Personal

Friday, July 18, 2008

ON THE BLACKBERRY/iPHONE BATTLE

TRENCH WARFARE

Maybe it's the fickle gadget junkie in me, or maybe it's just me being jaded about my 3G iPhone after my Blackberryboldclock problems with it the last few days.  But when I saw this picture of the coming new Blackberry Bold from RIMM in "bedside mode", my gadget gaze has now shifted to getting one on first opportunity (not that I haven't been focused on the upcoming Blackberry models). 

The picture is part of a post on Blackberry's recent annual shareholders meeting, by Jim Courtney of Skype Journal.  This application, though simple, is as cool as anything I've seen on the new iPhone.

Here's another tidbit from that post that I found interesting, especially for those with extensive music collections in iTunes:

"Blackberry's new Media Sync creates a direct connection between your iTunes music collection and the Blackberry. (and will also be made available to all Blackberry devices with a media card - Pearl, Curve, 88xx - through both a firmware and desktop software upgrade)."

For a long time now, I've carried both a Blackberry and an iPhone, with the former being my primary business phone and email device, and the latter being my primary web browsing and media device.

Being a primary device, I find that I still use my Blackberry more than the iPhone to take pictures, given that it has a better camera with flash, something even the new 3G iPhone still lacks.  But I have NO music on my Blackberry, something I turn to the iPhone for on a long flight.

There are many users like me, who compartmentalize their professional and personal lives in a similar fashion, and use separate devices for each life.  Or as Jim Courtney puts it in starker terms:

"The iPhone is left with two markets: younger generation consumers who want an expensive toy and Mac aficionados who can use the iPhone as an extension of their Mac experience."

Both RIMM and Apple have long-realized this and are increasingly beefing up their products and services, so that RIMM has more media, personal fun oriented features, and Apple has more business and professionally oriented features like "push" wireless syncing.

But it looks like for the next 12 to 18 months anyway, it's going to be a bit of a stalemate.  And both sides will have interesting enough features to keep their core users hooked on their upcoming offerings.  But neither will just yet have enough to make broad and deep inroads into the other camp's core functionality.

In the meantime, many of us gadget geeks will have to continue to carry around both devices.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

ON SOFTWARE BUGS AND THE 3G iPHONE

BUMPY ROAD

(Updated below)

All things are not rosy with my new 3G iPhone, as I've expressed in some posts on Twitter already.  Having 2330026046_52c7b74a45 eagerly anticipated the App Store now available with the iPhone 2.0 software on new and existing iPhones and iTouch iPods, I'd downloaded and installed over 60 third-paid and free applications (aka Apps), onto the new device in the last week (image source).

And I've paid a price in device instability ever since.  My brand new 3G iPhone has crashed and hung up on the boot screen, about five times now.  Each time it happened while I was playing or trying to wirelessly update an application installed on the device. 

Each time, after turning off the device and turning it on, I faced the famous shiny Apple screen, with no further response from the device.  I even took it in to the Genius Bar at the Apple store on the first crash, and they couldn't revive the device other than a full reset.

That involves taking the device back to the factory installed settings, wiping out all the customized settings and newly installed applications.  A full restore takes about two hours, even though all the applications and iTunes content are stored locally on my iMac.  It's just a slow, slow process.

Well, I've had to go through five of these now, and have just finished and customizing the iPhone with all my favorite settings, bookmarks, mail accounts, and applications for the sixth time.  And I'm planning to be much more careful in how I use the third party Apps, and how I go about updating them wirelessly (NOT).

Now, this post is not to complain about Apple, the new iPhone or the App Store.  It's just to highlight one user's experience with brand new, version 1.0 software, whether it's on a device or in the cloud. 

MacWorld makes this point particularly well in a recent article:

"With the release of the updated iPhone software, Apple flung open the doors of its new App Store. On its first day, the App store was populated with more than 500 programs, and that number is growing rapidly.

Think about that: 500 programs, all of them at version 1.0. On a device that had never before supported software written outside of Apple. It’s exciting, seeing the birth of a brand new software ecosystem. But it’s also scary. If people were worried about the first-generation iPhone hardware and software (many vowed they wouldn’t buy an iPhone until the second version arrived, for fear of buying a buggy 1.0 product), how should they feel about more than 500 programs on a brand-new platform, all at version 1.0?"

They go on to make the broader point of how the unique circumstances around the 3G iPhone introduction complicated the normal quality-testing process for third-party App developers:

"Unfortunately, there was no way for iPhone programmers to beta-test their products before the App Store launched. The software used to create iPhone programs was a secret. And only a select group of programmers were able to run their programs on real hardware, rather than in a Mac-based simulator. Developers in countries without iPhones could only test their programs on the iPod touch.

Even worse, Apple’s cloak of secrecy around the iPhone software programming tools prevented programmers from sharing tricks they had picked up during their work. The programming community, especially on the Mac, is remarkably collegial—programmers post blog entries detailing things they’ve learned all the time, and the quality of all the programs in the Mac ecosystem benefit as a result. Without blogging and Google searches, the only way iPhone programmers could share what they’d learned was through the old, inefficient medium of one-on-one conversations."

So, the reality is that early buyers of Apps on the Apple store on the new iPhone 2.0 software, are in for some continued instability.  It doesn't mean we have to like it, but at least we may be prepared to grin and bear it...for now.  It's Apple after all.

Update:  After experiencing a 7th crash and hang yesterday, I decided to do a full restore of the iPhone WITH all the Applications, but WITHOUT turning on syncing with MobileMe, the upgraded version of Apple's old .Mac (aka dotMac) service.  I especially didn't turn on the wireless, over-the-air "push" upgrading of my contacts, calendar, and email data via MobileMe, to see if this would stop the crashes.

It's been 12 hours since that restore, and so far so good.  The iPhone seems fairly stable, and am able to run any of the 65 or so Apps without any problems.  I still haven't tried to wirelessly update any of the Apps.  For now, will hold off any wireless data syncing and/or updates.  At least until the next firmware release from Apple.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

ON SOME COOL, LESSER KNOWN iPHONE APPS

NEEDLES IN HAYSTACKS

Well, I've had a couple of days now to play with the new iPhone 3G and the flood of third-party applications now available for it in the Apple App Store, both free and for a fee. 

And the good news is that there are some pretty cool applications, especially games that take advantage of the iPhone various features and sensors.  Look no further than the leading paid application that shows up at the top of the App Store list, Monkey Ball from Sega, as a good example.  Apps like Monkey Ball have been long anticipated by users, given the opportunity they had to show-case themselves at Steve Jobs' 3G iPhone Keynote a while ago.  There are already good reviews of some of the best applications by folks like Walt Mossberg, David Pogue and others.

