Category Archives: Uncategorized

is the ipod touch an iphone without the phone? yeah, but man, i can see why everyone’s trying to rip off the app store. awesome apps.a nd awesome video. and awesome wi-fi (when there’s a decent network around.) i’ve never paid a cent for an app. that will mean i’ve not got some awesome apps, but i’m pretty sure that once i start buying apps, i’ll be opening the floodgates. a just like with music on itunes. $70 bucks has disappeared without my even realising it. damn awesome business plan. maybe i’ll start dabbling in paid apps soon. but free apps rock. just like the 2 best free mac apps: Quinn, for the Tetris nerds amongst us, and QuickSilver, entirely indispensable for launching programs and opening stuff.

is there anything to do on facebook now other than become the fan of stuff? doesn’t seem so. other than playing geochallenge. which gets really old really quick. but it is good for learning flags.

today is the day that i am back. and good to be back it is. not sure how long i’ll be back for. but today is a good day. particularly for what happened 203 and 204 years ago. which is the better? that would require a long debate, but i like both, and that’s reason enough to call it a good day. so suck on that bolt of lightening Charleyhorse. and you too you turncoat alex. may you live on as mere babes in the hands of a giant.

vive l’empereur!

 

and go franchini!!!

iTunes is the big dog. with a bigger marketshare than WalMart and any other US music retailer, this is not the issue. the issue is keeping me coming back. i’ve not bought anything from the iTunes store for a while now, and with amazon selling higher bit-rate non-DRM music, there is an incentive for me to go elsewhere for my music purchases. and there’s the lure of the physical CD itself, at a higher bitrate than amazon again, and without DRM.

but my preference would be iTunes, even despite the lower quality. let me explain.

there’s iTunes regular and iTunes plus music for purchase. the regular version provides 128kbs with DRM and the plus provides 256kbs without DRM. clearly the latter is better as the prices are the same (although they weren’t originally) as we all like quality, and if we need the smaller files, we can always down-convert, whereas you can’t up-convert to the same effect. and the amount of Plus songs available has increased. several Queen albums are now available in the Plus variety and the price has dropped (Queen, the eponymous debut album can be got for NZ $11 in Plus variety, whereas it used to be $18 in the regular variety, for example)

i’m not so much out to bash the record companies here but to put down an idea. well, it’s two that are sort of dovetailed to a certain extent.

the first part is a loyalty program. the more songs you buy/money one spends, the next songs become cheaper. say the first 100 or so (pick a number, exactly what is a much more thorny issue) songs are sold at US 99c. then chop off a cent or two per song (all pain with by credit card so those of us in countries without 1c coins don’t suffer from the evils of rounding) for the next x songs. this will keep people coming back. however, the problem here is the record companies. their general policies have shown them to be rather retarded generally. apple apparently makes bugger-all, if not anything on the music part of the iTunes store, but it does keep the iPods flowing out the doors, which is where they make the real money. and cheaper songs for loyal customers would certainly not hinder that.

but then there’s the Steve, who seems to be entirely against split-level pricing. and the argument for this is a good one, everything is a x level, and thus there’s no doubt in the customer’s mind as to how much the bloody thing costs. but this fixed level pricing seems to be leaving. there’s SD movies at one level (i can’t remember whether it’s 1.99 or 2.99 or 3.99) and HD a dollar more. same for TV shows, the HD are a dollar more. song by song there is continuity in pricing, but by album there is certainly variation. i’ve seen albums for $9.99, and i can’t remember exactly what the highest price was, but for some collection it was in the hundreds of dollars. anyway, the point is that there’s also a good case against the policy of fixed-level pricing- it’s not being done. but at least we’re paying with dollars and cents, rather than credits like at a certain other store.

whether cutting the price for loyal customers would actually pay off would require a look at the books in terms of how many more iPods it would sell, how willing the record companies would be and a myriad of other factors that can’t be pondered, they must be known.

the case i wish to proffer is that of a sort of subscription service within iTunes. despite the attractiveness of going elsewhere, most people (in the US at least) go to iTunes for their (legal) music. if i could pay a monthly fee for the following, i would be happy:

access to listen to anything in the iTunes catalogue
and the ability to keep a certain number of these songs as my own, and a small fee for extras over the limit

this would allow me to sample a lot of music, but it would also allow me to own the stuff i want to and it would also serve as a sort of loyalty thing as the price for the extra songs could be less than the price if they were purchased separately. this would also keep the money rolling in, what’s more this could also cut down on the credit card transactions that have to be processed (and thus paid for) because instead of say, buying an album a week, and the credit card processing happening once a week, there would be one credit card thing a month, and then any extras. again, this is just theory. but it seems to be sound.

