Saturday, November 21, 2009
Sparta and the disturbing flexibility of human culture
Chrome OS - the Parental Controls
When to accept an Apple OS update
Snow Leopard
.... In my experience with Tiger & Leopard, a really usable version isn't available until around the .4 timeframe. My guess is the same will be true with SL. I play with a SL partition every now and then (whilst I test things like SoftRAID - great!), but I need a system that works.
SL ain't there yet, and once again, Steve Jobs and company thank us all very much for paying to be beta testers."Apple's point OS updates, like 10.5 to 10.6, are dramatic; even those like 10.6 that add few marketed features.
--
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Google's failures - and recent improvements
The Quick
- Search and Scholar
- Android
- Google Reader
- Google Reader Comments and Shares
- Gmail
- Google Contacts
- Google Mobile Sync
- Chrome browser
- Chrome OS
- Picasa and Picasa Web Albums
- Calendar
- Maps
- Earth
- News
- Browser toolbars
- Translate
- Gmail Tasks (promoted)
- Custom search engines (promoted)
- YouTube (promoted)
- Mobile (promoted)
- Google Talk (promoted)
- Books (because they keep trying)
- Google Voice (iPhone web app frozen in time)
- Google Sites
- Google Apps
- Google Video Chat (demoted)
- Blogger (demoted)
- Shopping
- Google Checkout
- Google Base
- Orkut
- Desktop
- iGoogle
- Knol (all-but-dead)
- Google Notebook
- Google Page Creator
- Google Browser Sync
- Google Video
- Google Groups (demoted)
- Google Web Accelerator
- Google Name Verification (Knol)
- Google Gears
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Fans of Glenn Beck
Glenn Beck - Salon.com--
... every person in the last 2 years that I have introduced to the WN [White Nationalist] Philosophy have come largely from Alex Jones, Glen Beck and the Scriptures for America founder Pastor Pete Peters ... Baby steps are required for people like these, but the trio Beck, Jones, Peters are the baby food that feeds potential Nationalists… Glenn Beck is not far behind as his Mormon background indicates to me as most Mormons I have met are not friends of Jews like the Church was years ago...
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Twilight of the mail
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Friday, November 20, 2009
Health IT Standards - what I would do
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
How much is the gBook in the Window?
Q: Do you know what this Chrome OS netbooks will cost?Huh?
SP: You will hear that from our partners. They will be in the price range that people are used to for netbooks today. But it’s hard to predict a year from now. Also remember, they will be bigger.
What ChromeOS Means For Netbooks And Why Microsoft Needs To Be Scared
... ChromeOS may not be powerful, it may not play Far Cry and it may not run Microsoft Office but it’s a game changer. The underpowered laptops that limped along under Vista, XP, or 7 will fly under a new ChromeOS regime and thin-and-light laptops will fall below the vaunted $199 mark as the so-called “Microsoft Tax” – basically the small cost manufacturers pay for OEM licenses – disappears."..The XP tax, by the way, is less than $25.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
A smart mind is a dangerous thing to waste
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Paul Graham on the price of the App Store
Apple's MistakeStart with allowing Google's products.
... I suppose Apple has a third misconception: that all the complaints about App Store approvals are not a serious problem. They must hear developers complaining. But partners and suppliers are always complaining. It would be a bad sign if they weren't; it would mean you were being too easy on them. Meanwhile the iPhone is selling better than ever. So why do they need to fix anything?
They get away with maltreating developers, in the short term, because they make such great hardware. I just bought a new 27" iMac a couple days ago. It's fabulous. The screen's too shiny, and the disk is surprisingly loud, but it's so beautiful that you can't make yourself care.
So I bought it, but I bought it, for the first time, with misgivings. I felt the way I'd feel buying something made in a country with a bad human rights record. That was new. In the past when I bought things from Apple it was an unalloyed pleasure. Oh boy! They make such great stuff. This time it felt like a Faustian bargain. They make such great stuff, but they're such assholes. Do I really want to support this company?
Health insurance: we're defeated by a complexity attack
- The graphical portion of the simulation is probably wrong.
- Disregarding the graphical part, and parsing out rollover of the "HRA" part, and factoring in various combination of pre-tax and post-tax contributions and Flex guesses the plans are more similar than the appear -- but the numbers may be wrong
- The numbers in one resource are quite different from the simulation/web site numbers. They don't add up. On the other hand, one of the simulation numbers is probably wrong.
- Gordon's Notes: Employment benefit complexity: we are sheep
- Gordon's Notes: The hidden insurance problem: they can play the game better than we can
AT&T “A List” – the gift that’s not
AT&T markets a new “A List” feature…
Enjoy unlimited calls to and from the phone numbers in your A-List. Your A-List can include valid domestic phone numbers for any domestic service provider - wireless or landline.
I’ve added my corporate conference call number to my AT&T “A List”. The list already includes my home landline and, especially, the Google Voice number that connects me to Canada for free.
