Analysis of Google vs Tim Cook’s Apple ∞
A little slanted, perhaps, but still a very interesting read. Interesting take on the timing of Tim Cook’s hiring in 1998. No argument that Apple has been better in the Tim Cook era.
A little slanted, perhaps, but still a very interesting read. Interesting take on the timing of Tim Cook’s hiring in 1998. No argument that Apple has been better in the Tim Cook era.
An Olympics broadcast from the ice planet Hoth. In Danish, but that only makes it better. [Via Kottke]
I’ve always thought that composers have a radio in their heads. They hear a tune playing, then quickly grab a guitar or piano to work out the arrangement before they lose it.
You can see a glimpse of that at work here, as McCartney hums his arrangement of For No One live in the studio.
UPDATE: Reader Marek Bell points out that this is likely a scene from Give My Regards to Broad Street, made in 1984. I wonder if there’s any footage of McCartney playing this in 1966. Was this song in any of the early Beatles movies?
UPDATE2: This remains a mystery. The Broad Street version of this song is clearly different than this one. Different shirt, and in this one, McCartney’s guitar strings that emerge from the tuning pegs are uncut (wrapped in a circle). Any other clues? Leave a comment.
This email arrived today from Kickstarter…
On Wednesday night, law enforcement officials contacted Kickstarter and alerted us that hackers had sought and gained unauthorized access to some of our customers’ data. Upon learning this, we immediately closed the security breach and began strengthening security measures throughout the Kickstarter system.
No credit card data of any kind was accessed by hackers. There is no evidence of unauthorized activity of any kind on your account.
While no credit card data was accessed, some information about our customers was. Accessed information included usernames, email addresses, mailing addresses, phone numbers, and encrypted passwords. Actual passwords were not revealed, however it is possible for a malicious person with enough computing power to guess and crack an encrypted password, particularly a weak or obvious one.
As a precaution, we strongly recommend that you change the password of your Kickstarter account, and other accounts where you use this password.
To change your password, log in to your account at Kickstarter.com and look for the banner at the top of the page to create a new, secure password. We recommend you do the same on other sites where you use this password. For additional help with password security, we recommend tools like 1Password and LastPass.
We’re incredibly sorry that this happened. We set a very high bar for how we serve our community, and this incident is frustrating and upsetting. We have since improved our security procedures and systems in numerous ways, and we will continue to do so in the weeks and months to come. We are working closely with law enforcement, and we are doing everything in our power to prevent this from happening again.
Kickstarter is a vibrant community like no other, and we can’t thank you enough for being a part of it. Please let us know if you have any questions, comments, or concerns. You can reach us at [email protected].
Thank you,
Yancey Strickler Kickstarter CEO
Pretty huge. Here’s a link to a Kickstarter blog post that basically mirrors the email that went out.
The Atlantic:
Recently I watched the four-episode original BBC House of Cards series from 1990. It’s on Netflix too, and, seriously, if you are interested in either politics or satire, this is not to be missed.
As a Canadian, I usually love the British originals of American shows better but the comparisons between both of these very good adaptations of the book is interesting.
Phys.org:
Ten questions about physical and biological science were on the quiz, and the average score—6.5 correct—was barely a passing grade.Just 74 percent of respondents knew that the Earth revolved around the Sun.
One in three respondents said science should get more funding from the government.
Apparently, so should science education.
Bored Panda
There are many biological theories behind why women live longer than men, but we’re sure that behavior like that in these pictures isn’t helping.
There’s an amazing amount of The Stupid going on here.
As the music industry races toward a future of digital streams and smartphone apps, its latest crisis centers on a regulatory plan that has been in place since “Chattanooga Choo Choo” was a hit.
Since 1941, Ascap and BMI, the two giant licensing organizations that dominate music publishing, have been governed by consent decrees with the Justice Department. These agreements were made to guarantee fair royalty rates for songwriters and for the radio stations, television networks and even restaurants and retail shops that play their music.
But with the industry struggling to make money from digital music, this system has come under attack. The streaming service Pandora is squaring off against Ascap in a closely watched trial over royalty payments. Big music publishers like Sony/ATV and Universal are calling on the government to overhaul the system, and technology companies are accusing the publishers of trying to skirt federal rules meant to protect them.
The outcome could reshape the finances of a large part of the industry.
Another potential game changer for an already disrupted market.
I love the speed of skeleton. Your face is inches from the ice hanging off the front of the barest of sleds. You steer with subtle leg movements.
Woz shared this video of his son, Gary, speeding around the track in Park City, Utah. You are a brave man, Gary!
The installation of 65 iBeacons at Dodger Stadium, home of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and San Diego’s Petco Park, home of the Padres, will be followed by similar work at more than a dozen and a half other MLB stadiums, the league said. The plan is to have more than 20 ballparks in total equipped with the technology by Opening Day in late March. The Padres host the Dodgers on Opening Night on March 30.
I’m really looking forward to giving these iBeacons a try.
These games have hidden unused pieces of text, never intended to be seen during gameplay, because developers have voices too. These include things like programmer shout-outs, messages aimed at hackers trawling through the game data, and the furious ranting of overworked, underpaid coders doing crunch-time.
This is a pretty good list. 423 games. How many of these do you remember?
This theremin was implemented using the Web Audio API. Tried to play the Star Trek theme. I think I won’t quit my day job.
A lot of fun!
In the 2010 Olympics, Georgia republic luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died after a training run. On that track, the lugers reached speeds of 95 mph (152 kph). Even though officials concluded that the crash was driver error, they determined to slow the track down for the Sochi games.
Terrific video.
The Stop Bad Patents web site is a resource to learn about patent trolls and patent abuse. Worth a look.
