Month: March 2013

Tom Warren, The Verge:

Speaking at Microsoft’s TechForum event this week, Steve Ballmer’s senior advisor, Craig Mundie, detailed the history of Redmond’s philosophy toward Windows OEMs and how Surface came to be. “I think one of the things evolved over a long time in the PC business was we stopped some years back really trying to actively curate what the devices looked like,” said Mundie, discussing the engineering and design influence involved in creating an experience and hardware that’s relevant to people.

“We said, ‘oh the OEMs, that’s their design, they deal with it.’ We got huge diversity out of that at all possible price points, but it became hard to guarantee a uniform quality of experience that the end user had,” he explained.

In fewer words, the Surface was designed to compete with the best hardware design and quality in the world: Apple.

Alex Lloyd, for Jalopnik:

[I]t won 15 out of 16 races in the 1988 season, with Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost behind the wheel. On six occasions the MP4/4 qualified first and second with a margin of a second or more, and at Monaco, Senna was 2.6 seconds faster than his nearest non-McLaren rival. But, even more amazing is this incredible pace was at no detriment to reliability. The MP4/4 retired just four times, two of which were a result of crashes.

An absolutely breathtaking automobile. You should see it in the hands of a master, or one of his fans.

“C. S.-W.”, the Economist:1

Microsoft, maker of the Windows 8 operating system and the Internet Explorer web browser, has been fined €561m ($732m) by the European Union’s antitrust regulators for breaking a promise to offer its customers a choice of the browser they would like to use to surf the internet on their personal computers.

As the company in charge of the most-used operating system in the world, Microsoft has special rules to follow. Offering users a choice of browser is one of those requirements, and it appears that a tiny error is going to cost them dearly. But Christopher Mims of Quartz2 thinks that the fine is a small price to pay for Microsoft’s grander strategy:

Granted, Microsoft is going to miss the half billion dollars in US cash equivalent (if it were repatriated and US taxes paid) that the EU will be extracting from the company, but given that Microsoft can’t figure out what else to do with its cash, that may simply be the cost of maintaining market share for its desktop browser.

Interesting take, but I don’t buy it. That seems like a large price to pay for a product that does not directly generate revenue, and cannot do so without striking a deal with the competition.


  1. I really hate this style of attribution. What’s wrong with a name? ↥︎

  2. I really hate this Javascript-heavy website. It’s a usability nightmare. ↥︎

Mark Hurst:

Remember when people were kind of creeped out by that car Google drove around to take pictures of your house? Most people got over it, because they got a nice StreetView feature in Google Maps as a result.

Google Glass is like one camera car for each of the thousands, possibly millions, of people who will wear the device – every single day, everywhere they go – on sidewalks, into restaurants, up elevators, around your office, into your home. From now on, starting today, anywhere you go within range of a Google Glass device, everything you do could be recorded and uploaded to Google’s cloud, and stored there for the rest of your life. You won’t know if you’re being recorded or not; and even if you do, you’ll have no way to stop it.

You can expect a giant privacy shitstorm the moment this wearable technology is used to record and upload something sensitive. Via Dave Pell.

Andrew Tuck, Monocle:

But Buffett’s willingness to spend a lot of good money on newspapers is based on a deep belief: that people still want good regional and local newspapers. In the past 15 months he has bought 28 daily papers for a grand total of $344m (€263.7m). In his letter this year he said that “People will seek their news – what’s important to them – from whatever sources provide the best combination of immediacy, ease of access, reliability, comprehensiveness and low cost.” […]

What seems to be happening though – at last – is that media players of every size and in every sector are realising that there is not just one route to success. There is no quick-fix media model you can buy off the shelf.

Last year, I was given a subscription to Lapham’s Quarterly in both digital and physical editions. I love my iPad, but I wait to receive the physical copy of this. And, while I don’t have a subscription to it, I prefer the physical version of Monocle as well. Both of these magazines are printed on high-quality paper stock with beautiful typography and vivid images.

Compare with the earlier link regarding the downfall of pay-what-you-want music. The immediacy of digital availability is part of the ability to grow businesses in both music and publishing, but there is value attached to a physical object.

Matt Alexander:

TED is absolutely cultish. But it’s a cult for the sustenance of beneficial ideas. Elitist, morally unsound, isolated, self-congratulatory, and tone deaf? Yes. All of those. But useful and, in some respects, daring? I believe so.​

I find TED talks range from the barely-tolerable to cringeworthy. After reading Alexander’s take, though, I’m more optimistic. It’s about ideas bigger than the conference and, despite the conference’s often unpleasant nature, it’s an important gathering, if only to remind everyone that it’s okay to be uncertain.

John Siracusa:

Web rendering engines are extremely complex. There are very few companies that have the expertise to create and maintain one on their own. (Again, the similarity to Linux is strong here.) I’m glad all those developers at Apple and Google are working on improving the same open-source web rendering engine, rather than dividing their efforts between two totally different, proprietary engines.

