Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The chicken or the egg???

Eureka-Podcast-Icon

The age old question for those of us involved in Engineering and science has been: does the collective imagination of writers and producers influence us as inventors, or does our inventions fuel the fictional creations of the creative?

The most popular argument given, although somewhat of a joke now, has asked: did the early works of Gene Rodenberry and his “wagon train” to the stars, Star Trek, influence a generation of engineers and scientist, or was it their influence that gave him the creative outlet to create such a series that even today, it enjoys a franchised success rivaled by no other, still fueling the imagination of the creative, and the scientific….

Though I believe that the real answer is somewhere in the middle, and each group truly influences the other, it is interesting to see the world changing before our eyes, as harkened by the news that the actors and writers from the current re-imaged Battlestar Galactica are meeting with the UN to discuss issues such as human rights, children, and the global problem of armed conflict, among other issues.

Sometimes it is nice to realize that the human race is, and can, grow up.

Link to the news article.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Tech Economy

According to TechCrunch, Tech Layoffs Come Back With a Vengeance: 80,000 In January, Approaching 200,000 Total

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Photo
What am I reading this week:

  • Enterprise 2.0by Niall Cook, Don Tapscott [via Amazon]


What Movies am I watching this week:


Blurbs, Professional:


Blurbs, Personal:

Friday, December 05, 2008

Daily Notes

IMG_0095
What am I reading this week?


Professional:

Personal:

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Daily Interest - Professional:

10 Stupid Things ERP Software Salespeople Say

The Day The Web Went Dead



Daily Interest - Personal:

T3 Top Ten: Reasons to LOVE netbooks

T3 Top Ten: Reasons to HATE netbooks

It took 90 minutes for Daily News to 'steal' the Empire State Building

Easy Wi-Fi Takes Annoyances Out of Free AT&T Hotspots (Free til Friday)

Santa's Gmail Account


Interesting Web Sites:

Nombray, own your web

Power.com


Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Blurbs, Professional:

Startup Funding - Startup Valuation at the Friends and Family Round

The First-Time CEO’s Recession Survival Guide



Monday, September 08, 2008

The future has arrived...soon to be replacing your morning newspaper, or subway ride magazine.


Plastic Logic Electronic Reading Device (
eReader)

On October 19th, 2005  I wrote an short article that caused a surprising stir amongst my contemporaries in the Newspaper industry (5,000 hits in one day), the article titled: Print is Dead, was meant to eschew the coming changes within the print media, delve into the role of blogging and how it challenges the news gathering role, and take a practical look at the coming eReader revolution, leaving traditional newsprint to die slowly as ad revenues fell. 

I reanimate this horse because there is movement on all fronts. Firstly, there is new information regarding negative momentum, as newspapers ad revenues decrease at downhill speed; secondly, the greater role that blogging is playing and often overshadowing the role of print media in traditional news gathering, and lastly, the device quotient that would seal the fall of traditional print media. 

The device I reference above is stunningly cool, and to be truthful, I am giddy at the prospects... and what device released has made me prattle on like a school girl... Plastic Logic's Electronic Reading Device  (I know what you're thinking: not a very retail friendly name!).

So what has Plastic Logic done differently then the Amazon Kindle or the Sony eReader?  Firstly, they have made me a soothsayer by releasing a product that I foretold of in 2006, a device that would woo the average Joe from his newsprint sullied hands!  But kidding aside, they have released an Electronic Reading Device that Joe Q. Public will buy handily, a device with the optimum form factor for mass adoption, battery life in terms of days instead of hours, versatility at reading multiple eBook formats, and wireless connectivity options to boot.  A device such as this is what the market has dreamed of, and should be the tipping point that encourages eReaders to become mainstream.

We are at a crossroads, though minor, it's nice to recognize the point of origin.

*Ed Note: Engadget has a write up and better photos of Plastic Logic's Electronic Reading Device [via Engadget]

Friday, September 05, 2008


Cheryl enjoying a nice quiet night at home (notice the Dora book?)

