September 5, 2013

The Fox

Via Gawker

i_have_the_weirdest_boner_right_now_344

Ever hear of Marty Glickman? He was on the Olympic team that represented the US in Berlin in 1936, alongside Jesse Owens. The documentary, Glickman, tells the story of Marty’s youth as a runner, his trip to the Berlin games (great story, don’t want to spoil it here), and then his rise to become one of the most influential sportscasters in history. Just as most musicians are influenced by the Beatles, most sportscasters have been influenced by Marty Glickman.

Glickman is available on HBO, HBO on-demand, and HBO Go. Terrific documentary.

Mick Jagger’s letter to Andy Warhol, asking him to design the infamous Sticky Fingers album cover.

In my short sweet experience, the more complicated the format of the album, e.g. more complex than just pages or fold-out, the more fucked-up the reproduction and agonising the delays. But, having said that, I leave it in your capable hands to do what ever you want………..and please write back saying how much money you would like.

One of my favorite Stones’ albums. Great letter.

Sony announced a new series of lens cameras, designed specifically as smartphone attachments. Each QX lens has no screen and no body. The camera smarts are inside the lens housing, communicating with the smartphone via WiFi. There’s an attachment that connects the lens to your phone, though that is not strictly necessary. The QX app converts your smartphone screen into a realtime viewfinder. When you press the shutter release on the lens, a compressed version of the image is sent to your phone’s image library. The full-size images are stored in a memory card on the lens.

I really like this idea, though it is hard to imagine mounting the lens on my phone every time I want to take a picture. Something you might get used to, I suspect, and worth it if the images are significantly better than any I can capture with my phone’s built-in camera.

One aspect that I find most intriguing is the fact that the app can control the lens remotely, with the ability to release the shutter, start/stop movie recordings, and adjust common photographic settings like shooting mode, zoom, Auto Focus area and more. This means I can mount the lens on a tripod, move to a comfortable position, make all my adjustments, then take my shot, all remotely. In addition, this lets me take my shot without touching the lens, avoiding vibrations that might affect focus.

Meanwhile when you’re looking for photo clipping path services to take care of all your photo editing needs, here is a good company similar to Zenith Clipping, a clipping path service provider in Bangladesh that offers the best quality clipping paths. They are also a well-reputed top-ranked image editing company serving since 2010.

Six-year-old Avery drums Rush’s “Fly By Night”

Another Neil Peart in the making!

September 4, 2013

A cappella Abbey Road

All the vocal tracks from the Beatles’ Abbey Road album, sans instruments (for the most part). So lovely.

It seems unimaginative to me. I don’t know, I just expected more.

Stupid lawsuits.

An article I wrote for Fortune on how important the iTunes Festival is for the bands that participate.

If you’ve spent any time with a pair of headphones and Pink Floyd’s seminal work, Dark Side of the Moon, the phrases “cruisin for a bruisin” and “I certainly was in the right” will bring back some memories. Not to mention, “There is no dark side of the moon really. Matter of fact, it’s all dark.”

Someone at WFMU got hold of all the individual mix tracks from the album and posted them. Nice.

This is an interesting business model. RocketSpace rents space to tech startups, a common enough practice. But instead of offices, or even cubicles, RocketSpace uses long tables, shared within a single company, or between multiple companies. Tight quarters, noisy, with some nice perks.

What RocketSpace, the office rental company he started in San Francisco in a building on its last legs in late 2010, does provide is lots of high-speed Internet access, proximity to well-regarded young companies, amenities like free beer and occasional chats with the likes of Steven A. Ballmer of Microsoft, Dick Costolo of Twitter and the venture capitalist Vinod Khosla.

And RocketSpace is succeeding. By packing tenants into tight quarters, they achieve a 20% rent increase per-square-foot over traditional office space.

Companies that have passed through RocketSpace, either as local start-ups or initial satellite offices, include such tech darlings as Zappos, Uber, Spotify and Kabam, an online gaming company.

I suspect we’ll see this model quickly make its way into other tech markets.

Time lapse of Bay Bridge construction

Amazing to watch this unfold.

This infographic shows households by type, 1970-2012. The most notable trend is the number of married couples with children, which dropped from 40.3% to 19.6%. Interesting.

September 3, 2013

A 21-year-old communications engineer and self-professed security enthusiast named Arul Kumar, from India, is about to get his second bounty from Facebook for pointing out a flaw in the system. This one was pretty interesting.

Basically, the hacker uses the support dashboard to request the removal of a photo from someone’s account. During the request process, the hacker has access to the photo owner’s Profile_id. Change the Profile_id to the hacker’s own id and the request is sent to the hacker instead of the owner. The hacker approves the request and the photo is deleted.