Having downloaded over 60 free and paid applications and them for a bit, I thought I'd highlight five, lesser heralded applications that merit a closer look, at least from my point of view.  In no particular order, let me start with:

1.  vSnax Videos by Rhythm NewMedia, is a free App that offers bite-sized aggregation of entertainment videos.  Although videos have long been available on the iPhone and iTouch through the YouTube application bundled by Apple on the home screen, vSnax's approach is more proactive in that it serves up a series of short videos in various categories that a mainstream consumer may find of interest.  It's an approach I think most purveyors of videos on the web will adopt over time, given that consumers are already close to a point of being overwhelmed by the choice of stuff to watch, and the effort required to find the good stuff.

2."The Battle for Waterloo" by Touchtomes is a fascinating little game for $3.99, especially for those geeks who have fond memories of the classic text-based early computer games of Zork fame by Infocom, over two decades ago.  We've made some progress from text here, where the story and game play are advanced by beautiful illustrations of that famous battle.  Here's a flavor of the game from Touchtomes:

Shooting "“Battle of Waterloo”
It is 1815; Napoleon has escaped captivity, become Emperor of France, and has raised an enormous army of 125,000 men. With it, he plans to conquer all of Europe.

You are the youngest officer in the British Army, serving under the Duke of Wellington. You have just returned from a dangerous scouting mission near the French and Belgian border. “Sir,” you inform Wellington, “Yesterday I saw French troops invading!”

Pretty cool stuff, that sometimes reminds you that you don't need the latest tech features to provide a cool gaming experience.

3. OneTap Movies by Avantar is another application, available for $1.99, that's a good example of a new class of services that make it easier to quickly get lots of information on a subject, widely available on the web, in a convenient and graphically pleasing manner.  In this case, the App does the following:

Mailpagemovies_2 "OneTap Movies recognizes where you are and displays the nearest movie theaters, along with the movies that are being played, as well as the showtimes, critic ratings, basic info, posters, etc. All with a single tap of your finger. You can also watch the trailers or simply enjoy your time searching for details of any movie with a link to the International Movie Data Base (IMDB)."

Again, nothing one can't do with the excellent 3G browsing already possible on the new iPhone, but very convenient to get it all with "one tap" as it were.

4. Trism by Demiforce is a cool $4.99 App for those who already love classic games like Tetris and Infinism Bejeweled. 

Trism stands for triangular prisms, which you move around and match by color to progress in the game.  The game has a lot of polish and is fun to play using the iPhone touch interface.

There are various types of challenges available, so the game doesn't get old too fast.  The developers have managed to cram in a good tutorial which is so far unusual for a lot of iPhone applications.

5.  OmniFocus for iPhone is by the Omni Group, a developer well known for a number of great productivity applications on Apple's Mac platform.  With a price point of $19.99, this is not an inexpensive iPhone App, but does provide pretty useful on-the-go productivity enhancing features.  Here's how their site describes the application:

Ofi_screenshot_02 "OmniFocus for the iPhone brings task management to your fingertips. Keep track of actions by project, place, person, or date. Bring up a shopping list, agenda items to discuss at work, tasks for home, and any other lists you need.

Using your location, OmniFocus can create a custom list of actions to complete nearby. Buying groceries? OmniFocus can show you the closest grocery store and create an instant shopping list.

Capture tasks anywhere, anytime with OmniFocus: you can enter text, take a picture, or even make a quick voice recording."

There's a fair bit of power under the hood, especially if used with a beta version OmniFocus for the Mac, a separately sold desktop application, which will soon officially support the iPhone version of the App.

This list of five cool, lesser-known Apps is by no means comprehensive, and the above is but a tiny sampling of the good stuff that's available in rapidly growing piles of haystacks.  To be continued.

Friday, July 04, 2008

ON THE NATION'S BIRTHDAY

THE BIG DAY

Upon being reminded that today was America's birthday, my six-year old nephew thought about it for a moment, and popped out a question that most adults forget to ask while going through all things they plan to do on this special day, "How old is America today, Uncle Michael?"

It made me do some verbal tap-dancing, while I did some quick math in my head to give him the answer, "232 years old, Neal".  This seemed to satisfy him for a bit, until the next question, whatever it may be, might pop into his head.

The little conversation this morning came to mind, when I read this story in USA Today, about how our soldiers abroad are faring during this great national birthday celebration, and particularly this quote:

"It's kind of like the fight's never over," said Sgt. Jacob Fultz, 22, from Gardner, Kan. "It started on July 4, 1776 and now it's 2008."

Two hundred tweve years and counting.  Happy July 4th, everybody.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

ON GLOBAL POPULATION TRENDS

DEMOGRAPHIC TECTONICS

As a long-time geek on demographic matters, this weekend's New York Times Magazine cover story on the falling birth rates in Europe caught my eye, especially with this bit:

"Around the time that President Kennedy went to Germany and gave his “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech, Europe represented 12.5 percent of the world’s population. Today it is 7.2 percent, and if current trends continue, by 2050 only 5 percent of the world will be European."

Demographics is Destiny as they say, and the devil is in the details, as they go on to say.  This article has a lot of both, including the implications of these European demographic trends for both Asia and the U.S. 

First, some detail:

"The figure of 2.1 is widely considered to be the “replacement rate” — the average number of births per woman that will maintain a country’s current population level. At various times in modern history — during war or famine — birthrates have fallen below the replacement rate, to “low” or “very low” levels. But Hans-Peter Kohler, José Antonio Ortega and Francesco Billari — the authors of the 2002 report — saw something new in the data.

For the first time on record, birthrates in southern and Eastern Europe had dropped below 1.3. For the demographers, this number had a special mathematical portent. At that rate, a country’s population would be cut in half in 45 years, creating a falling-off-a-cliff effect from which it would be nearly impossible to recover. Kohler and his colleagues invented an ominous new term for the phenomenon: “lowest-low fertility.”

The piece delves into the trends around Europe, and gets into possible reasons for the trends:

"As it turns out, the situation differs by region. “It’s a mistake to think of Europe as a single entity in this respect,” Alasdair Murray, director of CentreForum, a London-based research group, told me. “There are really four different population changes happening in Europe.”

The one that was the newest to me was the North-South divide:

"But the true fertility fault line in Europe — the fissures of which spread outward across the globe — runs between the north and the south. Setting aside the special case of countries in the east, the lowest rates in Europe — some of the lowest fertility rates in the world — are to be found in the seemingly family-friendly countries of Italy, Spain and Greece (all currently hover around 1.3).

I asked Francesco Billari of Bocconi University in Milan, an author of the 2002 study that introduced the “lowest low” concept, to account for this. “If we look at very recent data for developed countries, we see that Italy has two records that are maybe world records,” he said. “One, young people in Italy stay with their parents longer than maybe anywhere else. No. 2 is the percentage of children born after the parents turn 40. These factors are related, because if you have a late start, you tend not to have a second child, and especially not a third.”