Ever since Opera announced that they would be switching to WebKit, some have bemoaned the loss of their Presto engine. While Opera has a market share of around 2%, it was the principle of aligning yet another browser with the Apple-Google behemoth. These fears, as Siracusa articulates beautifully, are misguided.

By the way, if you want to know about all the little differences between the various WebKit implementations, Paul Irish has written a smart (and thorough) article.

Interesting article from Greg Sandoval:

But that dream has turned into a nightmare, according to Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke [… who] indicated that he and his bandmates may have done more harm than good in 2007 when they self released the album In Rainbows and allowed fans to pay whatever they chose. By turning music commerce into a sort of large tip jar, the In Rainbows offer was hailed as a forerunner of what the music industry would one day become.

Spotify and Rdio have allowed people to listen to music on demand for very little money, but that means that artists barely get paid. Though music revenues were greater in 2012 than they were in 2011, it’s a field that is more competitive than ever — anyone can make a record and upload it to Bandcamp.

I love paying for music that I enjoy. I don’t mind receiving digital files, but a physical package that has been comprehensively designed and considered is much more rewarding, and I am willing to pay more for it. I own one of the deluxe edition “Ghosts” packages, and will soon be receiving a vinyl copy of “MBV”. These feel worth their price. I think that’s what fans enjoy — provide a physical product with value, alongside an inexpensive digital download. The “pay what you want” scheme cheapens the experience by constantly hinting that you could have paid less, which means that the music is assigned little value.

Ben Bajarin writes for Time what the rest of us are thinking:

So to recap: Apple is the most profitable company, can’t make enough products to meet demand and is the most admired by its peers. Yet Wall Street and media fanatics are claiming Apple is doomed. The reality distortion field is in full effect.

This (fantastic) article from Kevin Ashton details the production resources required to produce a can of Coke, but he overlooks one critical component: water.

It’s mindblowing to consider that one can purchase a can of Coca-Cola just about anywhere in the world and it will taste nearly identical. This is because each bottling plant has its own water treatment facility. I’d know — I have seen one in action. At some production plants, Coca-Cola will pull its water from their own source; more commonly, they’ll use municipal facilities. Even though the city has treated the water on its own, the bottling plant will neutralize it to a specific purity and dissolved mineral content per Coca-Cola’s requirements.

Ashton makes the worldwide connections that produce a single can of Coke. The water, however, must be acquired locally and made identical worldwide; in some ways, it’s the inverse of Ashton’s examples.

Aabha Rathee, Wall Street Cheat Sheet:

Apple’s shares touched a new low on Monday as Cowen & Co. analyst Matthew Hoffman cut his current fiscal year estimates on the company after saying he expected the upcoming iPhone upgrade to be delayed.

Delayed? That’s not good.

Hoffman said his firm’s chip analyst Timothy Arcuri’s research showed that the construction of an iPhone 5S was trending toward the month of June, which was later than the April period of manufacturing the firm had earlier predicted. According to the analyst, the device may now launch in the fiscal fourth quarter, or the September-ending period.

Let me get this straight — an analyst gets to spitball production of a new iPhone as earlier than expected, then revise that prediction to the same quarter that the iPhone has been released in for the past two years, and shareholders respond to both? How dubious.

Headline copped from D’Arcy Norman.

There’s a certain joy in attempting to master the unmasterable; it prioritizes the process and the adventure over the result. The strategy game Othello (also known as Reversi) has been marketed under the slogan “a minute to learn… a lifetime to master” (yes, including the ellipsis). It’s the perfect description of these kinds of activities: a low barrier to entry, with a lifetime of learning after that in the pursuit of perfection.1

This is the same reason I’ve played guitar for over 16 years. The barrier to entry for playing guitar is quite low: you need the instrument, and a pair of hands (and if you’re a total badass, you don’t even need the latter). With practice come notes, then chords, then speed, and then the rest of the techniques one needs to master the instrument. Eventually, obviously.

Some songs can be picked up quite quickly. The Doobie Brothers’ classic “China Grove” is a great starter piece, with a simple rhythm and a typical power chord progression. It’s still my warmup song when my fingers are frozen stiff from a Canadian winter.

Some songs require a little more practice. AC/DC’s “Back in Black” is one that every electric guitarist learns. The pulling-off motion for the descending intervals in the verses is deceptively tricky, but it’s manageable with a little bit of practice.

Some songs are a real challenge, requiring hours of practice and hundreds of attempts. A fair amount of Led Zeppelin’s catalogue falls into this category. “Black Dog” seems easy enough on the first listen, but it contains a hell of a guitar line.

And then there’s Jimi Hendrix. Hendrix’s guitar lines aren’t simply technically challenging — there’s an almost palpable connection that is formed between listener, Hendrix, and guitar when he plays. It’s a groove, an ethereal quality, and yet a heaviness. It’s nothing that can be explained, but it is something that can be felt when attempting to play.