The Hemingway app is what Word could be if it had a more informative, tunable interface. You type in some text, and you get feedback on things like run-on sentences, word misuse, much more. The interface allows you to turn on and off checks for hard to read sentences, adverb overuse, passive voice misuse, and more.
This is the tip of the iceberg as to what might be done with an interface like this. Helpful to professional writers, but could be an incredible boon to writing students. I would love to see technology like this built into Safari.
UPDATE: Reader Jim “The Beard” Dalrymple pointed me to this post which runs Hemingway’s actual writing through the Hemingway app. Pretty funny.
Globally, cousin marriages are still going strong, with an estimated 10% of all marriages in the world being between cousins, and has high as 50% in some regions of the world.
I had no idea!
Khoi Vinh, the former Design Director at NYTimes.com, posted two new logos he’s been working on. I always find it interesting to see what people like Khoi come up with.
It’s Valentine’s Day so, why not? Not safe for work because of language but completely safe for facts. The “diamond ring is a scam” story is a fascinating one.
The analyst’s comments about docking stations etc. are asinine and Rene Ritchie agrees. The future of computing is going to be about us, and not as much about the device we carry. The device to make this all work could be as small as a pin, but more powerful than anything on the market today. Rene sums it up nicely in the last sentence.
Some people are about to have the chance to get very rich.
Twitter, the microblogging service whose shares have more than doubled since its November initial public offering, will give insiders the first chance to sell their stock tomorrow.
No insiders sold in Twitter’s IPO, meaning none have been able to profit yet from the run-up in the stock price. Twitter, which debuted Nov. 6 at $26, closed at $56.47 at yesterday’s close in New York. They touched an intraday record of $74.73 on Dec. 26.
Twitter’s biggest shareholders include co-Founder Evan Williams, who has about a 10 percent stake, and Rizvi Traverse Management LLC, which along with its affiliates held an almost 16 percent stake after the IPO. Other shareholders include Benchmark Capital, Union Square Ventures, Spark Capital and celebrities such as Ashton Kutcher.
What happened to Facebook when their insider lockups expired?
In 2012, Facebook Inc.’s shares dropped to record lows amid the rival social network’s larger share-lockup expirations.
Remember that building in London that was melting cars because of its unfortunately curved shape and position with respect to the morning sun? They called it the Fryscraper.
Now Google has a similar issue, a massive solar energy project with mirrors concentrating solar energy, heating the air to 1000+ degrees Fahrenheit (about 537 Centigrade).
Seems birds that fly in the path of the beam are being incinerated.
The $2.2 billion solar farm, which spans over five square miles of federal land southwest of Las Vegas, includes three towers as tall as 40-story buildings. Nearly 350,000 mirrors, each the size of a garage door, reflect sunlight onto boilers atop the towers, creating steam that drives power generators.
The owners of the project— NRG Energy Inc., Google Inc. and BrightSource Energy Inc., the company that developed the “tower power” solar technology—call the plant a major feat of engineering that can light up about 140,000 homes a year.
But the birds, what about the birds?
Regulators said they anticipated that some birds would be killed once the Ivanpah plant started operating, but that they didn’t expect so many to die during the plant’s construction and testing. The dead birds included a peregrine falcon, a grebe, two hawks, four nighthawks and a variety of warblers and sparrows. State and federal regulators are overseeing a two-year study of the facility’s effects on birds.
You have to love smart people.
This is a great, insightful take on the stresses faced by indie developers.
Dong Nguyen is a young guy. He wrote a game for fun, put it out there, and found himself at the target end of a massive wave of attention, much of it negative. I can’t stress enough how insanely terrifying this can be, and he wasn’t ready.
[Via iOS Dev Weekly]
iMore has a lot of great how-tos on its site. I didn’t expect this one, but Allyson Kazmucha wrote up a piece if you want some help.
Tami Reller, Microsoft’s chief of marketing, spoke at a Goldman Sachs tech conference yesterday. She was asked about bringing Office to other mobile platforms. Last October, Steve Ballmer committed to bringing Office to iPad. Seems like Reller might be hedging on that commitment.
“As we step back and say, these core applications, these core brands that are so important to enterprise customers and consumers, how do we make sure that we’re thoughtful about what we’re doing on the Windows platform, as well as cognizant of the fact that there’s other devices in their lives.”
“So you’ll see us be thoughtful about how and when we bring what applications to what platforms.”
Microsoft is facing a difficult decision. On the one hand, they can keep Office as Windows-only, hoping to build a locked in ecology that will force consumers to buy Windows tablets and phones if they want Windows.
On the flip side, there’s a very real danger that that strategy will erode the Windows market if people do not buy into the Windows mobile offerings.
An interesting article. Microsoft is in a difficult position.
I love great design, and I think this Kickstarter is a fantastic idea. The Dash headphones are a secure fit, designed for runners and swimmers and offer in ear biometrics.
The Dash works in sympathy with the wearer. Movements like pace, steps, cadence and distance are tracked. Heart rate, oxygen saturation and energy spent are measured, all the while real time acoustic feedback is provided.
The Dash has an embedded 4GB/1000 song music player so you can use it without a smart phone. It has a built-in microphone (presumably it will allow you to make calls with your phone).
Even though The Dash provides impressive noise isolation, the wearer can choose to channel ambient sound into the headphone with the transparent audio feature. A swipe on the capacitive touch surface of The Dash will enable or disable ambient sound to pass through.
That’s right, it has a capacitive touch surface. Tap your ear to allow ambient sound to come through.
These sound great.
This is such a great story on what can happen if your phone number shows up on the news just after Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone.
There are some amazing photos here.