What's particularly interesting in all this is the notion that what's happening in Europe could be potentially be the harbinger for trends around the world, as countries go from developing to developed:

"If this reading of southern European countries is correct — that their superficial commitment to modernity, to a 21st-century lifestyle, is fatally at odds with a view of the family structure that is rooted in the 19th century — it should apply in other parts of the world, should it not? Apparently it does.

This spring, the Japanese government released figures showing that the country’s under-14 population was the lowest since 1908. The head of Thailand’s department of health announced in May that his country’s birthrate now stands at 1.5, far below the replacement level. “The world record for lowest-low fertility right now is South Korea, at 1.1,” Francesco Billari told me. “Japan is just about as low. What we are seeing in Asia is a phenomenon of the 2000s, rather than the 1990s.

And it seems the reasons are the same as for southern Europe. All of these are societies still rooted in the tradition where the husband earned all the money. Things have changed, not only in Italy and Spain but also in Japan and Korea, but those societies have not yet adjusted. The relationships within households have not adjusted yet.” Western Europe, then, is not the isolated case that some make it out to be. It is simply the first region of the world to record extremely low birthrates."

The U.S. seems to be OK on these trends for now, partly because of our relatively unique openness (until recently), to immigration:

"WHICH BRINGS US TO A sparkling exception. Last year the fertility rate in the United States hit 2.1, the highest it has been since the 1960s and higher than almost anywhere in the developed world. Factor in immigration and you have a nation that is far more than holding its own in terms of population. In 1984 the U.S. Census Bureau projected that in the year 2050 the U.S. population would be 309 million. In 2008 it’s already 304 million, and the new projection for 2050 is 420 million."

There's a lot more nuance and detail in the piece, and it's a good starting point to understanding the demographic drivers that'll affect us all in the coming decades.  Recommended reading.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

ON INNOVATIONS IN MICRO-BLOGGING

A NEW TAKE

For all of the folks who're ardent users of "micro-blogging" services like Twitter, Pownce and others, there's a start-up that tries to do the same thing with a little bit of user interface innovation.  PC Magazine reviews this new service called Plurk, and has this to say:

"Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but it can also be a darn good way to compete—especially when the imitator improves on the original. That's the approach taken by Plurk, a new microblogging rival to Twitter..."
"But while plenty of Twitter wannabees, such as Jaiku, dot the webscape, some offer little that's original beyond a slicker interface. Plurk's interface is certainly better, but the site also rethinks the genre somewhat and incorporates clever features.

   
SLIDESHOW (7)
Slideshow | All Shots

The site's primary innovation is the horizontal timeline it uses to display entries. That approach makes a lot of sense to me—it's a far more natural way to view sequential events than the vertical-scrolling method Twitter and its clones use."

The slideshow goes through some of the UI innovations, and they'll make more sense if you're already a user of these types of services.

The feature that strikes me as the most unique, is one which gives users credit, or "karma" for simply doing various things on the service:

"In the Plurk universe, your actions produce karma, but unlike its metaphysical counterpart, this one is quantifiable: Specifically, it ranges from starter (0 to 20) to Plurk Nirvana at from 81 to 100, and is recalculated every day. High karma brings a reward far beyond enlightenment, though: permission to use extra emoticons. Your karma level is based on your frequency of posting, the richness of your profile, and how many friends you invite."

It's kind of a frequent flier program for the online service, and an idea borrowed from world of computer and online games.  We'll see if it gains traction in the world of online social media.
I'm in the process of trying out the new service myself, and will see if the innovations make a material difference to using a service like this. 

Of course the critical factor driving the success of failure of a social service are the number of people using it.  And while Plurk offers ways to find Plurk members amongst your network of online friends on AIM, Yahoo!, MSN, Twitter and other services, there's obviously not that many folks who've started to use Plurk yet.  So it may be some time before "Plurking" becomes familiar, even amongst geeks.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

ON VISUAL VOICEMAIL FOR EVERYONE

FEED ME

Visual Voice mail
, one of the flashier features of the original iPhone, is apparently coming to a Blackberry near you, as Boy Genius Reports:

Blackberryfusionvoicemail "If you haven’t yet heard of Fusion Voicemail Plus by PhoneFusion, prepare to be impressed. In a nutshell, Fusion Voicemail Plus centralizes all of your voicemail boxes and presents your voicemail messages visually on your mobile handset.
Instead of receiving voicemails in separate boxes for your mobile number, home number, VoIP number, office number, etc everything goes to your PhoneFusion One voicemail box. The messages are then displayed visually on your handset a la iPhone. Each entry displays caller info and incoming number along with your number corresponding to the relevant phone service (so you know if the caller dialed your mobile number or home number for example). And did we mention that the service is completely free?"

All of this sounds good, but will have to see how it works in practice.  The last couple of years have seen a handful of startups provide voice mail transcription services.  I've been an avid user of Simulscribe, now known as PhoneTag, which is a subscription based voice-mail service, I'd still recommend.

The notion of having multiple voice mail boxes feed into a consolidated email feed though is appealing.  Will have to keep an eye on this new service by PhoneFusion.

Monday, June 23, 2008

ON SAYING GOODBYE TO GEORGE CARLIN

SAD STUFF

George Carlin passing away at 71 over the weekend is obviously big news for his fans worldwide.  Like millions, I've been a fan of his comedy for a very long time.

It was especially ironic since my wife and I spent part of the weekend spring cleaning around the house and there were several vigorous discussions around how much stuff had accumulated in the closets.  Of course there were debates about which bits of stuff should be kept and which should go.

It all brought to mind my favorite bit by George Carlin around STUFF.  Fortunately, I was able to find it on YouTube.  It's five minutes long, and if you haven't seen it, it's a treat.  Fair warning, George has always used "salty" language:

It's a great perspective on Stuff and the real meaning of life, and one that bears reminding ourselves constantly over time. 

And these days, we've got even more digital stuff to worry about that wasn't even on the radar when George raised the very important issues around stuff.

R.I.P. George, and thanks for all the great belly-laughs.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

ON JUDGING BITS AND ATOMS

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION

This Reuters article highlights how difficult it is being a shopper of analog goods in terms of trying to discern quality from where things are made:

"These days, many fashionistas are still confused over what is real, what is fake, and whether a product's country of origin says anything about its quality.

Even a "made in Italy" label no longer guarantees that a bag or a pair of shoes was hand crafted by artisans in a Tuscan workshop.

Instead, the bag could have been stitched together by illegal workers in clandestine Italian factories, and the shoes assembled from plastic soles and leather shipped in from China."

The piece goes on to describe how the perception of quality differs depending on not just where a product is made, but where a buyer is coming from:

"Asian shoppers are particularly origin-conscious as French and Italian luxury goods are important status symbols in the newly affluent region. And the opinions of Asian shoppers are beginning to matter more and more as growth in more mature markets slows down.

"In Asia, in a certain segment, you can't offer a product made in China or made in Asia," said Patrizio di Marco, president and chief executive of Bottega Veneta, on the sidelines of a luxury goods conference in Tokyo."

