Search This Blog

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Google's Blogger gets a refresh

Google's Blogger gets a refresh: A set of major user interface changes--from edit tools to management--is coming to the Web-blogging service.

Trash your smartphone - Neuroscience - Salon.com

Trash your smartphone - Neuroscience - Salon.com: There you sit, hammered by stimuli: On your computer screen, you're pounded by an overflowing RSS reader, twitching Facebook and Twitter feeds, an email box constantly chirping at you and IM bubbles doing their best pop-up video impression; off in the distance, your television frantically flits between images of explosions and a screaming, overcoiffed suit whose impossibly fat head floats disembodied above a never ending ticker-tape; and on your desk, face up, a cellphone perpetually spasming with text messages, photos from friends, yet more email and, of course, phone calls.

Yale gives iPads to med school students

Yale gives iPads to med school students: The Yale School of Medicine is distributing an iPad 2 to each one of its students this fall, joining a trend at medical schools across the country.

A Dangerous Method - Trailer

A Dangerous Method - Trailer:







  A Dangerous Method - Trailer

Seduced by the challenge of an impossible case, the driven Dr. Carl Jung (Michael Fassbender) takes the unbalanced yet beautiful Sabina Spielrein (Keira Knightley) as his patient in A DANGEROUS METHOD. Jung's weapon is the method of his master, the renowned Sigmund Freud (Viggo Mortensen). Both men fall under Sabina's spell.
Directed by: David Cronenberg
Starring: Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbander, Vincent Cassel


A David Cronenberg film about Freud and Jung, with Keira Knightley?! I am so there!

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Physicist cuts plane boarding time in half

Physicist cuts plane boarding time in half: Algorithm has passengers board in a set order, reducing the aisle traffic jam and potentially saving more than $1 billion for the industry.

CNN acquires iPad news app Zite

CNN acquires iPad news app Zite: CNN on Tuesday announced that it had acquired Zite, the popular personalized news app for iPad.

Monday, August 29, 2011

The decade's biggest scam - Glenn Greenwald - Salon.com

The decade's biggest scam - Glenn Greenwald - Salon.com: Last year, McClatchy characterized this threat in similar terms: "undoubtedly more American citizens died overseas from traffic accidents or intestinal illnesses than from terrorism." The March, 2011, Harper's Index expressed the point this way: "Number of American civilians who died worldwide in terrorist attacks last year: 8 -- Minimum number who died after being struck by lightning: 29." That's the threat in the name of which a vast domestic Security State is constructed, wars and other attacks are and continue to be launched, and trillions of dollars are transferred to the private security and defense contracting industry at exactly the time that Americans -- even as they face massive wealth inequality -- are told that they must sacrifice basic economic security because of budgetary constraints.

First, this wastefulness is seen as inefficient only if one falsely assumes that its real objective is to combat Terrorist threats. That is not the purpose of what the U.S. Government does. As Daniel Weeks explains today, the Congress -- contrary to popular opinion -- is not "broken"; it is working perfectly for its actual owners.

The LA Times, and most people who denounce these spending "inefficiencies," have the causation backwards: fighting Terrorism isn't the goal that security spending is supposed to fulfill; the security spending (and power vested by surveillance) is the goal itself, and Terrorism is the pretext for it.

Exaggerating, manipulating and exploiting the Terrorist threat for profit and power has been the biggest scam of the decade; only Wall Street's ability to make the Government prop it up and profit from the crisis it created at the expense of everyone else can compete for that title.

Steve Jobs made Apple great by ignoring profit

Steve Jobs made Apple great by ignoring profit: Steve Jobs retires as the CEO of Apple with a reputation that will place him amongst the pantheon of history’s great global business leaders...

Friday, August 26, 2011

iPad, I Saw, I Waited: The State of E-Textbooks

iPad, I Saw, I Waited: The State of E-Textbooks: If you're looking for a textbook example of technology obstruction by the media industry, look no further than e-textbooks.