that would give iTunes even more clout. but as the record companies seem to be trying to set up something as a viable competitor to iTunes, methinks this ain’t gonna happen, as the record labels will be ceding more power to Apple, which they don’t seem to want to do.

we could have something that rates as better than the current iTunes store, but the wombles at the record labels are showing their brilliance by clinging desperately to the model that worked when people bought sheet music by the truckload.

when it was announced, the iPhone was the be all and end all of mobile phones. despite the fact that some companies, not to mention names, are making it so damn expensive for a meager amount of data that it’s ridiculous, the iPhone still has that zang. it was that zang that got it all over the news when it was announced. and it was that zang that got it all over the news when it actually came out. even the NZ news covered it, even when the phone was released solely in the US.

what about the T-Mobile G1? twas announced earlier this week. no NZ news. and Apple didn’t even market it

how can Apple take the iPhone even further? get themselves out of the exclusive partnerships, first of all. it’s gonna be harder for rival companies to tell Apple that they don’t want x in the phone when their competitor has it.

but there’s an even more drastic step they could take.

the time of wired connections is drawing to a close. with WIMAX and varying other wireless technologies that let us have access to the internet just like we get access to phone towers there would be a colossal advantage. and that seems to be where we’re going. there’s free public WIFI in many major US cities, and within the century we’ll have that here too. but things move on. soon the internet will be like the cell phone network. everywhere. no need for wires. merely turn the device on and you’ll be on. this will be a big thing not just for computers but for phones too.

apple does computers and apple does phones. this couldn’t really be done as a Chrome sort of thing. there’s far too much of an infrastructure cost. so apple would have to go in playing hardball- trying to get a big enough chunk of the cell phone market to make it viable- and this would go along with apple’s vertical market at the moment- they make the software and they make the hardware and tie them together. an Apple cell network would let Apple do what it wants on its network, rather than having to share its toys with big telcos. and Apple would make it attractive, as they do with practically everything they do.

but how wise is it to invest in a telco (for that is what Apple would become if they had a cell network) it doesn’t seem very wise, when one realises that one can VOIP someone for a lot cheaper than calling them. but the strength of the phone is that it’s small. if I’m on the subway and want to call someone, I don’t want to whip out my computer and call someone, that’s far too clunky. so the phone needs to be the integral part of the system so as to not be replaced entirely by the computer.

but the problem here is the iPhone itself. if there were an Apple cell network, there would have to be more than just the iPhone, just as there is more than one mac. admittedly, there are different iPhones available, but they are not MacBook-MacBook Pro differences, they are 15 or 17 inch MBP differences.
but the iPhone is a computer, you say. the thing is that the phone and the computer need to be interdependent- there’s no chance that everything computer-wise will be done on an iPhone sized screen- people are buying bigger and bigger displays- so there will have to be two devices, the computer we all think of at the moment, and the VOIP phone, because cell phones are gonna die out when VOIP capability becomes ubiquitous. so Apple should actually start an ISP. and they would do it Apple style- ie well. that would put another layer on the Apple ecosystem. and it would put Apple in control not only of what people would do with their iPhones, but it would also let Apple drive the bus in the direction it wants with file sizes and other things similar. at the moment, one of the major limits on Apple’s vision for a HD future (the Steve said at Macworld 2005 that 2005 would be the year of HD, yet it’s only in 2007 that we get HD movies on the iTunes store and 2008 that we get HD TV shows from same.) HD files are massive, and there’s no getting around that. the ISPs can’t really take everyone downloading truckloads of HD video, and connection speeds limit who can actually get the data in a reasonable length of time, and there are plenty of places worse off speed wise than the US, so don’t complain.

while this lack of capacity is entirely on the ISPs shoulders, there is a good reason why they are not investing in the super-duper insanely high speed network we all long for- it’d cost too damn much and by the time it would be rolled out nation/world-wide, there’d be an even high standard capable of being reached and could well be overtaken speed wise by a cell-phone sort of wireless ISP. but should the consumer suffer because of this? hell no.