What's funny is how perceptions are blurring in the realm of digital goods as well.  The example that comes to mind are the area codes for phone numbers, be they old-fashion land-lines, cellular lines, or internet phone (VOIP) lines. 

In a world where almost everyone has a cell phone, and the geographical location of the phone no longer matters, the area code on the phone still does.

My 917 cell phone number from New York, which is my primary number, almost always causes a double take in stores and restaurants around the country.

It's one of the reasons why vendors of internet phone numbers like Vonage, Skype, Yahoo! et al, do a thriving business in offering the area codes of your choice.  With these numbers you can be "local" to all the people that matter to you whether it's business or personal.  You can be all things to all people, for a small fee per year.

My wife was extremely chuffed last year, when she won the area code lottery while activating her new iPhone with AT&T, and getting a 212 number for a CELL-PHONE.  I of course felt gypped a few minutes later by the same phone company with my prosaic 646 assignation for my new iPhone.

It's reminiscent of the famous Seinfeld episode, "The Maid", where the status of a New Yorker was, and is still judged by whether the seven digit phone number is preceded by a 212.

I guess geography does matter, regardless of whether it's bits or atoms.  And it will for some time to come, regardless of how much technology blurs our land lives.

Friday, June 20, 2008

ON CRUISING TO A RECORD

FLOATING FAT

My wife and I went on our first cruise ever with my in-laws and grandparents earlier this year and enjoyed the on-board experience more than we expected.  Prior to that, we'd always thought Cruise-ships were not quite our speed. 

But we've come to realize that for traveling with extended family from both sides, it's not a bad experience at all.  Not to mention that it can be a better value traveling to places like Europe at current exchange and fuel rates.

So I've come to pay more attention to developments in the cruise-ship world, and this Gizmodo post caught my eye today:

Ship_profile_w_name_r "Royal Caribbean's new boat is big. Really big. The "Project Genesis" cruise liner, currently being constructed, will be 43% larger than the Queen Mary II, currently the world's largest ship. 1,180 feet long and weighing 220,000 tons, it'll be able to carry more people from New Jersey down to the Caribbean than any ship before it.

5,400 people, to be exact. The ship is so large that it has a "Central Park" the size of a football field in the middle, its own gigantic amphitheatre, and seven different "neighborhoods" that people will stay on. This thing is larger than an aircraft carrier, people."

It's expected to launch next year, with a twin due in 2010.  Will have to check it out, especially if it has ship-wide wireless Wifi internet access.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

ON OUR OFFSHORE DRILLING PHOBIA

GET ON WITH IT

There's something good that comes out of almost every crisis, and that is true even of the Oil price crisis of 2008.  Case in point is the crack, however small, in the multi-decade, bipartisan stand by U.S. politicians against offshore drilling.   This New York Times article today makes the point with a bit of drama:

"Gov. Charlie Crist stepped on the third rail of Florida politics this week when he abandoned his opposition to drilling offshore for oil and natural gas. But surprise, surprise, he did not die.

His call for cautious reconsideration, in fact, is  spreading.

In the Capitol and along the coast here minds once closed to offshore drilling have been cracked open by the prospects of safer drilling technology and an awareness that dependency on foreign oil has heavy costs."

Never mind that it's primarily the Republicans for now moving cautiously in this direction, with both President Bush and Presidential hopeful John McCain publicly speaking out for re-thinking the 27-year old U.S. ban on drilling offshore between three and 200 miles off our shores.

Never mind that our neighbors in the Americas, like Canada up north, and so many countries down south have been aggressively drilling offshore for a long time with no major environmental issues.  In fact Brazil recently won THE global oil reserves lottery recently, with the biggest oil discoveries in 30 years anywhere in the world, just about 200 miles from it's shores.

Even Cuba is busy drilling offshore with a little help from the Chinese, just 90 miles off our shores.  Given that oil reserves under land or under sea-beds don't recognize national borders, it wouldn't be surprising if the Cubans were straw-sipping some oil that could be drilled from our side of the offshore border.

Mexico is already competing offshore with us on this "drinking straw effect".

In fact, European countries in Scandinavia and norther Europe have been deep-water drilling for a long time, yet satisfying some of the most vigilant environmental constituencies in the world.

We've been playing offshore with one-hand tied behind our back for a long time:

"Congress first adopted its moratorium against drilling on the outer continental shelf, 3 to 200 miles offshore, in 1981. In 1990, Mr. Bush’s father signed an executive order reinforcing the ban; Mr. Bush promised Wednesday to rescind the order if Congress ended its moratorium."

Oil prices in 1981 were in the mid $30 per barrel range, with of course a very different global demand picture.

What's at the root of our national objection to offshore drilling? This NY Times article offers an answer:

"The primary concern about offshore drilling has been that unsightly oil rigs would dampen tourism, or that spills would threaten the environment. Advocates, and even critics, say new technology has greatly reduced the risk of spills."

Ironically, these are amongst the same arguments (aesthetics and environmental factors), against deploying wind and solar power infrastructure both offshore and on land.  So much for alternative energy sources.

One of the most bullish things on the global offshore drilling front, is how things are about to change in terms of drilling capacity over the next 3-5 years.  Again, an excellent New York Times piece yesterday provides a lot of good detail:

"In recent years, this global shortage of drill-ships has created a critical bottleneck, frustrating energy company executives and constraining their ability to exploit known reserves or find new ones..."

“The crunch on rigs is everywhere,” said Alberto Guimaraes, a senior executive at Petrobras, the Brazilian oil company that has discovered some of the most promising offshore oil but has been unable to get at it.

“Almost 100 percent of the oil companies are constrained in their investment program because there is no rig available,” he said.

As a result, drilling costs for some of the newest deepwater rigs in the Gulf of Mexico — the nation’s top source of domestic oil and natural gas supplies — have reached about $600,000 a day, compared with $150,000 a day in 2002."

But here's the good news:

"These record prices have spurred a new wave of drill-ship construction. This boom could lead to renewed offshore oil exploration that would eventually bring more supplies to the oil market, and push down prices.

Already, 16 new drill-ships are scheduled to be delivered to oil companies this year — more than double the number delivered over the last six years combined. In fact, 75 ultra-deepwater rigs should be delivered from 2008 to 2011, according to ODS-Petrodata, a firm that tracks drilling rigs.

Shipyards from South Korea to Norway are working overtime to meet a huge influx of orders."

Remember these ships aren't being order hoping to find oil offshore, but to extract lots of oil that's already been found offshore around the world, that's now profitable to get at these record prices.

Also remember that energy is a cyclical industry, notwithstanding the secular demand curves oil analysts like to point to from countries like China and India.  Again, the article above reminds us of the last big surge in demand for onshore drilling rigs:

"The last such boom in orders came in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when exploration rose after the 1970s oil shocks. In the 1990s, low oil prices and overflowing oil supplies led oil companies to cut back on exploration drastically."

