You Need Seek Droid

A while back, I read about Seek Droid, a simple phone locating app, on Lifehacker. I finally got around to buying it ($0.99), mainly as a way to test buying apps using the new Android Market, and I’m impressed. There’s no magic with Seek Droid, or the now free iOS version, Find My iPhone/iPad. Basically,… Read More

Hans Rosling on the Joy of Stats

Speaking of a well-spent hour learning from the best, I highly recommend watching the BBC special called “The Joy of Stats” narrated by Hans Rosling (@hansrosling), another smart person Paul (@ppedrazzi) introduced me to years ago; yes, there’s a trend there. Aside from the big brain on Hans, the man’s exuberance about data is contagious. Update:… Read More

Isn’t Mobile Fun?

I remember about a decade ago reading about NTT DoCoMo and all the sweet things their customers could do with their phones. Around the same time, a newish wireless protocol called Bluetooth was on the rise, and aside from enabling printing over the air (squee!), it promised to empower these magical phones with mobile wallet… Read More

Mobile Web Apps vs. Native Apps

And so begins the next development war. 37 Signals officially announced Basecamp Mobile today, and gasp, it’s a mobile web app, not a native one or ones. Launch: Basecamp Mobile Sure, 37 Signals isn’t the first company to make this decision, but they are well-known and well-respected for both their development chops and their relentless… Read More

Smarter Phones, Weaker Passwords

Tim (@oraclebase) points out something Rich (@rmanalan) and I have previously discussed. Soft keypads foster weak passwords. Do virtual keyboards promote weak passwords? | The ORACLE-BASE Blog Having to shift for capital letters and switch keyboards for some special characters is bad enough, but when coupled with the inconsistent implementation of keyboards between OSes, a… Read More

Should Tumblr Care?

Well this is interesting. Should Tumblr care? In response to issues with Tumblr, David Karp tells users to “go away” if they don’t like it I love what services like Posterous and Tumblr are doing, but after dabbling a bit, I quickly found that having as much control as possible was the way to go,… Read More

WebCenter Enterprise Methodology Group

Time to talk business for a second. Chet (@oraclenerd) actually told me about the newly-formed WebCenter Enterprise Methodology Group last week. WebCenter Enterprise Methodology Group « Peter Moskovits’ Oracle WebCenter Blog This group was started by Yannick Ongena (@yannick_ongena), and it joins existing EMGs for ADF, OBIEE and SOA-BPM. The EMG concept was developed and grown… Read More