a lot of Apple seems to be about control- the software, hardware, and a myriad of other things to create a (nearly always) unbeatable experience, which people are willing to pay for (take a look at the iPod, the MacBook and the various iterations of the iMac, the computer that saved Apple.) this would be another step in that direction. and i think it would be a damn good one

who pays the bill for NASA? most of it comes from the american taxpayer. and that is just not right. why? because the american taxpayer pays for research which becomes available to the scientific community as a whole. sure, they do get some return on their investment, but this doesn’t seem right.

let me say why.

scientific knowledge is for the benefit of us all. take the ability to cure diseases (well, the ones that we can cure.) this knowledge is available to everyone who can get their hands on it, and those who can’t can’t for two reasons, 1. they can’t understand it (and this is a large amount of scientific information, as few people would, i would wager, be able to explain what a Higgs boson is and why it is so important) and the second reason is that it is not financially accessible. this latter point needs no explanation. people in poverty all over the world would be able to be freed from large amounts of suffering through disease if medicine and doctors were free. but they are not. that is the way things are. but how does this relate to space funding?

like this.

we are genetically selfish automatons at the lowest level (think about it, there are few people out there who aren’t bonking away, and reproduction is the effect of bonking away. it’s good for our children to survive. and to survive, we must get off this rock, as an asteroid is coming, and there will be one big enough to destroy life on the planet, if not the whole bloody thing. it can’t be stopped. but what we can do is get off the planet and settle in numerous places. despite the fact that this would lead to the very bad days i talked of in another post, it seems that this is the right way to go. (if one argues that continued human existence is a good thing. i’m not sure about this. Stephen Hawking had something very wise to say along these lines “it says a lot that the only thing we have created that comes close to life is the computer virus, and this is incredibly destructive.” however, a computer as a virus itself (ie the computer is the virus) is a notion i may ponder over later.) anyway, we need to get off the planet.

to get off the planet and get to other habitable places (we need to get out of the solar system, as the sun will swell up and swallow the inner rocky planets and then go out and leave a big patch of darkness (well, it may be a bit red, but it still won’t be anywhere near as bright as it is now when it’s finished doing its thing) and that will make survival a lot more difficult. so we need to be on multiple planets, preferably, in multiple solar systems and even better, multiple galaxies.

how to achieve this? the ISS is one of the first steps. we need to know how to survive long term in space (it takes the rather speedy photon in a beam of light 8 years to get to the closest star, and lot longer to get to the next galaxy. NZ doesn’t have a space program. very few countries do. Japan, US, Russia, China have their own programs, and the ESA is Europe’s collective effort. should these countries foot the bill alone? no. if we all want to share in the benefit of intergalactic colonisation, we should all pay our dues, and yes, that means tax. this tax should go towards some sort of global fund. that seems fair. but what about the gate keepers? so far, only Russia, the USA and China have put people into space in their own programs (ESA dudes mostly use the US program to get up there and some others use the Russian method, to the best of my knowledge, and the Chinese have only put one guy up there.

getting into space needs to get to the same stage as getting in the car and going to the mall (not that anyone goes to the mall with high gas prices, the wonderful state of the economy and the internet.) and it seems to have taken the first step. but this step doesn’t seem to be very well liked.

i wasn’t alive back in the late 50s and early 60s when going into space was a way-out concept. i grew up in the 90s when the shuttle would go up numerous times a year and the russians would go up when they could afford to fill up the gas tanks. it all seemed to be like clockwork. then came Challenger and years later Columbia. but neither of these tragedies made gave space-flight its edge back. they reminded us that going into space was dangerous, but they didn’t give it the excitement there once was. i have to make this judgment from what i see in the media, history books etc, but Armstrong and Aldrin may well be one of the greatest days in human history. Gagarin’s flight goes along with it. remember the ticker-tape parade for Al Shepherd when he got back from his massive slingshot ride? everyone was ecstatic. same for John Glenn’s flight. (I call Shepherd’s flight a slingshot as that’s what it was, he didn’t orbit, like Gagarin and Glenn did, he was shot straight up and landed a few hundred miles away. it was an attempt for the struggling American space program to save face and needs to be seen as such. not to belittle the man or the accomplishment. it was very impressive, but the Soviets had already been to the party, had too much vodka, woken up the next afternoon, worked out what the hell had happened and started working on sending Ghermain Titov into space, who orbited before Glenn did, to set the score 2-0 to the soviets.) the point is that the space-flight was the highlight of the year/one of the biggest stories of the year. everyone knew who went and the name of the ship. anyone know which shuttles have been up so far this year? there was a Simpsons episode on this phenomena, space-flight had become boring. and going on a car trip is boring. it certainly doesn’t make world headlines. lack of publicity for the space program for this reason is a justifiable problem, but it also has this benefit- we have come to see it as part of our advancement. we now need to see it as part of our everyday lives. and spaceship one, for example, is another step in that direction.

