Repercussions from Back to Mac

Yesterday’s Back to Mac event introduced the Mac Store, essentially the OS X version of the App Store. This and several other items signaled what many have expected for a while, i.e. that iOS was infiltrating OS X. Many are deconstructing the terms of the Mac Store, and several, including Mozilla’s Director of Firefox, Mike… Read More

Listen to Steve Jobs Wordsmith

Right, wrong, indifferent, Steve Jobs is an interesting person. This audio recording from Apple’s Q4 earnings call yesterday is no exception. Listen To Steve Jobs Rip Into Android And The Upcoming Tablet Competition [Audio] Interesting to me is the definition of “open” he uses, which makes sense if you’re Apple. Obviously, Google defines “open” as… Read More

Shibboleet!

You know you love xkcd. Today’s comic is up there with “sudo make me a sandwich“. Don’t forget to hover. Shibboleet is destined to become the bane of tech support call centers everywhere. I’m betting some will work it into their scripts. If at any point during the call, the customer says “shibboleet” immediately place… Read More

Facebook Flexes

I’m not really the best person to ask about Facebook anymore. Although I keep up with announcements and sometimes mess with new features, I just can’t use it anymore. I know, it’s funny right, considering how many posts I wrote about Facebook here over the years, but there are a couple reasons why I don’t… Read More

Gap or Bloat?

I read a post over on TechCrunch last week about bloatware, ostensibly about carrier software bundled with base Android. An interesting example provided to illustrate the overall point was the lack of a “Set image as wallpaper” option in Chrome and its open source sibling Chromium, and the outcry for that feature, which has its roots in… Read More

Journal Making Redux

A couple months ago, I mused about using services like foursquare (@foursquare) and GetGlue (@getglue) to document your life, one checkin at a time. Well, meet two more services that you could include in that list, and these two have higher aspirations for you, RunKeeper (@runkeeper) and Health Month (@healthmonth). While we’re here, I should… Read More

Who are North Korea’s 13 Twitter Friends?

Twitter’s transparency offers an interesting, mostly speculative, window into the minds of celebrities. Speculative, because you can’t always confirm who is tweeting, even in the case of verified accounts. Kanye West (@KanyeWest) being one noteworthy exception; you just can’t fake his tweets. The same transparency (and speculation) applies to the official Twitter accounts of countries,… Read More

The Real Life Social Network v2

Very interesting slide deck from Paul Adams (@padday) from Google. The Real Life Social Network v2 (h/t Paul) Facebook relaunched their groups feature yesterday, and I’ve been ruminating on groups as a feature. I might dump some thoughts on that later. Anyway, Paul (Adams, not Pedrazzi) includes some very interesting insights into social behavior, both… Read More

G2 Has an Anti-Rooting Rootkit, Not Good

This is not good. Newest Google Android Cell Phone Contains Unexpected ‘Feature’ — A Malicious Root Kit. | NewAmerica.net (h/t MobileCrunch) The short summary version: T-Mobile has added a rootkit to their soon-to-be released G2 Android phone that reportedly resets the phone to its original software after rooting. It’s unclear if the rootkit undoes both… Read More