July 11, 2009

From Twitter 07-10-2009

  • 01:25:22: @prgully Great. Is it QFLM or something else? I get the feeling that something unexpected is cooking...Quicken 2009 for Mac?
  • 01:32:12: @prgully That was quick...no pun intended. Great news! Although many Mac users will have a 'believe it when I see it' reaction.
  • 01:32:50: RT @prgully: An update for Quicken for Mac customers: Quicken for Mac Release Date is February 2010 - http://shar.es/hL3U
  • 01:33:30: Looks like the expunging of QFLM from Quicken's website was because it HAS been killed, in favour of a proper Quicken version.
  • 01:34:07: Now that they're not trying to re-invent the wheel (as a square) and instead going back to what works, it won't take as long as QFLM did.
  • 01:35:17: Right decision by Quicken. QFLM beta was simply terrible. Pointless use of coverflow interface. Less functionality than Quicken 2007.
  • 01:40:23: Now that I know there's a new version of Quicken for Mac on the way, I WANT IT NOW.
  • 01:46:32: @prgully That should be "show me MY money". That's what Quicken does after all. :-) Thanks for reaching out to us in this way.
  • 01:48:51: @prgully So how do I sign up for the beta test?
  • 02:50:19: @ThatKevinSmith When Eric Clapton had similar thoughts, he went off and wrote Wonderful Tonight instead...
  • 02:54:28: NFL bans players from Twittering during games. http://is.gd/1svg3 (via @BrettTrout) (via @arstechnica)
  • 07:31:22: "I have been and always shall be your BFF, Jim!" #1stdraftmovielines
  • 07:37:01: "Talk? No, Mr Bond, I expect you to be cut in half by my frickin' laser beam!" #1stdraftmovielines
  • 14:20:06: @patlaw White will discolour eventually. Black will show up fingerprints but can be wiped clean. It's quite tough so doesn't scratch easily.

Tweets copied by twittinesis.com

July 10, 2009

From Twitter 07-09-2009

  • 09:40:26: RT @kaj33: Ariza was trying 2 get more money cuz this was his first outstanding year. Artest was willing to sign for the $$$ he turned down.
  • 12:02:18: Lebron confiscated all video of a kid dunking on him - I thought we were all witnesses? Guess the King With No Ring doesn't want us to be.
  • 14:55:43: @kaj33 YOU. And winning championships.
  • 17:07:43: Suddenly been overcome with paranoia about what to do if Quicken 2007 for Mac stops working. Tried QFLM beta again and it sucks.
  • 17:08:50: May have no choice but to run Quicken for Windows in emulation, if Quicken 2007 dies. It should at least survive Snow Leopard, I guess.
  • 17:31:50: Isn't Google's OS just a repackaging of Chrome? And won't it mean that your computer is useless when you're not connected to the internet?
  • 17:34:46: And why does Chrome need repackaging? 'Cuz it's a FAILURE. To most people, it's just another browser.
  • 19:54:47: Voice control for iPhone 3GS sounds cool...but will I be able to ask it to play Elva Hsiao and Jolin Tsai?

Tweets copied by twittinesis.com

July 09, 2009

Not so easy after all...

Apologies for the break in transmission...although I'm not sure anyone really reads this blog anyway.

So...just when I thought LoudTwitter had given me a convenient and easy way to keep this blog updated, it died. I've just set up an account with Twittinesis which is supposed to do what LoudTwitter did (although the author of Twittinesis seems to be in a mild panic at his sudden spike in users), and let's see how it goes. LoudTwitter has been a great way to blog without actually putting in the regular effort, so hopefully Twittinesis works just as well, if only as a way for me to capture my random thoughts somewhere for sheer narcissism's sake.

June 30, 2009

Free?

Chris (Long Tail, Wired editor) Anderson's new book Free is out. My gut reaction is scepticism - what he's talking about isn't really making stuff completely free, but just finding some other way to pay for creativity. While Malcolm Gladwell's criticisms probably are slightly overblown because they take Anderson as advocating that content should be made completely free, I think there are serious problems in Anderson's basic argument, in contrast to his Long Tail argument which made a lot of sense to me. His concept of 'Free' could be taken as the logical extension of the Long Tail, but there's probably a point beyond which the original concept ceases to work...

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Free?" »

June 29, 2009

Party

Busy today, because we had a combined party for Ryan's 4th birthday and Sophie's 1st month. Photos and a report sometime in the future, once I get my act together.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Party" »

June 28, 2009

The Apple Way

Just loved Gruber's line about Apple : "...better nothing at all than something less than great."