This movie is from Arul’s blog post. Facebook has fixed this hole, thanks to Arul’s detective work. Good job, Arul.

Delete any Photo from Facebook by Exploiting Support Dashboard from Arul Kumar.V on Vimeo.

Apple announces special event for September 10

Apple on Tuesday sent out invites for a special event to be held on September 10, 2013 at the company’s Cupertino, Calif. headquarters. According to the invitation I received today, the event will start at 10:00 am PT.

It is widely expected that Apple will introduce a new iPhone at the event.

appleevent

iTunes Festival: Sigur Rós

Icelandic rock band Sigur Rós performed at the iTunes Festival in London last night to a packed house. I had an opportunity to speak with the band before the show about the festival and its importance.

“iTunes Festival is really well done and it reaches a lot of people—I think it’s really cool,” said the band’s singer and guitar player, Jónsi Birgisson. “It’s never the same as being at a show, but it’s good to introduce music to some new people.”

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Birgisson brings up an interesting point. There is so much music to listen to these days that it becomes a bit overwhelming. Sometimes being able to watch a band live gives you a connection that you wouldn’t have had otherwise. I have found this with a number of bands over the years that I still listen to today.

Sigur Rós is a unique rock band that isn’t afraid to try new things with its music. The band tours with 11 members that includes a brass section, strings, percussion, drums, guitar and bass.

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Georg “Goggi” Hólm, the band’s bass player, explained that the new album involved a lot of experimentation with sounds and instruments, but everyone has a job to do on stage and it all works.

In fact, it did work very well. Birgisson and Hólm are both known for playing their instruments with a bow at times during the show (similar to what Jimmy Page did with Led Zeppelin years ago.) It provides another layer to the band’s music and sets them apart from most of the music you may listen to on a regular basis.

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

iTunes Festival kicked off this week with a performance by Lady Gaga. You can watch all of the performances this month live on your iPhone or iPad by downloading the iTunes Festival app or on your Apple TV.

Incredible Eight year old Japanese guitarist

Wow. I don’t know what else to say.

Send professional, detailed invoices and get paid sooner with Billings Pro for Mac, iPhone and soon iPad.

Easily capture all your billable time using the convenient time tracker on Mac and iPhone.

Organize your time, mileage, expenses and products using projects. Generate invoices for clients with multiple projects or generate invoices on a per project basis. You can also send recurring invoices, statements and estimates to your clients.

Automatically synchronize between all your Macs, iPhones and iPads as an individual user or as a team of users.

You can also get notified when Billings Pro for iPad is available.

I found several things interesting about this story.

First, 25 million downloads is a huge number, but given the incredible popularity of Plants vs. Zombies, and the fact that the franchise was purchased by Electronic Arts, that number is not that surprising. What is surprising to me is the fact that that number reflects pure iOS downloads. The game has not yet been released on Android. The original Plants vs Zombies was released on iOS in February 2010, and on Android more than a year later, in May 2011.

I also found the tone of this article amusing.

Without the help of Android, the number one mobile OS in the world with millions of devices activated daily, the extremely popular Plants vs Zombies 2 is still doing great. While we all know these numbers would be substantially higher with a simultaneous release, the developers from PopCap games are already celebrating nearly 25 million downloads.

This is an Android blog, fair enough. But is an article pointing out that one of the biggest mobile games of all time is not yet released on your platform the appropriate place to hammer home the phrase “the number one mobile OS in the world”?

Om Malik:

Microsoft’s legacy as a PC monopoly holder made it incapable of handling the fast changing, rapidly shifting post-mobile world. And now for the next year Microsoft will be distracted by integrating the two companies — all at a time when Samsung will be releasing a barrage of new phones, Google will be improving on Moto X and Android and, lest anyone forget, Apple will have a trick or two up its sleeve. Oh, by the way, there is that other Seattle-based company: Amazon has been quietly working on its own phones and has plans to take on the current smartphone establishment. And they don’t even care about making a profit — they just want marketshare.

That’s probably just how the next year will play out.

It’s a big deal, but I don’t think it will come as much of a surprise to most people.

This is brilliant and a bit mesmerizing. Launch the page, zoom in on your airport of interest, and watch the flights do their thing. Click on one of the icons and detailed information about that particular flight, along with the path from its origin, will appear in a sidebar. Love this.

September 2, 2013

This Friday (September 6), NASA will launch its Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) spacecraft. LADEE will be fitted with a sophisticated laser comm device that will significantly speed up communications with Earth. This is a proof-of-concept mission. The biggest hurdle to overcome is relaying the data almost 240,000 miles to ground telescopes on Earth.