Thursday, August 25, 2011

Comixology revamps app, requires re-download of comics

Comixology revamps app, requires re-download of comics: Comixology has issued a major update to its digital comics app, now at version 3.0, that brings many improvements and changes to the graphic-publishing management and storefront app -- so many, in fact that the upgrade will require a one-time, no-cost re-downloading of the comics on users' devices. The overhaul brings a new on-demand store, a completely new interface, background downloading and a host of user-management options for their digital collections....




Flipboard to carry movies, TV shows

Flipboard to carry movies, TV shows: Flipboard will begin carrying movies and TV shows in the near future, Reuters reports. The developer's CEO, Mike McCue, says that he will take on the project at the end of 2011. The executive is refusing to comment on which studios have been approached; it is also unclear how the content might be formatted, though by definition the change will suddenly put Flipboard into competition with other iPad video apps such as Netflix and Hulu....




NFL's Buccaneers equip every player with an Apple iPad 2

NFL's Buccaneers equip every player with an Apple iPad 2: The coaching staff of the National Football League's Tampa Bay Buccaneers has equipped every one of their 90 players with an iPad 2 to view playbooks and watch videos.

Steve Jobs’s Movie Legacy: Pixar and the Technology That Freed Indie Filmmakers | Film School Rejects

Steve Jobs’s Movie Legacy: Pixar and the Technology That Freed Indie Filmmakers | Film School Rejects: In 1985, the Graphics Group in LucasFilm‘s Computer Division was on the chopping block. As Robert Sutton relates, George Lucas wasn’t confident that computer animated films had much of a future, and as a result, department heads Ed Catmull and Alvy Ray Smith (two pioneers of extreme importance) were being pressured to fire some of their workers. Instead, they offered up their own names to be culled, which saved the entire division. At least for that moment. It’s unclear what fate might have fallen on the Graphics Group had the Computer Division not been purchased in 1986 by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs for a tidy $5m.

Of course, we know this department by another name: Pixar.

Jobs put his money down on a company he believed in, and the result stands currently as 26 Academy Awards, an absurd amount of box office money, a legion of fans worldwide and nearly complete animation dominance in the movie world. In 2006, Disney bought Pixar at an evaluated worth of $7.4b, making Jobs the largest Disney shareholder. He is stepping down as Apple’s CEO today, and even though it’s hard to say what kind of effect that might have on the film world, Jobs’s legacy already extends far beyond Pixar and beyond The Mouse.

In a sense, Apple erased the need for an Avid workstation. It had a revolutionary effect on how indie filmmakers are able to make their art. It put that art within reach.

Steve Jobs: The insanely great comeback kid - How the World Works - Salon.com

Steve Jobs: The insanely great comeback kid - How the World Works - Salon.com: It's easy enough to rhapsodize over Job's incredible track record -- his accomplishments include the first great personal computer, the transformation of both the music and the telephone business, and the creation of one of the greatest movie-making studios of our time. Just writing that sentence is breathtaking. We will not see its like again. But for me, Jobs' career signifies something more primal -- his comeback saga is a story of redemption, a fantasy epic in which a great king is toppled, but through force of will and grit and brilliance fights his way all the way back to the throne, and inaugurates an even greater empire. It's hard to think of parallels.

Ruminations on the legacy of Steve Jobs

Ruminations on the legacy of Steve Jobs: "That day has come." Four simple words that signaled that Steve Jobs felt compelled to step down as CEO of Apple, the company he founded, then lost, then saw ridiculed and written off, only to lead its rebirth and rise to new heights.

It's an incredible story of prevailing (read: dominating) over seemingly insurmountable odds. A story that has no peer in technology, or any other industry, for that matter.

The realization that one man sits at the junction point of cataclysmic disruptions in personal computing (Apple II/Mac), music (iPod + iTunes), mobile computing (iPhone + iOS), movies (Pixar) and post-PC computing (iPad) is breath-taking in its majesty. A legacy with no equal.