I remember that boom and bust cycle vividly from my time on Wall Street and the Middle East.  History almost always repeats itself. 

But for now, things are moving slowly in the right direction for consumers.  And we need to nudge our politicians along, regardless of partisan lines.  And not let them hide behind promises of focusing on alternative energy sources. 

It's not an either/or proposition.  We need to be doing it all, wind, solar, bio-fuels, nuclear, clean coal, and good-old fashioned fossil fuels, wherever we can get our hands on it.  And of course do it as safely and ecologically sensitively as possible.  But the more expensive alternatives on all these fronts will only pursued by the markets when prices are high. 

None of it is going to happen very quickly, regardless of the choices we make, and no, it won't make an immediate dent in oil prices that would make us all happy.  But turning this ship around will take a lot of time (pardon the pun).  So we need to get on with it, balancing pragmatism and our ideal wishes.

That time is now, with as few political impediments as possible.  And hopefully be ahead of the long-term cycle for a change.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

ON GOOGLE UNPLUGGING BROWSER SYNC

SAY IT AIN'T SO

Must say that like many other geeks and early adopters, I was surprised and very disappointed to learn from Lifehacker, that Google is suspending support and development of it's popular Google Browser Sync extension software for the next version of the Firefox 3 browser to be launched next Tuesday.  Lifehacker posted a reply to a user query from the Google team responsible for the product:

"Thanks for trying out Google Browser Sync and for all of your feedback. It was a tough call, but we decided to phase out support for Browser Sync. Since the team has moved on to other projects that are keeping them busy, we don't have time to update the extension to work with Firefox 3 or to continue to maintain it.

For those of you who want to continue to use Firefox 2, we'll maintain support for old versions of Google Browser Sync through 2008. After that, we can recommend a few other products that scratch a similar itch. We hope that one of them works for you:

Mozilla Weave [labs.mozilla.com] from Mozilla Labs—Offers bookmark and history synchronization across computers.

Google Toolbar for Firefox [toolbar.google.com]—Store your bookmarks online and access them from any computer online.

Foxmarks Bookmark Synchronizer [addons.mozilla.org]—Synchronizes your bookmarks across all computers where it is installed.

Regards,
The Google Team"

Like many Firefox users, I find Google Browser Sync to be the single-most useful extension I use on Firefox, since it allows automatic syncing of not just bookmarks, but my passwords, usage history, and browser states across several computers, both Windows and Macs.  It's been a "Thriller" product for me since day one, despite occasional problems as the product evolved within Google.

If this news is true, I'm going to forgo using FireFox 3.0 into 2009, even though it's supposed to be a much faster and more stable browser.  I know there are other potential alternatives for this functionality, including the Fennec initiative by Firefox developer Mozilla, but I prefer getting this service from Google than anyone else.

It's especially puzzling that Google think this software is not critical to continue to support given that it's long-term strategic mission is to get hundreds of millions of users around the world comfortable doing their computing off the cloud, less tethered to specific computers and devices.

In fact, Google Browser Sync seems to be the perfect customer facing device to propagate the work it's doing with Google Gears, which is a set of emerging Google technologies allowing tons of Google and third-party applications to run on multiple computers even when the user do not have an internet connection. Nik Cubrilovic has a great post today on TechCrunch describing where that effort is at Google to date.

If anything, Google should be expanding it's investment in Browser Sync, and making every effort to make the technology less geeky and more appealing and obvious in it's benefits to mainstream users.

All this is especially ironic given that competitors like Yahoo! are pulling out all the stops to become the daily "starting point" on the internet for hundreds of millions of users around the world. 

Google already is the starting point with it's Search application, and services like Browser Sync were starting to act as the glue bringing the disparate computers together for every user, starting to do things on the internet every day.  And they didn't even think of it is a starting point.  User habits were changing to just expect that their computing environment would be the same as they flit from machine to machine, all using Google services.  What other Google product or service could be more important to invest in than that?

Other companies like Apple are also hoping to be glue together the browsing experience for it's users across both Macs and Windows, and into it's iPhone and iPod Touch hand-held devices, using it's Safari browser as the conduit.

Microsoft is also working on similar strategies on the multiple incarnations of it's Live platform initiatives.

But these solutions are vertically focused on a given company's hardware and software.  Google is uniquely positioned to be a cross-platform, and potentially cross-browser provider of this unifying functionality.  Technically, the task is not a trivial one, given that it requires tying together many standard and non-standard, proprietary and non-proprietary technologies to make a seamless user experience possible across computers and hand-helds.  Again, this seems to be totally aligned with Google's long-term strategic focus.

I like many geeks, am hoping that Google re-considers it's strategy with Google Browser Sync.  Here's hoping that Google has a strategy to continue to bring Browser Sync like functionality to future browsers and platforms to the masses, even if it's with a whole different name and approach.

Friday, June 13, 2008

ON A CRITICAL SUPREME COURT

RIGHTS AND WRONGS

Regardless of whether one supports the majority or the dissenting opinion in this week's Supreme Court decision on the Guantanamo Bay prison case, it's important to keep the bigger picture in perspective.  This was underlined well by the last paragraph in today's New York Times op-ed on the subject, provocatively titled "Justice 5, Brutality 4":

"There is an enormous gulf between the substance and tone of the majority opinion, with its rich appreciation of the liberties that the founders wrote into the Constitution, and the what-is-all-the-fuss-about dissent.

It is sobering to think that habeas hangs by a single vote in the Supreme Court of the United States — a reminder that the composition of the court could depend on the outcome of this year’s presidential election. The ruling is a major victory for civil liberties — but a timely reminder of how fragile they are."

Amid all the debates around this Presidential election, it's easy to forget that one of the biggest things at stake in the next election is the fate of at least two seats on the Supreme Court in the coming years.  The partisans on either side of course have never forgotten this for a second.  But it's important for us moderates, the so-called "Silent Majority", to also sit up and take notice.  And decide what's really important for the country in the long-term.

As far as the case itself is concerned, I've gone through decision and tried to understand both the majority and dissenting opinions, not to mention the reactions by both the President and McCain, who not surprisingly have expressed solid support for the dissenting opinion.  I'm far from an expert in these matters, and frankly struggle, like most citizens, to understand the legal complexities of a case like this, as interpreted by either side.

But as a centrist, moderate American first and McCain supporter second, I'm afraid I have to agree with the majority opinion in this case.  They made a tough decision through a tangle of bad choices.  And our country is likely better off for it in the long-term.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

ON SOME UNIQUE OBAMA SUPPORTERS

FOR THE RECORD BOOKS

After last night's historic win by Barack Obama in the Democratic primary for President, it's only appropriate to remember that the candidate has supporters around the world. 

Especially in Obama, Japan, which one would would presume, was ecstatic upon hearing the results overnight.  Here's how crazy some citizens from Obama, Japan were over the candidate, a few weeks ago, in this CNN report:

Their enthusiasm is infectious, to say the least.