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "The Apple Way" »

June 27, 2009

Jacko R.I.P.

Woke up, picked up my iPhone, read the WSJ update that said Jacko's in hospital. Actually laughed out lot, thinking that he was finding a way out of the comeback concerts in London that nobody in their right mind should've believed he could pull off, unless he appeared for just a few minutes each night (as has been rumored was contractually stipulated).

Then I flick to the next e-mail. Further update from WSJ - Jacko's dead.

---

I've never been a Michael Jackson fan. Objectively, his music is good - some if it even great - but I've never understood the adulation he attracts. How do people see past his weirdness (and that's putting it charitably, insofar as the molestation allegations go)? And why does he continue to gain fans when his last good stuff was released over 20 years ago, and he's barely released anything since?

Anyway, this is going to be Elvis all over again, ironically given his past marriage to Lisa Marie. There will be Jacko sightings, and conspiracy theories...Jacko transcended real life long ago, and so his death seems in some ways just a case of the facts catching up with the (un-)reality.

Sorry if that sounds harsh - I don't wish him ill at all. Indeed, there's a part of me that feels he's probably better off now, away from all the things that made him so obviously an unhappy person during his lifetime.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Jacko R.I.P." »

June 26, 2009

Leave Steve alone!

I am really sick of the media's attempts to stir up a controversy over Apple's non-disclosure of Steve Jobs' liver transplant. While the critics claim to be protecting investors' interest, it's pretty obvious that triggering a panic by announcing the news earlier would've been unduly damaging to AAPL's stock price. However, such a drop in the stock would've been wholly disproportionate and due to the completely overblown (and media-stoked) perception that Apple's success is entirely reliant on Jobs.

There's no doubt that he's a big part of Apple's multi-year resurgence, probably the biggest part, but the company's businesses (Macs, iPhones, iPods) are all now long-established and thriving, and won't fall apart simply because Jobs has to back off from day-to-day operations. It's in big-picture strategy that his main contribution to Apple's success lies, and despite all the noise, there's nothing to suggest that Jobs was, at any time, near death or incapable of continuing to contribute to major strategic decisions (apart from, one would imagine, the time when he was actually being operated on).

I think the fundamental question is this: was Jobs' illness and consequent need for a liver transplant really an immediate threat to Apple's business, or is that mainly an exaggerated perception that has been actively promoted and promulgated by the press? In my opinion, the numbers speak for themselves - Apple's business has continued to thrive despite Jobs being on medical leave, objectively demonstrating that he really isn't as vital to Apple's success as the press has made out.

In other words, just because some stupid investors might panic because of what they've been led to believe by the press, the reality is that Jobs' liver transplant did not, at the time, represent any real immediate danger to Apple's ongoing business. Apple shouldn't be subjected to a higher standard of disclosure simply because the press has decided to manufacture a cult of personality (and thus, a myth of indispensibility) around Steve Jobs.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Leave Steve alone!" »

June 25, 2009

Peace in our time

So it turns out as I expected it would - the entry of the deep-pocketed manufacturers, unused to being ordered around, meant that Max held a losing hand. Once the manufacturers went nuclear with their breakaway series threat, the commercial interests behind Bernie left the erstwhile supremo with no option but to stick the knife in his long-time ally's back. By doing that, Bernie appears to have saved his (and CVC's) own share of the pie, at least until 2012.

As I write this, Max is trying to restart things by threatening to run after all, but it seems like just a last-minute attempt to save face, after his initial pathetically-transparent attempts to spin it as a personal victory failed in the face of FOTA's 'deep background' briefings. FOTA was clearly trying to be magnanimous in victory, but the unattributed 'real story' in many articles made the truth clear - Max had been forced to back down.

Ultimately, this was a victory for F1 fans. As I blogged previously, Max's ham-fisted attempt to ram the unreasonable budget cap down the manufacturers' throats would have resulted in a "dual-track" championship - even if they wanted to, there was no way that the manufacturers could have slashed their budgets sufficiently, and thus they'd have been condemned to burn money while new teams running according to different regulations ran away from them.

As I've blogged in the past, such a championship would've been a farce. Faced with those prospects, it's no surprise that FOTA concluded that they had to hold the line.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Peace in our time" »

June 24, 2009

Nice try, Celtics

So the Celtics are shopping Rondo? He was clearly their best player in the playoffs, but I guess Ainge is trying to repeat his trick twice, and trade the future for another quick ring.

