Category: Uncategorized

Scoble Defames Apple… JOKING!

Scoble on the Apple on Intel rumour. [here]
Is running Windows on Apple hardware considered heresy? And it would be interesting to see OSX and WinServer 2003 (let’s compare Apples to apples) running on the same hardware.
This could be fun.
My original post here.
And Geek News Central agrees with me:

Is this not a interesting possible development. Maybe they have determined they need a little more power under the hood and have decided to embrace some Pentium chips. Time will tell. [Emphasis mine]

Jeffrey Phillips: Getting Unstuck

Jeffrey Phillips has some great advice on getting unstuck. [here]
The last time I got seriously stuck was after September 11. Everything seemed to grind to a halt. So, in order to change gears, I started to play with Linux on my laptop. Eventually I got proficient enough to spend 3 months working exclusively on Linux.
Right now, I can feel the mud sucking my wheels deeper. I wonder what I will discover this time.

Apple and Intel…AGAIN!

Engadget posts on it here. Gizmodo on the same here.
Apple denies this vigorously. However, given the G5 Powerbook meme running around the blogosphere (here), the serious side of this is that unless Apple discovers a new type of physics, they have maxed out their ability to squeeze power out of their chip choice. Cooling the G5 enough to put it in a Powerbook profile apparently still requires a portable tank of liquid nitrogen to accompany the user around in his mobile travels.
Apple is stuck. They have nowhere else to turn to squeeze more power into their portable computing platforms.
They have to decide: Intel or AMD.
It’s not a pipe dream anymore. It’s a necessity for Apple to remain relevant in the notebook and laptop market.

Dave Winer: Apple and Google NEED to Blog

Dave Winer points out that Apple and Google have suddenly stumbled into potential PR/brand issues in the last 24 hours that could easily be resolved in a customer-focused blog. [here]
I have beaten Apple on more than a few occasions on their lack of blogging cred. [here and here and here]
Google’s blog strategy is…well, weak.
Meanwhile Sun and Microsoft are more than willing to jump into the blog pool and take a few bumps and bruises along the way.
If you can’t take the heat…you will get burned in the fire.

On renewal and priorities — Break from Blogging, June 4 3, 2005

In 48 hours, we have seen posts from Lawrence Lessig and Joi Ito reminding us that life is about more than blogging, about more than presentations, about more than being on the road 250 days a year.
What have we gotten ourselves into? Two of the most invigorating minds of the digital generation have declared that they need to focus on what is important, or focus on renewing what made them so driven to begin with.
Perhaps we should all step back and realize that running at the redline for as long as we have been (I have only been running this hard since 1999) is not for us, either personally or as a society.
Maybe it’s time to declare Break from Blogging day. I suggest June 4 3, 2005 (a Friday).
Walk away from your computer. Go outside. Go for a walk. Write a long journal entry, ON PAPER. Read a book.
Just don’t blog. Don’t read them. Don’t write them. Just be the person you are.
UPDATE: I am an idiot. Friday June 3, 2005

Moveable Type: The Power of Complexity

Tim Porter hits on why MT may not be the best blog platform for those who prefer to spend more time blogging than tweaking a complex environment. [here]
I use b2evolution, and it just works. I only play with it to tweak the design. The rest of it is handled internally.
What platform do my readers prefer? What makes that platform appealing to you?

SAP: Opacity Rules!

If you thought this was bad, SAP strives to exceed its previous level of obsfucation.
Nicholas Carr quotes from the transcripts at the Boston SAP Sapphire conference.

Let’s look through this thing. Remember we had the fridge. We decided to retire the fridge. We’re going to talk about a new metaphor from now on. What is NetWeaver and how does the whole thing come together? We talk about what we call the body of information. If you think about how the body of information is constructed, there are multiple pieces in there. It’s the mirror, if you want, of what we had with the fridge. The only difference from the fridge is that all the pieces have to work together. The face is the portal. If you think about the brain behind the face, there are two halves. The analytics, the structured side; knowledge management, the unstructured side. The brain is critical not only for storing information but for processing. Anything that comes through the brain gets context. Through this brain, and what’s supporting it, is probably the backbone of your body of information: master data management. If you don’t have master data management, your body may be there, but it may not be able to move. And that’s very critical to understand. Every information that goes through, every transaction that goes through, at some point in time touches master data, and if you don’t have a coherent master data strategy and a coherent master data management server, you will not get an agile body. MDM is one of the biggest things that is happening right now in NetWeaver. Through the backbone, you get a lot of events. The events contextualize themselves through master data into the brain and then get back and thrown into the rest of your body. That network is like your nerve system.

Brain. Melting. I. Must. Follow. Blindly.
Via Chris Selland

Business Week: Two strikes in a single day.

My copy of Business Week came today, and promptly went in the trash. It contained a scent sample, and made the whole house curl up their noses.
And then, when I went to their site to express my displeasure, and was greeted with this.

TODAY IS MAY 21, 2005!
Business Week: please get your act together.

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