My Calendar of Events for September:

Daily Interest - Professional:

  • Negative Momentum: Newspaper Ad Revenues Gaining Downhill Speed (Even Online Is Declining)[via TechCrunch]
  • Online TV Viewing Approaches the Mainstream [via NewsFactor]
  • Does a Tech Manager Need to Be Tech-Savvy? [via CIO, a worthwhile read...]
  • Google Exec Praises Apple iPhone, Chrome Browser [via CIO]
  • Acer expected to ship two million netbooks in 3Q08 [via DigiTimes]

Daily Interest - Personal:

  • Great American Beer Festival [via beertown.org]
  • Concrete-Jet Robot Prints Out Houses [via BotJunkie]
  • Dell Inspiron Mini 9 Has Hidden Built-In 3G [via Gizmodo]
  • 10 videos of ejection seat tests [ via OObject]
  • Acer Aspire One's 6-cell is a whole lot cheaper bundled [via Engadget]
  • 10 Things No One Tells You About Parenthood [from My Wife, via MSN]

Web sites of Interest:

Companies of Interest:

iPhone Apps:

* Editorial Note: You may notice in the last few posts the style and formats have been changing, that is purposeful, as I have been experimenting with different formats to enhance readability.

-Thanks, Drew M.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

 
OK, so I do hog the Lego's....

This morning I downloaded Google's latest and greatest, Chrome. Here are my thoughts after using for the day.

What I don't like:

  1. Freezes when opening up certain web pages for 15-20 seconds.
  2. Two crashes back to back when I first loaded the app (entire app, not just a window).
  3. Some pages don’t work, just ran into a problem loading JiWire.com. [check TechCrunch for a list]
  4. Absence of Plugins! I use FoxMarks, ScribeFire, TwitterFox, and Evernote all day, I do not want to live without them as they make my life easier (I know the community can add them...).
  5. Lack of Google Apps, Gmail, Domain, AdSense, etc. integration... I think this was a blown opportunity.
  6. I have read the ELUA, and the ownership issues do concern me significantly, regardless whether they are similar to the Google Apps language. I understand Google will be remedying this soon [via Gizmodo].

What I do like:

  1. HTML rendering is reminiscent of Apple’s Safari, and is just short of stunning.
  2. Tab are in the right place - finally!
  3. I like the minimalist feel of the User Interface.
  4. Imported everything beautifully from FireFox... Bookmarks and Passwords.
  5. In Firefox, I open 17 tabs simultaneously every morning, though Chrome chewed on it a little longer, it opened these with aplomb.

As I said above the ownership concerns are distressing, and the lack of any plugins at launch, even Google demonstration plugins was remiss, but overall I like Chrome for a first attempt, unfortunately, I think we have come to expect more from Google.

You can get Google's new Chrome here.



Two interests = too much trouble....

What am I reading this week?

Blurbs of Interest - Professional:

  • Customer Disservice: How Much Is It Costing You? [via CRM Daily]
  • Reboot Your Workflow This Fall [via LifeHacker]
  • Six Degrees of Separation Is Now Three [via TechCrunch]
  • Surgient Software Creates 'Self-Service Cloud [via CIO]
  • California claims copyright over it's laws? [via pressdemocrat]
  • Apple's 'Let's Rock' Invites Stir Announcement Rumors [via NewsFactor.com]

Blurbs of Interest - Personal:

  • New iRobot Roombas Aimed at Pets and Very Dirty People [via Gizmodo]
  • LED Trojan Horse [via Yanko Design]
  • Huge spider is latest arts event [via BBC]
  • AT&T Outage hits the East Coast [via Engadget]
  • 'ice shelf nearly the size of Manhattan has broken away' [via CNN]
  • Media Sync syncs from iTunes onto any phone [via salling.com]
  • Trek District ($930; November 2008) [via Uncrate]
  • Check out PleaseDressMe the T-shirt search engine [PleaseDressMe]

Blurbs of Interest - Dad Stuff:

Monday, August 25, 2008

Macy_gets

Baby wants water, Baby gets water!

What I am reading this week:

Articles of Interest - Business:

Companies of Interest:

Articles of Interest - Personal:

Dad Stuff:

Updates... I have updated the following with current information: