers has built a vastly different streaming service from anyone else in the space, one that has a more balanced approach between those disciplines.
I think it will be a long time until the folks outside Apple’s management team truly understand the value that Beats brings to the table.
Written by Dave Mark
You spent hours making your design perfect. The images have been meticulously Photoshopped. The calls-to-action have been revised and refined countless times. You know exactly where you want the user’s eye to land and precisely how you want it to move. And with the emergence of eye-tracking technology, it’s finally possible to know whether or not it actually works.
This is a great idea. Use eye tracking to figure out what images work best, and where to place them to bring the user’s attention where you want it.
Written by Dave Mark
Does the name Peter Norton ring a bell? Ever hear of Norton Utilities? If you answered yes to either of these, I think you’ll find the linked article fascinating. A lot of these pictures brought back memories. Guess that just proves how old I am.
Written by Dave Mark
Washington Post:
Earlier this year, Virginia officials slapped the app-based services with more than $35,000 in civil penalties for operating with out proper permits. On Thursday, Richard D. Holcomb, commissioner of the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles, sent a cease and desist letter to both companies.
“I am once again making clear that Uber must cease and desist operating in Virginia until it obtains proper authority,” Holcomb said in the letter. (You can see copies of both letters below)
With its action, Virginia joins a growing number of states that have banned or sought to limit the app-based services from operating. In Maryland, Uber is currently appealing a decision by the state’s chief public utility law judge that said it must file an application to operate as a for-hire carrier.
This is clearly a speed bump for Uber and Lyft. Question is, is this a growing trend?
June 5, 2014
WWDC is full on sessions, teaching developers about the newest technologies for iOS and OS X. These sessions can have hundreds or even thousands of people in them, trying to get a handle on what’s best for their apps.
Luckily, Apple has a solution for those developers that want to try out the code for themselves: Labs. The labs are staffed by Apple engineers, giving code-level assistance, insight into optimal development techniques and guidance on how they can make the most of iOS and OS X technologies in their apps.
Apple engineers will also help with existing code and possible ways to improve it. Here’s what the labs look like.




A really well done video showing how important soccer is to so many and how fanatical its fans can be. I wonder what that phone is they using in the ad?
Written by Shawn King
GQ:
What kind of person looks upon the world’s largest land animal — a beast that mourns its dead and lives to retirement age and can distinguish the voice of its enemies — and instead of saying “Wow!” says something like “Where’s my gun?”
It’s a stomach turning story but told well in an interesting way.
Written by Shawn King
Macworld:
Apple put the spotlight squarely on software—and software developers—right from the start, and gave iOS/OS X chief Craig Federighi a chance to shine. Federighi introduced a laundry list of new features and technologies that will quietly revolutionize the way the company relates to third-party apps.
Many developers I’ve spoken to are beyond excited over not just the news from WWDC but the possibility of a sea change in Apple’s relations with developers.
Written by Dave Mark
Don Zimmer died yesterday at the age of 83. Here are a few things most folks don’t know about him:
Zimmer met Babe Ruth (in 1947), was a teammate of Jackie Robinson (1954-56) and played for Casey Stengel (1962). He was in uniform for some of the most iconic teams in history: the team that lost the most games (’62 Mets) and the team, including postseason play, that won the most games (’98 Yankees). He was in uniform for the only World Series championship for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1955), one of the most famous World Series home runs (Carlton Fisk’s shot in 1975), one of the most famous regular season home runs (Bucky Dent in 1978), the Pine Tar Game (1983), the first night game at Wrigley Field (1988), the first game in Rockies history (1993), and all three perfect games thrown at Yankee Stadium (Don Larsen, David Wells and David Cone).
An amazing baseball life.
Written by Shawn King
New York Times:
Few images are more recognizable or more evocative. Known simply as “tank man,” it is one of the most famous photographs in recent history. Twenty years ago, on June 5, 1989, following weeks of huge protests in Beijing and a crackdown that resulted in the deaths of hundreds, a lone man stepped in front of a column of tanks rumbling past Tiananmen Square. The moment instantly became a symbol of the protests as well as a symbol against oppression worldwide — an anonymous act of defiance seared into our collective consciousnesses.
One of the most amazing and important photos ever taken.
Written by Dave Mark
When the personal computer was new, there was a language named BASIC. BASIC was easy to learn and, more importantly, it was easy to experiment with. Early versions of BASIC were interpretive, meaning you typed and ran, edited and ran again. You didn’t have to wait for your code to compile and link. Make a change to the program, run it immediately. BASIC was so easy to learn and work with, pretty much anyone could learn how to program.
Apple’s new Swift programming language is designed, over time, to replace Objective-C. Swift is much easier to grasp, though not nearly as easy as BASIC, since Swift is designed to support much more complex tasks. But Swift is much, much easier to grasp than Objective-C.
Like BASIC, Swift is a real joy to play with. Swift is perfect for rapid prototyping. Using Xcode’s Playground environment, you can make changes in your code and immediately see the results. You can build a little freestanding animation, then run that animation in a scrubbable timeline, tweaking the code as you go.
The linked article is thoughtfully written and goes into a lot more detail on Swift. If you are about to take the plunge, or are considering getting into iOS development for the first time, this is well worth reading.
When I first started developing iPhone apps (I wound up building 40 silly little pinpoint apps), Apple would not allow any books to be written on the topic, and put everyone programming for iOS under NDA, so there were no educational resources allowed at all.
I lived through that experience, as a coauthor of one of the very first iOS development books. This is not an understatement. NDAs were a necessary evil, but we did curse them.
But that’s changed tremendously in the years since the iPhone first came out. And, now, with Swift, the doors for iOS development may well have been blown open to a new generation of programmers who may be able to recapture that exploring spirit of wonder that the first Apple II BASIC programmers had when they got their first personal computers.
If you’re a registered Apple developer, you can download the Xcode 6 beta. Even if you’re not a registered Apple developer, you can download the Swift programming guide from iBooks for free.
If you are thinking of taking the plunge, go get the iBook. Even better, sign up as a developer, download Xcode and open the book as a playground from within Xcode. You’ll play as you learn. An incredibly fun experience.
Written by Dave Mark
Microsoft VP Nick Parker:
“We’ll reach price points that are very industry competitive for 7, 8, 10-inch devices,” Parker said, speaking to reporters after his keynote at Computex, Asia’s largest computing show. “They will really surprise you. Last year, we were in the 3s, 4s, 500 dollars. This year, we’ll be 1s, 2s, 3s.”
Not sure if this is a move to move inventory through the pipeline or an attack to build market share from the low end.
Microsoft’s share of the tablet market was less than 4% last year, according to research firm IDC. Parker declined to say if the free offering of Windows is a permanent strategy for the company, or if it will return to charging [higher prices] next year.
But he emphasized that Microsoft had other ways to make money besides Windows licensing fees, such as the “freemium” model of its Skype video chat service and the launch of Office 365, which allows users to rent the software for a year instead of buying it.
Make better products. Start there and you’ll find your path.
June 4, 2014
iWatch? Who needs an iWatch?
City of Hope’s Music, Film and Entertainment Industry group has awarded Apple’s senior Vice President of Internet Software and Services, Eddy Cue, with its highest honor, the 2014 Spirit of Life Award. According to the group, the award recognizes an individual whose work has fundamentally impacted the music, film and entertainment industries.
Cue is the first recipient from the technology industry. The award will be presented during an event in Los Angeles on Oct. 23, the group said.
“We couldn’t be more excited to be recognizing Eddy Cue with City of Hope’s highest honor,” said Jason Morey, president of City of Hope’s Music, Film and Entertainment Industry Group. “City of Hope and Apple are both renowned for their passionate embrace of innovation and change. Eddy embodies that same passion. He has played a hugely important role for Apple as it has revolutionized the way consumers enjoy everything from music to films to TV to books to apps. He is an extraordinarily worthy honoree.”
City of Hope is one of the leading research and treatment center for cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening diseases, with a mission to shorten the time from new research idea to new medical treatment.
