29 Jan 2010

I will miss the Old World. Damn you Apple!

The Old World

In the Old World, computers are general purpose, do-it-all machines. They can do hundreds of thousands of different things, sometimes all at the same time. We buy them for pennies, load them up to the gills with whatever we feel like, and then we pay for it with instability, performance degradation, viruses, and steep learning curves. Old World computers can do pretty much anything, but carry the burden of 30 years of rapid, unplanned change. Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X based computers all fall into this category.

The New World

In the New World, computers are task-centric. We are reading email, browsing the web, playing a game, but not all at once. Applications are sandboxed, then moats dug around the sandboxes, and then barbed wire placed around the moats. As a direct result, New World computers do not need virus scanners, their batteries last longer, and they rarely crash, but their users have lost a degree of freedom. New World computers have unprecedented ease of use, and benefit from decades of research into human-computer interaction. They are immediately understandable, fast, stable, and laser-focused on the 80% of the famous 80/20 rule.


How long will it take to complete this Old World to New World shift? My guess? The end is near when you can bootstrap a new iPad application on an iPad. When you can comfortably do that without pining for a traditional desktop, the days of Old World computing are officially numbered.

We'll always have the command line though, right!?

15 Jan 2010

My goals for 2010

Resolutions, goals, plans... whatever you want to call them, here are mine for two thousand ten.  My last year of being a twenty-something.

1. Get my stuff situated
Find a doctor, dentist, and eye doctor.  Open a Roth IRA and consolidate all my old 401K's.  Look into getting eye surgery and maybe braces.

2. Maintain (or increase) weight and strength.
I've been borderline underweight my whole life.  So lately I've been going to the gym and eating more and I have gained about 20 pounds since I started and can squat over 1.5x my weight!  Maintaining it will only get harder because I started doing a lot more cardio by...

3. Jogging long distances.
Running has always been fairly easy to me. I guess it sort of runs in the family.  I've never done more than a 10K though.  Despite the cold weather, I've been going out running to build up my mileage (I just did 8 miles!) so I can...

4. Run a Marathon in March.
"Run" is not really the right word.  Jog/walk (jalk?) is more like it.  Even still, I know it sounds crazy... 26.2 miles is a loooong way (I'll have 7 hours to finish).  I figure I might as well try since I'm going to have to train anyways to...

5. Thru-hike the Appalachian Trail.
Yep, the whole thing (will take about 5 months).   I plan to start in April with my dog Kooper.  This is something I've always wanted to do and I now find myself with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do it.  I work for a great company who will let me disappear (and give me back my job when I get back), I have good health, and few responsibilities.  I know what you are thinking... "Daniel? without a computer for 5 months?  HA!"  Well, you are partly correct.  This is my chance to unplug from the busy tech world I've lived in everyday, to take a break from information overload, and get a glimpse of the "real world".  So I'm not bringing a computer, but I will have a smartphone that I will use to keep my status updated and share some photos (if I have a signal).  I'll have a website for documenting my adventure and I may be the first to tweet all 2180 miles.   The website will also help me parlay the hike into...

6. Raising money and awareness for charity
To helps those with Mitochondrial Disease, including my friend Abby.  I have no experience with running a fund-raiser like this, so this will be tougher than the hike itself!  My thinking is that if people give money to 3-day walks, why not a 150+ day walk?  I'll probably have to setup some kind of non-profit org and fill out a bunch of forms, find sponsors, contact press, and blah blah blah... I have no idea it's even possible.  If you have any experience running a fund-raiser, I could really use some help.

That should keep me busy for most of the year.  When I get back from hiking I suppose I'll go back to work and start looking for a place to live (unless I want to live in the woods).

Thanks for following me during my adventures, I'll need all the support I can get!
5 Jan 2010

Google's Nexus One is disappointing

I'm sure the actual device is great, but the idea of the Nexus One is what I'm talking about... or more specifically, Google's Phone Store.  Google had the opportunity to turn the phone market on it's head, but instead has just become one of those booths at the mall trying to sell you a new phone package to make commission.  Except unlike those mall booths, Google only offers one phone and one plan to choose from.

So what is Google's goal here?
Sell phones?  Then they need to offer more than one $79 plan w/ subsidy.  This phone isn't special enough to justify breaking a contract or paying $529.
Push Android?  Then they need to insure there is an attractive, compatible, and affordable Android phone on the market.

The Nexus One is attractive, but for most people it is not affordable and is not compatible.  

So why is Google just being yet-another wireless middle-man?  A simplified Google version of http://wireless.amazon.com/ ?

In my dreamworld, Google announces a single unlocked device capable of running on both GSM and CDMA for about $299.  A world where your wireless device is totally decoupled from the carrier.  An affordable smartphone that can be used on any service without a two-year contract.  I know Google has the power to do this, and it would sell like crazy for years.

But they didn't.  Nothing to see here, move along.
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