Congratulations, Senator Obama, on a primary race well-fought and won.

Disclosure:  I remain a McCain supporter.

Monday, May 19, 2008

ON THE FIGHTS OF OUR FATHERS

UNTHINKING SUPPORT

This op-ed by Jeffrey Goldberg in the New York Times over the weekend, titled "Israel's 'America' Problem" makes a subtle point about the the choices facing Israel over the long-term vis a vis it's Arab and Palestinian citizens and neighbors, especially as it celebrates it's 60th birthday as a nation:

"WHEN the prime minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert, arrived at a Jerusalem ballroom in February to address the grandees of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations (a redundancy, since there are no minor American Jewish organizations), he was pugnacious, as is customary, but he was also surprisingly defensive, and not because of his relentlessly compounding legal worries.

He knew that scattered about the audience were Jewish leaders who considered him hopelessly spongy — and very nearly traitorous — on an issue they believed to be of cosmological importance: the sanctity of a “united” Jerusalem, under the sole sovereignty of Israel.

These Jewish leaders, who live in Chicago and New York and behind the gates of Boca Raton country clubs, loathe the idea that Mr. Olmert, or a prime minister yet elected, might one day cede the Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem to the latent state of Palestine. These are neighborhoods — places like Sur Baher, Beit Hanina and Abu Dis — that the Conference of Presidents could not find with a forked stick and Ari Ben Canaan as a guide.

And yet many Jewish leaders believe that an Israeli compromise on the boundaries of greater Jerusalem — or on nearly any other point of disagreement — is an axiomatic invitation to catastrophe..."

"When I spoke to Mr. Olmert a few days after his meeting with the Conference of Presidents, he made only brief mention of his Diaspora antagonists; he said that certain American Jews he would not name have been “investing a lot of money trying to overthrow the government of Israel.”

But he was expansive, and persuasive, on the Zionist need for a Palestinian state. Without a Palestine — a viable, territorially contiguous Palestine — Arabs under Israeli control will, in the not-distant future, outnumber the country’s Jews."

Here's where the piece really grabbed my attention, quoting Prime Minister Olmert:

"“We now have the Palestinians running an Algeria-style campaign against Israel, but what I fear is that they will try to run a South Africa-type campaign against us,” he said. If this happens, and worldwide sanctions are imposed as they were against the white-minority government, “the state of Israel is finished,” Mr. Olmert said in an earlier interview.

This is why he, and his mentor, former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, turned so fiercely against the Jewish settlement movement, which has entangled Israel unnecessarily in the lives of West Bank Palestinians. Once, men like Mr. Sharon and Mr. Olmert saw the settlers as the vanguards of Zionism; today, the settlements are seen, properly, as the forerunner of a binational state. In other words, as the end of Israel as a Jewish-majority democracy."

It was followed with this logical question and possible answer:

"So why won’t American leaders push Israel publicly? Or, more to the point, why do presidential candidates dance so delicately around this question?

The answer is obvious: The leadership of the organized American Jewish community has allowed the partisans of settlement to conflate support for the colonization of the West Bank with support for Israel itself. John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt, in their polemical work “The Israel Lobby,” have it wrong: They argue, unpersuasively, that American support for Israel hurts America. It doesn’t. But unthinking American support does hurt Israel."

Key phrase here: "Unthinking American support".  Applicable to so many issues, both foreign and domestic, that one barely knows where to start. The mind reels...Whew!

But coming back to the issue at hand.

Thorny political dilemmas like above, involving American citizens supporting political causes in the lands of their fore-fathers, with an eventually unhelpful amount of partisanship, are not unusual.

Note how our policy vis a vis Cuba, at a time when Fidel Castro is slowly exiting the scene, is still frozen in a 1950s time capsule, driven primarily by the political calculations for both parties in Florida with the Cuban-American community.

Other examples abound, including the involvement of Irish-Americans in the turbulent politics of Ireland vis a vis Britain, not so very long ago.

These political passions inherited from our families are very personal and can get more deep-set over time than the strongest cement. 

Growing up as a Hindu in the Middle East, I certainly felt the pressure within my family members to support  India, the country of my birth, in it's long-standing conflict with Pakistan over several decades. The two countries went through multiple wars, skirmishes and assassinations over that time, and things still seem relatively intractable today. 

I realize now that my utter reluctance to see the conflict in a partisan manner, even as a teenager, was more the exception than the rule.  For some reason, I decided to unthink my family's thinking, and continue to do on this issue today.

To this day, I see the fundamental issues between the countries as a moderate, hopeful for an eventual solution, but cognizant of the mountain of thorny and pragmatic issues that need to be overcome before anything positive can really happen.

The solutions to inherited political dilemmas of this type, by immigrants in ANY country, are not obvious or easy.  But we should at least see the problems first with a pragmatic and candid eye, which hopefully leads to the beginnings of more fruitful discussions and eventually compromises.

Of course, it'll take our politicians on both side of the aisle, starting to step out of their comfort zones, and risk some of their political capital, before anything can start to happen.  And THAT will take a little prodding by us citizens, regardless of our party affiliations.  Easier said than done, I know.  But we need to re-think our unthinking support on so many urgent matters.

Friday, May 16, 2008

ON THE JOYS OF AIR TRAVEL

TYPICAL FARE

Had a nine-hour cross-country flight today, that was originally scheduled to be a six-hour one.  It was one of those days where everything we don't quite like about traveling today, kinda happened to me.  You know what I mean.

Rather than share the joys of my travel day, I thought I'd offer this clip by comedian Brian Regan on air travel today:

Hope it brings a smile or two.  It certainly helped me a bit.  You could even save it for a rainy travel day yourself.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

ON REAL SUPER-HERO FLYING

FINALLY

Every boy from 2 from to a 100 (and a bit more), is going to like this story titled "Rocket man flies on jet-powered wings", as told by MSNBC:

080514jetmanhmed0110ahlarge "Former fighter pilot Yves Rossy, 48, accelerated to 186 miles an hour May 14, 2008, over the Swiss Alps during his first public flight while strapped to his self-made, jet-powered wings."

The piece goes into the actual experience (and has a video to boot):

"Steering only with his body, Rossy dived, turned and soared again, flying what appeared to be effortless loops from one side of the Rhone valley to the other. At times he rose 2,600 feet  before descending again with a trail of special-effects smoke in his wake.

"It's like a second skin," he later told reporters. "If I turn to the left, I fly left. If I nudge to the right, I go right."

And Rossy's next challenge:

"He said he is ready now for a bigger challenge: crossing the English Channel later this year. The stunt, which will be shown on live television, will test his flying machine to the limit. Rossy said he plans to practice the 22-mile trip by flying between two hot-air balloons."

Forget joy-rides into outer-space for folks willing to pay the freight.  This is the ride most of us boys (and I suspect quite a few girls), would happily sign up for, as and when available for mere mortals.