“I’m truly honored to be this year’s recipient of the Spirit of Life Award. The research that City of Hope does impacts the lives of millions and their work personally means a lot to me,” said Eddy Cue. “City of Hope uses the latest research and technology to fight cancer and other catastrophic diseases. I hope that everyone who can, gives what they can, to City of Hope so they can continue to fight the battle against cancer.”
Past recipients of the award include Quincy Jones, Sony Music’s Clive Davis, former Warner music Group Chairman and CEO Edgar Bronfman, and Azoff MSG Entertainment Chairman and CEO Irving Azoff. among others.
Cue has long been Apple’s goto person to launch and fix many of Apple’s biggest software and services products. As a fellow music lover, I’ve enjoyed many conversations with Eddy over the years, talking about bands and music in general. He’s a kind man, but he can also get things done when the pressure is on—something he’s proven over and over again.
Written by Shawn King
Mashable:
Imagine a world where your dog could play fetch by himself. It’s not the future; it’s this lucky dog’s reality. Instead of playing the usual game of fetch (when you get tired after 10 minutes), someone removed the human element from the game completely.
The dog is cute as all get out and congratulations to the owner for teaching the dog the trick but, come on! How lazy are you you can’t play catch with your dog for ten minutes!?
Written by Shawn King
Neural Correlate Society:
Every year, the Neural Correlate Society (which promotes scientific research into how sensory perception affects the brain) holds a contest for the best illusions of the year, and it’s announced its top 10 such brain-benders for 2014.
My brain hurts.
Written by Shawn King
LA Times:
Citing a massive increase in reports of illegal flashing of lasers toward aircraft, the FBI said Tuesday it would expand a program that offers a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests in connection with the “dangerous and irresponsible” incidents. Reports of people pointing lasers at aircraft have ballooned nationwide, jumping from 384 in 2006 to 3,960 in 2013, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
I honestly don’t get why someone would do this. What do they hope to accomplish – bringing the aircraft down?
I’m completely incompetent around a grill but even I could pull off Alton Brown’s “non-recipe for skirt steak”.
Written by Shawn King
CNET:
For the past year or so, I’ve been struggling to get my photo situation in more order. I’ve felt overwhelmed with the number of pictures that I and my family take. Ensuring they’re backed up and organized made me write about wanting to declare photo bankruptcy last year. I want one place where all my pictures are kept secure and organized. And I want the photos to be easily viewable on a variety of devices, whenever I want to see them. And if I want to tag the shots, adjust dates, geolocate them, and so on, I want to be sure all those photos will retain that information if I move elsewhere.
I see this problem in my photography seminar all the time – people overwhelmed by their own photo collection. Hopefully, the promise of Apple’s WWDC demo will come true and help users get this under control.
Written by Dave Mark
I am a big fan of escape rooms. The basic premise is, you are locked in a room and need to solve a series of puzzles to get out, perhaps to another escape room. There have long been virtual escape rooms. My favorite of these is The Room series on iOS.
The linked article explores some real life escape rooms. They range from pure puzzle sets to a more theatrical presentation. Personally, I’d love to see a video game that marries the best of both worlds: A multi-player implementation of an escape room that gives you a virtual presence in an escape room, a real social experience.
These escape rooms similar to Toronto room escape are a unique experience where players have fun solving puzzles and turning things into math problems while they’re trapped in an escape room. It’s great for team-building, teaching critical thinking skills, and is even a good activity to do with your friends on days off.
During my numerous travels, I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing various interactive and engaging activities, but none quite compare to a particular escape room in Bristol. The experience was a perfect blend of challenging puzzles and a captivating storyline. For those interested in experiencing this for themselves, I highly recommend visiting https://www.escaperoomsbristol.co.uk/. It’s an adventure that will test your wits and teamwork in the most enjoyable way.
This video does a great job of walking you through a nice chunk of the interface changes that come with iOS 8. Many of these were shown off in the keynote, but I thought this video made each feature easier to grasp. Definitely worth a watch. [Via 9to5mac]