there can’t be a gatekeeper, as there is at the moment. there have been a couple of space tourists, who paid the russians to fill up the tanks and light the match, but spaceflight won’t be part of everyday life until everyone has done it so much that it’s just another trip in the car. and more funding for space-happenings, research and other spacey things (nothing to do with Kevin) will help this along. the X-prize that SpaceShipOne won was another first step. but it needs to be followed up with another advancement. and a fund for research, development and implementation would do that. the X-prize was a million dollars, which comes nowhere near paying the costs or bringing in the publicit. and as No. 2 said, a million dollars isn’t a lot of money. if this fund put up a prize of a BILLION dollars, it would attract a lot of attention, and lots of people working towards a goal of getting space-flight turned into a mall trip.a billion dollars is a colossal amount of money. no one person would be willing to put up a billion of his own for something (well, it would be a way for Gates to be charitable, and it would also give him something to do now that the Gates/Seinfeld ad campaign for Windows has fallen flat on its arse.) and that money can’t come from Americans who foot the bill for NASA. it can’t come from the Russians, who pay the bill for the Russian Space Program. it can’t come from the people of Europe who pay for the ESA. it needs to come from everyone, for we will all benefit from it. the billion dollars would be around 16 cents per person on the planet. many many persons cannot afford 16 cents extra on their taxes, but these can be balanced out be the wealthier persons. i for one would pay my 16 cents (or even a dollar) if i knew it was going towards space research, rather than paying some bums to sit around their state houses and cook up p, and cause the house to need to be demolished and rebuilt at the taxpayers expense.

would you pay your 16 cents?

I would.

i met two people yesterday

the first was a guy on the austrian ski team, who was training yesterday where i skiied. so were the swiss women’s ski team, but i didn’t meet any of them. anyone who has any real experience skiing realises the lunacy of going over jumps at over 100 km/h, but he was actually an entirely normal guy. nothing loopy, nothing bonkers about him.

i’d probably say i know more history than most. and i know a fair amount about the activities on the Russian front in World War 2. Yesterday I met a native Austrian, who moved here in 1953. after being conscripted into the german army he spent 3 years fighting on the Russian front. three years, three russian winters, and three of those blistering summers. it’s one thing to appreciate the suffering on the russian front in literature (go and read Antony Beevor’s Stalingrad ;it’s brilliant and describes the Nazi campaign in Russia from about 1940 till the fall of Stalingrad. another of his books, Berlin describes the russian advance from Stalingrad all the way to Berlin) but to actually meet someone who was there is another thing entirely.

dang, the olympics are a damn good distraction from doing whatever you’re supposed to be doing. like writing some posts here. or doing a french assignment. or anything really. there’s always olympics on. not too many days of this supreme distraction left though, so there is hope that there will be some work done sometime

should there be team sports at the olympics? if yes, then why the hell isn’t there some sort of large yacht yachting, like america’s cup size boats. not only would it bring more recognition of the america’s cup but an olympic sort of doodacky would give the sailors more to aim for, bring in more sponsors, etc. maybe it would feed some egos too. i mean there are team sports at the olympics, what about soccer/football? baseball? softball? sailing big boats would also be cool to watch. but what’s the deal with the wind at the sailing? all the competitors are having to shake the boat/board to get the thing going, why is there no real wind????????

we’re here via evolution. what happens when we come across some aliens on some far away planet. it seems entirely feasible that we will go, or be sent, the way of the dodo, that is if we don’t send the aliens what way first. or if our friendly aforementioned, and therefore belowmentioned cosmic destruction-ram doesn’t have it’s way with us first.

but how freaky would it be if human and alien evolved into something that could interbreed? that would be freaky. aluminum hat freaky