Once this is effective my corporate conference calls shouldn’t use any of my minutes (even toll-free calls use minutes).
Since Google Voice and Google Talk combined with the A List mean my whole family uses less than 300 minutes a month, we no longer need our family plan of 1,400. I’ve be fine with only 550 minutes.
Wow! I could drop my bill from $80 to $40. What a great feature …
Ahh. But you know there’s a hook, don’t you?
The A list feature is only available for plans with 1,400 minutes and up.
AT&T isn’t stupid. Crooked, sure. Stupid, no.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
The cat brain simulator. Game over?
... IBM said it has already simulated a cat-sized cerebral cortex — the area of the brain that's key to memory, attention, and consciousness — using a massive Blue Gene supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.
This feline-scale cortical simulation, which was made with the help of researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, included 1 billion neurons and 10 trillion individual learning synapses. The simulation ran 100 to 1,000 times slower than real-time, said Dharmendra Modha, manager of IBM's Cognitive Computing unit at its Almaden Research Center, in a blog post.and from a completely different direction ...
- Gordon's Notes 2004: Rat brain flies plane -- organic neural network
- Gordon's Notes: Aaronson critiques Kurzweil and the 2045 Singularity
- SETI, the Fermi Paradox and The Singularity: Why our search for extraterrestial intelligence has failed
- Gordon's Notes: Signs of the singularity: science fiction gives up
- Gordon's Notes: Imagining the Singularity in 1965…
- Gordon's Notes: The Economist predicts an early Singularity through neuroengineering
- Gordon's Notes: Singularity watch: Google maps is now smarter than me
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
The paradox of 21st century prosperity
Robert Reich's Blog: Obama, China, and Wishful Thinking About American Jobs... The dirty little secret on both sides of the Pacific is that both America and China are capable of producing far more than their own consumers are capable of buying. In the U.S., the root of the problem is a growing share of total income going to the richest Americans, leaving the middle class with relatively less purchasing power unless they go deep into debt. Inequality is also widening in China, but the problem there is a declining share of the fruits of economic growth going to average Chinese and an increasing share going to capital investment...
- Gordon's Notes 2008 (another Reich article): Tipping points and GD 2.0: speculations and lessons
- Gordon's Notes 2005: David Brin on hierarchical societies
- Gordon's Notes 2005: Neo-feudalism
- Gordon's Notes 2004: Jared Bernstein & Brad DeLong on "Outsourcing": a dialog with interesting commentary
- NY Times 2009: Rich turn to concierge services to find value (and avoid fraud)
Monday, November 16, 2009
The world is going to get bigger
I don’t fly that much these days – maybe 10 flights a year. Yesterday I took one of my longer flights – from Minneapolis to San Francisco. On that flight I again thought about how the world is getting a bit bigger, and that it may get a lot bigger fairly soon.
That’s new. For most of my life the world got smaller. Air fare, especially as a percentage of average income, kept falling. Families spread out. My generation moved to take new jobs.
Air fares aren’t falling any more, and most people’s incomes aren’t rising much. When I consider increased costs of health insurance, my disposable income will be down this year – and I’ve been relatively fortunate.
On the other hand, air fare to Montreal (for example0 has more than doubled in the past nine months. The carriers reduced capacity, bought the competition, and now fly fewer but fuller planes at 2-3 times past fares.
Industry consolidation will continue to boost prices, but so will cap-and-trade carbon tax equivalents. There’s something much bigger coming though…
Energy security body calls for 'urgent' review of impact of oil shortages - Business – guardian
… Swedish academics unveiled their latest assessments of the numbers and came to even more gloomy assumptions. The study from Uppsala University entitled The Peak of the Oil Age estimated that by 2030 the world would be able to rely on only 75m barrels of oil a day, compared with the 105m forecast by the IEA.
Until relatively recently the agency was assuming the output figure would be as high as 120m and it still believes a peak of production could be reached in 2020, while Uppsala believes it might have already been reached…
I made my own “demand/supply peak light sweet” call in 2008 – in which I made wild ass claim that it would be apparent by 2015 that the demand/supply ratio for light sweet crude would cause prices to rise and crash and rise and crash their way to the $200/barrel mark (rise and crash because of secondary recessions, $200 because at that point serious conservation starts to align supply and demand).
Between some kind of carbon-tax-equivalent and “peak oil” of any form, air travel will at least double in cost over the next five years – even as profits continue to be squeezed.
That means a much bigger world to cross for the dispersed families of my generation. Maybe the next generation should stay closer to home base.
High speed rail, by the way, is looking pretty interesting.
Update 11/16/09: A follow-up article by The Guardian’s Monbiot: The one thing depleting faster than oil is the credibility of those measuring it - George Monbiot
Update 11/17/09: It occurs to me that a good measure of how real this stuff is would be to watch how very wealthy and smart people invest. I recall thatWarren Buffett recently bought some railways, and of course I'm not the only eccentric sort to make this connection ...