Monday, May 12, 2008

ON THE LONG-RUNNING BLACKBERRY/iPHONE RACE

THE FIGHT GOES ON

Research in Motion (RIMM) is up almost $10 today on the news of it's answer to Apple's iPhone, the Blackberry Bold (formerly known as the Blackberry 9000).  To be available later this summer on AT&T first and then all the major carriers, the new Blackberry borrows quite a few design cues from last year's iPhone, as this Ars Technica post illustrates and describes:

Iphone_bold "It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that RIM has taken a few design tips from the iPhone this time around. The Bold's all-black enclosure with a chrome border, combined with the high-contrast screen make it indeed a very, er, bold-looking new BlackBerry. Physically, the resemblance is striking.

Of course, the iPhone currently lacks many of the features that the Bold has—namely 3G capabilities, integrated GPS, Bluetooth that actually works with something besides a Bluetooth headset, video recording capabilities, and camera zoom.

However, many of these features are expected to be announced soon at WWDC for the next-gen iPhone. At the very least, a 3G iPhone is all but guaranteed, and GPS is widely-rumored to be included. And, of course, the iPhone already offers desktop-style web browsing in addition to a giant multi-touch screen that the Bold doesn't have."

The piece goes onto list Blackberry's unique advantage vs. the iPhone:

"On its own, however, the Bold is still a very attractive option for those in business who are married to things like the BlackBerry's handling of corporate e-mail and the non-touchscreen keyboard that many BlackBerry enthusiasts still love.

On the flip side, Apple said at its SDK Roadmap event in February that the iPhone 2.0 software will introduce "real" Exchange support, push e-mail, and other enterprise features that it currently lacks, possibly bringing it up to speed with the BlackBerry in that regard."

One has the killer physical keyboard and industrial-strength email capabilities.  The other the killer touch-screen with the "real internet", and a universe of software applications to come.

It looks like I'll be upgrading to BOTH the Blackberry Bold and the new 3G iPhone and continue to carry both around for a while longer. 

No clear-cut winner yet.  It's Experience vs. Hope all over again.

Looks like this race between the two devices will run at least  as long as the Clinton-Obama contest before we have a clear winner.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

ON ANOTHER MOTHER'S DAY

SHADOW DREAMS

Thomas Friedman has a heart-felt post about this first Mother's Day after the passing away of his 89-year old mom last month.   The bit that resonated the most for me today was when he says:

"She even came to see me in Beirut once, during the civil war  —  at age 62.

The picture of her in Beirut makes me think back in amazement at what my mom might have done had she had the money to finish college and pursue her dreams — the way she encouraged me to pursue mine, even when they meant I’d be far away in some crazy place and our only communications would be through my byline. It’s so easy to overlook — your mom had dreams, too."

Yes, they did and if around, still do. 

Most of our lives we go through life seeing our moms through the prisms of our own wants, needs and ambitions.  It starts when we're babies of course, since most moms seem programmed to be around at our beck and call at that age. 

Even after we've grown much older and gone on to make lives of our own, our relationship with our mom is still heavily tinted by how our moms have treated us over the years.  It takes an effort to consider sometimes how we've treated them over the years.  And how they saw their lives both before and after our shadows.

I wrote a few years back about how my Mom was surprised by the very concept of Mother's Day, a very Western concept in her eyes.  From her perspective, the very notion of envisioning her life without her two kids seemed very alien indeed. But she had dreams too, as Thomas Friedman puts it so well, and this Mother's Day, I'd like to talk to my mom about them.

Happy Mom's Day, all.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

ON DUAL-CLASS STRUCTURES FOR TECH COMPANIES

TEN FOR ME, ONE FOR YOU

Marc Andreessen has a post well worth reading today explaining why he's gone from being an opponent of dual-class share structures for companies to being a support of them, especially for young tech companies with passionate founders interested in creating a major long-term franchise. 

It's a comprehensive and well-argued position, covering everything from how it's worked so far for companies like Google and how it may have changed the merger dynamics between Microsoft and Yahoo! had Yahoo! had a similar structure.

Marc makes a particularly seductive  argument on how the current public market environment has short-term forces that can be truly distracting to creating long-term shareholder value.  And how dual-class structures would insulate world-class, deserving tech companies from these nasty market forces.

The whole argument works only if the founders turn out not to be bozos in the long-run, so ensconced in their own cocoon that they truly don't work in the best interests of their majority, long-term shareholders.

It works only if the founders stay wise and visionary, and are able to execute through both the short-term and and long-term challenges of running a large, fast-growing, world-changing technology company.

And the history of the markets, both public and private, have taught us that those folks are few and far between to be found.

And even visionary, extraordinarily capable founders invariably run into periods where their very successful companies are in a long period of funk.  In the world of technology, Bill Gates, Michael Dell and Larry Ellison come to mind.  Not to mention Steve Jobs, who got in to trouble enough to have to leave the company he founded.  And go through a  unique set of circumstances to be invited back and save the day.

And all those successful and rewarding companies where both founders and  public share-holders did just fine without dual-class voting structures.

Problem is, no one is immune from turning into a bozo at least one time in their life.  There's no guarantee that they won't do evil things regardless of any initial promises.  People change, motivations change and so do the most initially aligned of shared interests.  There are not guarantees, and dual-voting structures merely fore-stall and prolong the inevitable as in the case of the New York Times, which Marc eloquently discusses.

The other thing that is trouble-some about a dual voting structure is that goes against the very spirit of the compact with public market shareholders, regardless of whether these investors are large or small, short-term or long-term in their investment horizons.  It's about creating efficient marketplaces after all, with all the bad that they sometimes entail with the good.

To paraphrase Ian Malcolm, the mathematician in Jurassic Park, "Markets find a way", despite all the best-intentions of visionary founders.

Marc goes on to explain how Google today is a poster-child for dual-class voting structures in tech companies.  It is a good example in the here and now.

And there's no question that in the near-term, some emerging tech companies that are next in line to go public will be sporting dual-class share structures in their IPO.  It'll be the fashionable thing to do for a while, until it isn't.

As an aside, it's interesting to bring up Facebook here, which has been fast emulating all things Google, hiring Google folks as fast as it can, including Google's global head of PR today.  And if as Kara Swisher also reports today that Marc Andreessen has verbally accepted an offer to go on Facebook's board, a dual-class voting structure is almost a certainty for Facebook as and when it goes public.

In the meantime, the debate about the pros and cons of these structures will continue, I'm sure.

DISCLOSURE:  I remain a long-time shareholder in dual-structure public companies like Google.

Friday, May 02, 2008

ON A BIG CHANGE AT COLUMBUS CIRCLE

EXTREME MAKEOVER

There is no doubt that Columbus Circle in New York, around 59th Street and Broadway on the West side, has seen architectural change and substantial improvements over the last half a decade, both with the arrival of the Time Warner Center complex and the re-design of Columbus Circle itself.