I’ve spent the last five years trying to learn “Voodoo Child”. 2 The version you hear there is the one I have a recording of, and is therefore the one I’ve attempted to learn. There’s no other way of putting this: it is a difficult song to learn. I’ve managed to button down the intro pretty well, and I can play the verses and choruses alright, but I’m finished as soon as it hits the first solo. Five years of practice, with a hair under two minutes to show for it.

It gets worse: as soon as I had a good grasp of those two minutes, I attempted to compare it against a live version. For, you know, flavour. And that damn Hendrix had to change it up and make it even more challenging. Adam Savage has his Maltese Falcon, and I have “Voodoo Child”. I don’t think I’ll ever tame this beast, but that’s fine: the adventure is in the pursuit, not the result.

In the excellent 2004 film Layer Cake, Colm Meaney’s character casually disassembles a 1940s Luger pistol onto a glass table while observing that “meditation is concentrating the front of the mind on a mundane task so that the rest of the mind can find peace.” While dubious in its accuracy and biological merit, this is a similar interpretation to what I wish to achieve from meditation, via “Voodoo Child”.

Despite its primary association with Buddhist traditions, meditation is something which we all practice, to one degree or another. The word itself carries with it a broad range of activities and goals, but the simplest interpretation is that it relaxes, trains, and focuses the mind. Those who actively practice it can gain from it what they wish.

To meditate, some assume the lotus position, some lay on the ground, and some disassemble old pistols. I stomp on a Boss DS-1 and plant my fingers onto the seventh and ninth frets. Again, and again.


  1. See also Josh Centers’ article about Letterpress in the fifth issue of The Magazine↥︎

  2. Sometimes referred to as “Voodoo Chile”, the title it was originally catalogued under. Confusingly, there’s another Hendrix song called “Voodoo Chile”, but it’s a 15 minute blues jam, not a four-minute rocker. ↥︎

Nilay Patel, The Verge:

Interestingly, we’re also told that Apple’s chosen to rework the full iOS to run on the watch instead of building up the iPod nano’s proprietary touch operating system — although the previous nano was already watch-sized and seemed like a great starting point for a wrist-sized device, Apple’s betting on iOS across product lines.

This is all rumours and conjecture, of course. If it does run iOS, expect it to be analogous to the way the original iPhone ran “OS X”.

James May:

The ‘magic’ of Top Gear – something we’re asked about a lot – is largely down to the directors, cameramen, sound recordists, editors, producers and everyone else in the vast, unacknowledged army of experts who slave thanklessly to put three morons on the screen.

Slate’s Matthew Yglesias tries out one of JCPenney’s new department stores:

There is no evidence that [Ron] Johnson has remade much of anything. Everything that I always find alienating and unpleasant about the basic department store experience is still there. The store is too big and too disorganized. Products are sometimes clustered by functional category and sometimes by brand, with a confusing mix of house brands and real ones. Right at the door a sign invites you to enjoy free Wi-Fi throughout the store, which really is a change. But why would you want that? There’s no place to sit in the store and no synergy between laptop use and shopping there. Just for kicks, I had my iPhone hop on the Wi-Fi network only to discover that the connection speeds were noticeably slower than Verizon LTE.

Damning. And it isn’t like today’s news is reassuring:

JCPenney CEO Ron Johnson announced on the company’s Q4 earnings call that he has brought on former Coke marketing exec Sergio Zyman as an advisor as he tries to turn around the ailing department store. […]

Zyman was instrumental in the launch of New Coke in 1985, a product aimed to turn around Coke’s lagging sales and put the company back at the top of the soda industry. The cola’s legendary formula was tweaked in secret to give it a “smoother, rounder yet bolder” taste and production on the classic brand stopped altogether.

Yeah, bring in the guy who was responsible for the launch of a product synonymous with “highly touted new product failure” to try to turn around your highly touted new department store that’s failing. That’ll help.

Cabel Sasser unravels the mystery of the shitty-quality “1080p” video-out from an iPad Mini using a Lightning connector adapter:

We thought we were going insane. This is just an AV adapter! Why are these things happening! Limited resolution. Lag. MPEG artifacts. Hang on, these are the same things we experience when we stream video from an iOS device to an Apple TV…

Don’t let me spoil the surprise for you.

Update: A comment by an “Anonymous Coward” fills in the missing pieces of this mystery. Fascinating stuff.

Chris Gonzales assists a group of students as an Apple Store employee:

Each student was given the choice of a black or a white 160GB MacBook. I supposed they had all been brought to the Apple Store to check each one out at the last minute and see what they liked best, but it didn’t take long for the students to form a line next to the teacher with their minds already made up. And then the teacher walked off to handle a student who was being particularly rowdy.

And then it dawned on me that all of these students were all speaking to one another in sign language.

They were from a school for the deaf.

Fascinating story, if you stick around until the end.