Unfortunately, it isn't so easy being a "great GM" when you don't have a former Celtic giving you a present on the other side of the negotiations. Joe Dumars isn't stupid, nor is he going to be in a hurry to do the Celtics any favours, even if the Pistons themselves are in a rebuilding process.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Nice try, Celtics" »

June 23, 2009

One million iPhone 3GSes?

Dear Apple,

It's great you sold a million of 'em, but can you please figure out an elegant way to pluralize "iPhone 3GS"? It is one million iPhone 3GSes, or one million 3GS iPhones, or one million iPhones 3GS? 'Cuz your press release stating "one million iPhone 3GS models" makes it sound like you were selling a million different varieties of 3GS.

At the very least, "one million iPhone 3GS handsets" would've been better.

Cheers, and well done!

(P.S. Nice way to subtly slip in Steve's return to work...better than making a big deal out of it, which would only reinforce the wrong perception that Apple depends solely on him!)

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "One million iPhone 3GSes?" »

June 22, 2009

Ooooo-YEAH!

Looking forward to watching the Macho Man DVD collection...it's a pity that the bad blood between him and Vince (rumored to arise from Macho making a pass or doing something derogatory at Steph) prevents WWE from doing more to promote this collection.

Unlike Ric Flair, whom I only came to appreciate when I became a 'serious' wrestling fan in the 'naughties, Randy Savage was my childhood favorite wrestler. Still remember marking out while watching the video of Savage's face-turn, when Elizabeth saved him from Honky-Tonk and he subsequently carried her on his shoulder around the ring. Plus, of course, watching the Megapowers unite then break up.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Ooooo-YEAH!" »

June 21, 2009

Jobs' Liver

Wow, this was a surprise. It's amazing that he kept it quiet this long, and it's pretty obvious that the news has only broken because of an intentional leak from within Apple. The timing is just too good, with the successful launch of the iPhone 3GS to cushion it.

Ultimately, this sounds like good news. If he needed it, the liver transplant can only be a good thing (as opposed to not getting one), and the story also confirms that he'll be back at work. In the meantime, Apple has been executing brilliantly, since that's been Tim Cook's job all along.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Jobs' Liver" »

June 20, 2009

The End of F1?

Somehow I doubt so. What's happening is that the teams are now largely owned by manufacturers or otherwise deep-pocketed backers, and they've realised that their collective bargaining power can stand up to Max and Bernie. I've a feeling this will end with Max reluctantly agreeing not to run for FIA president again, F1 continuing next year without the budget cap, and Bernie still making pots of money (although possibly slightly less).

Ultimately, all parties stand to lose money if F1 dies. In the long run, FOTA might be better off with their own championship, but I suspect the start-up costs of such a venture are prohibitive, especially in the present climate. Who is going to do all the marketing, organisation and promotional work for them, and more importantly who is going to pay for it? And what about the whole infrastructure of stewards, marshals and everything else?

Ironically, you have to think that this uprising against the Max/Bernie dictatorship could only happen because Max ultimately succeeded in pushing Ron Dennis out of the top seat at McLaren. With Todt also gone, the way because open for a rapprochement between the teams, particularly Ferrari and McLaren.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "The End of F1?" »

June 19, 2009

Kobe in Dreamland

Watched Kobe's appearance on The Tonight Show. It's really wonderful to see how happy he looks. He's always come across as tortured, moody and misunderstood, but now he just looks like a man living in a perfect world, completely at peace with himself.

With the earlier Kobe-Shaq championships, although they did come after some struggles, there was ultimately something easier about them. There were more shoulders (like Shaq's rather large ones) to share the burdens, and it's almost as if the Lakers - and us fans - took them for granted, especially after the first one.

But after all that Kobe has been through since then, it's easy to understand why he feels so happy now. But the great thing is that you know he's going to come back just as hungry next year, except that the rest of the team will also have the experience and confidence that comes with having won it all before.

All the focus now is on whether Ariza and Lamar will come back, although the press has also been trying desperately to engineer some drama over the possibility of opting out. Personally, I think it's virtually guaranteed that Ariza and Lamar will be brought back, although Shannon Brown might be a couple of million too much for Dr Buss - if anything, Farmar's improved play towards the end of the championship run might have sealed Brown's fate, unless he's prepared to accept only a modest raise.

Yesterday's YellowHandTweets after the cut, posted by LoudTwitter.

Continue reading "Kobe in Dreamland" »

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