One element that has however remained a fixture, is the infamous and controversial Edward Durell building on the south corner of Columbus Circle, which most visitors know has the "Lollipop" building.  It often puzzled outside viewers with it's sheer exterior white walls where windows ought to have been, so as to allow enjoyment of the presumably spectacular Central Park views from that unique geographical vantage point.

Well, the building is finally getting a long debated and anticipated re-do, and the New York Times has a succinct article and interactive feature about it that's well worth reading.  As it explains:

2columbus190 "New York may not be able yet to place the name, but the lollipops will certainly be familiar. So will the shape and the pale color of Edward Durell Stone’s Gallery of Modern Art, built at 2 Columbus Circle in 1964 to house Huntington Hartford’s art collection.
Almost everything else has changed, however, with the transformation of the building into the Museum of Arts and Design (formerly known as the American Craft Museum), designed by Brad Cloepfil of Allied Works Architecture..."
Stone’s design, initially disparaged, gained admirers in recent years, including Tom Wolfe; the architectural historians Vincent Scully and Robert A. M. Stern; and Herbert Muschamp, former architecture critic for The New York Times. Their pleas could not move the Landmarks Preservation Commission to hold a hearing on whether to designate the building.

So the transformation went ahead.  [See the interactive feature.]

Though the museum is four months from opening, the new facade has now emerged from its construction cocoon."

The short and well-prepared interactive feature is particularly helpful , in that is shows the historical evolution of the building in it's architectural context, especially the various constraints and realities.

As a New Yorker for over quarter of a century, I've lived within ten blocks of this building for much of that time.  My initial reaction, subject to change, is that the new design is a substantial step forward in enhancing Columbus Circle.  Look forward to the completion of the project, and seeing the changes inside.

At the very least, it should hopefully reduce the controversies over the original design.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

ON A NEEDED BROWSER FEATURE

TAB, YOU'RE IT

First, let me confess that I'm a tab-a-holic.  Whether it's my primary Firefox browser, or Safari as a backup, and even Internet Explorer once in a while when on a Windows PC, I instantly end up opening at least half a dozen browser tabs as my windows on the world wide web.

Tabs have become indispensable to millions of web users ever since the concept was pioneered in a few early browsers like Opera almost a decade ago.

And every browser company has constantly tried to innovate to make them ever more useful and easier to use.

One of my favorites recently was the ability to move tabs WITHIN a Firefox browser window, placing them where you want.

I also like and use the ability to bookmark a full window's worth of tabs all at once, and then being able to load all of them at the click of a button the next time.

Here's the feature I want next, which is the reason for this post.
What I'd like next is the ability select a few tabs open non-contiguously within a window, and be able to move them to a separate new browser window.

How many times have you found yourself researching a topic, and before you know it, you have more than a dozen tabs open within a window, all mixed up by different topics.  And you just want to bookmark and save a a handful of them in a certain order.

There may be a browser extension that already achieves this, and if so , would appreciate a heads up.
In the meantime, I've got to get back to re-organize this mess of browser tabs and windows.

ON A NEEDED BROWSER FEATURE

TAB, YOU'RE IT

First, let me confess that I'm a tab-a-holic.  Whether it's my primary Firefox browser, or Safari as a backup, and even Internet Explorer once in a while when on a Windows PC, I instantly end up opening at least half a dozen browser tabs as my windows on the world wide web.

Tabs have become indispensable to millions of web users ever since the concept was pioneered in a few early browsers like Opera almost a decade ago.

And every browser company has constantly tried to innovate to make them ever more useful and easier to use.

One of my favorites recently was the ability to move tabs WITHIN a Firefox browser window, placing it where you want.

I also like and use the ability to bookmark a full window's worth of tabs all at once, and then being able to load all of them at the click of a button the next time.

Here's the feature I want next, which is the reason for this post.
What I'd like next is the ability select a few tabs open non-contiguously within a window, and be able to move them to a separate new browser window.

How many times have you found yourself researching a topic, and before you know it, you have more than a dozen tabs open within a window, all mixed up by different topics.  And you just want to bookmark and save a a handful of them in a certain order.

There may be a browser extension that already achieves this, and if so , would appreciate a heads up.
In the meantime, I've got to get back to re-organize this mess of browser tabs and windows.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

ON A NEEDED VERSION OF iTUNES

WISH UPON A STAR

One of the top discussions on Techmeme today is around a TUAW story  titled "Rumors:  Apple working on iTunes controller for iPhone", focusing on the following:

"An anonymous tipster tells TUAW that according to code found in the latest firmware release, Apple is working on a new iPhone application called iControl. Like Apple TV and other remote controllers, it would allow the iPhone to connect wirelessly to local iTunes libraries and browse through and play media from those sources."

This is all very good, and I'll be among the first adopters if and when Apple does release a new iTunes manager for iPhone.

But I'd be even happier if Apple were "just" to release a new iTunes Manager for, well, iTunes.

Let me explain.

Over the last few years Apple has done a terrific job of making iTunes central for millions of both Windows and Mac users, in the way they use and manage over a 100 million iPods, and soon over 10 million iPhones world-wide.

By now, most iPod users have at least one iPod, and likely several iPods used by several members of their household.  And many users have more than one computer and/or laptop, that they use iTunes on, be it Windows or Mac.  Many of those households in turn have their various computers and laptops connected via a home network running ethernet and/or wireless Wifi.

Yet iTunes by itself remains quaintly designed for a world of almost a decade ago, when most people had one iPod, one computer, and no home network.

If you have more than one member of a household using the same version of iTunes for various iPods, they have to jump through several hoops to share an iTunes library with their individual play-lists, ratings, and sub-libraries of music and videos.

Forget making the iTunes library available over a home network via one computer and/or a home server, especially across Windows and Macs in a household.

And you'd better make sure you buy you music and videos via the one master computer that has the copy of iTunes everyone uses in the household.

If you buy a tune or video on a laptop attached to the same iTunes account (which is still archaically limited to five computers), then you have to sneaker-net that item back to the original iTunes library if you want to make sure it's backed up with the master library.

And forget syncing various iTunes libraries across various computers in a household with all the music and play-lists.  Cannot be done for now using Apple software.

Much of what can't be done above, CAN be done using third-party applications.  But using many of them is a bit of a learning curve into the intricacies of managing an iTunes library, that most mainstream folks won't have the patience to endure.

And there's no guarantee that those third-party apps will work immediately with the next upgrade of iTunes, which as most users know, tend to come fast and furious most of the time.  If something breaks, then one typically needs the patience and diligence of a CSI to figure out what went wrong and how to fix it.

So it's for all these reasons and more, that I fervently wish Apple would soon introduce an iTunes manager for iTunes. 

Followed of course by an iPhoto manager for iPhoto, which has some of the same issues as iTunes, albeit without a Windows version, for now.