“This pointing challenge is the equivalent of a golfer hitting a ‘hole-in-one’ from a distance of almost five miles… Developers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Lincoln Laboratory have designed a sophisticated system to cancel out the slightest spacecraft vibrations. This is in addition to dealing with other challenges of pointing and tracking the system from such a distance. We are excited about these advancements.”

Interesting stuff.

An article I wrote for Fortune on Apple’s motivation for doing the iTunes Festival.

Nice survey of start-ups in the New York Times. Some I knew, some were new to me. Interesting read.

App cloning is a problem that impacts both large and small developers. In a nutshell, a cloner decrypts an app, then sucks out the binary. Once they have the binary, they modify it and resubmit it to the App Store as their own. A difficult problem for Apple to solve. They’d either need to apply significantly more resources to screening submitted apps, or take more time per app with existing resources, which would slow the review process to a crawl.

The app had only been out three months, and already the creators of A Beautiful Mess were scrambling to deal with a big problem: clones, copycats, and rip-offs, as many as seven of them, crowding the search results in the App Store. The clones appeared to be legitimate, affiliated versions, yet as all the developers knew, they were anything but. The CEO of the company that created the original A Beautiful Mess called them “infuriating.”

And getting rid of a clone is no easy task.

A Beautiful Mess developers tried to have the clones removed. “When we reported an IP infringement through Apple’s system, [Apple] would e-mail the company we were accusing and CC us on it,” said Trey George, the business development manager for A Beautiful Mess, in an e-mail to Ars. George believed that most of the clones originated with two operations, which he believed would feign innocence when confronted in a bid to buy time.

Clones and the like have been around the App Store almost since its inception. But this scourge has now become commonplace.

Android’s lack of strong oversight can lead to an even worse problem. Clymer highlighted the recent case of the game Gentlemen!, which was purchased legitimately 144 times and pirated more than 50,000 times.

Glad to see this problem getting the exposure it needs.

Early Christian Bale

In 1987, Steven Spielberg made an excellent movie called Empire of the Sun, about a young British boy who lives with his wealthy parents in Shanghai. His privileged childhood abruptly turns to chaos when the Japanese army occupies Shanghai. A terrific movie with a brilliant young actor in the starring role.

Turns out that boy was a young Christian Bale. This was 18 years before Batman Begins. Here’s the trailer.

Pictures from the Lady Gaga concert at iTunes Festival

I posted my thoughts on the opening of the iTunes Festival with Lady Gaga last night. Here are some great shots of the performance.

The iTunes Festival runs for the entire month of September with a new artist playing live every night. You can watch the concerts live by downloading the iTunes Festival app on your iPhone or iPad. You can also watch the concerts free on your Apple TV.

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

Photo Credit: iTunes Festival, London 2013

September 1, 2013

iTunes Festival kicks off with Lady Gaga

Apple’s iTunes Festival began tonight in London, England with headlining act, Lady Gaga.

I must admit, I’ve never been to a Gaga concert before, so this was a new experience for me. As a music lover, I have respect for the amount of work she puts into her music, so I was looking forward to seeing her performance.

iTunes Festival6

She didn’t disappoint. It was clearly a big production—shortly after Gaga came onstage, the dancers and props and musicians came to life behind her. It’s interesting to imagine just how much work goes into putting on a show like this, which lasted just over an hour.

iTunes Festival3

The iTunes Festival marks Gaga’s first major performance since having major hip surgery—an injury that could have sidelined her for a lot longer than it did. Gaga talked to her fans quite a bit through the show. She talked about love, happiness, joy and how much she missed them. It seemed to go on a long time for me, but the fans all seemed to enjoy it.

iTunes Festival5

There are plenty of great artists left to play this month. Elton John, Katy Perry, John Legend, Pixies and Justin Timberlake will all play the festival and entertain fans.

I’ve been to a lot of music festivals over the years, but I don’t think anything compares to the scope of what Apple is putting on with the iTunes Festival.

Apple chose to hold the festival at the Roundhouse in London. The venue holds about 3,000 people, so the concerts are an intimate experience for the artist and fans alike. It’s a great decision to use this type of venue because it feels even more special for the fans—they feel closer.

iTunes Festival2

From my seat in the balcony, it didn’t look like there was a bad seat in the house. Everyone was enjoying themselves, people were dancing and the fans at the front were screaming their heads off with every word Gaga said.

itunes Festival1

It was a great time.

The iTunes Festival runs for the entire month of September with a new artist playing live every night. If you’re not in London or didn’t get tickets, you can watch the concerts live by downloading the iTunes Festival app on your iPhone or iPad. You can also watch the concerts free on your Apple TV.

Just a reminder, you can watch live streaming of the iTunes Festival starting at 4p EST today by steering your browser to itunes.com/festival. Jim is there and I am jealous!