'Weak' Jobs worked full day on last day as Apple CEO

'Weak' Jobs worked full day on last day as Apple CEO: Steve Jobs was in Apple offices for a complete work day on the day of his resignation as CEO, according to a person described as "close" to the executive. Jobs is in fact said to have attended a regular board meeting, in spite of being in a "weak" condition and having been housebound for several weeks. The resignation is not a sign of a sudden plummet in Jobs' health, the anonymous source claims. A separate source alleges that Jobs had an emotional meeting with his executive staff after talking to the board, whom me told he intends to be an active chairman....




Tim Cook to Apple Employees: "Apple is Not Going to Change"

Tim Cook to Apple Employees: "Apple is Not Going to Change": Ars Technica reports that new Apple CEO Tim Cook has sent out an email to Apple employees expressing his enthusiasm for officially taking the reins of the company and reassuring employees that "Apple is not going to change." The full text of the email:

Team:





I am looking forward to the amazing opportunity of serving as CEO of the most innovative company in the world. Joining Apple was the best decision I've ever made and it's been the privilege of a lifetime to work for Apple and Steve for over 13 years. I share Steve's optimism for Apple's bright future.





Steve has been an incredible leader and mentor to me, as well as to the entire executive team and our amazing employees. We are really looking forward to Steve's ongoing guidance and inspiration as our Chairman.





I want you to be confident that Apple is not going to change. I cherish and celebrate Apple's unique principles and values. Steve built a company and culture that is unlike any other in the world and we are going to stay true to that—it is in our DNA. We are going to continue to make the best products in the world that delight our customers and make our employees incredibly proud of what they do.





I love Apple and I am looking forward to diving into my new role. All of the incredible support from the Board, the executive team and many of you has been inspiring. I am confident our best years lie ahead of us and that together we will continue to make Apple the magical place that it is.





Tim
Cook has gained a solid reputation for his leadership abilities and work to streamline Apple's operations. He has also clearly embraced the Apple concept as revealed by the "Cook Doctrine" he laid out over two years ago as he took on the role of overseeing Apple's day-to-day operations during one of Steve Jobs' medical leaves of absence.





TUAW's Michael Grothaus, a former Apple employee, also offers a personal impression of Tim Cook, noting the thoughtfulness and careful consideration he gives when speaking as an example of his leadership abilities "sans ego".
Tim Cook is one of those rare people who stop and think before speaking. Standing in the same room with him I realized that he's comfortable with silence as long as that silence is productive and appropriate. He's not like other tech execs who ramble almost immediately and incoherently at any question lobbed at them, as if doing so will convince others they know everything about everything.





Tim Cook is a person who has confidence in his position as a leader, sans ego. Ego doesn't take pauses. It's rapid-fire. And it's that confidence and lack of ego that allows him the time to examine the issues and questions at hand, no matter how lowly or silly others may think them, and address them appropriately.
Cook has been at Apple since 1998, and while he has played a primary role in hosting Apple's earnings conference calls, he has until relatively recently remained quietly in the background when it comes to Apple's mainstream public appearances. But the company in recent months has been making a more active role for him, most notably as the on-stage representative for Apple at the introduction of the Verizon iPhone earlier this year.





Recent Mac and iOS Blog Stories

Steve Jobs Called Google's Vic Gundotra on a Sunday About this Icon

Steve Jobs' Resignation Not Indicative of Sudden Worsening of Health

Steve Jobs' Outlook on Apple After Returning in 1997

"Jobs's greatest creation isn’t any Apple product. It is Apple itself."

Steve Jobs to Remain on Disney Board





Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs: Stepped down as CEO of Apple today. We must suppose, now, that it is only a matter of time. Poor man, he's younger than I. If I were some day to assemble a pantheon of heroes who died during my lifetime, even if I were to limit their number to ten, Steve Jobs would undoubtedly be among them. Mad genius, insanely great, an adopted child, a self-made man and a gentle soul, he would make a near-perfect role model for any of my children. That, in my opinion, is the very definition of hero. ...

A look at Tim Cook, the man replacing Steve Jobs

A look at Tim Cook, the man replacing Steve Jobs: The man tapped as Apple's new CEO has served as Apple's COO for seven years and filled in for Steve Jobs during three medical leaves of absence.

Jobs resigns at Apple CEO; Cook named successor

Jobs resigns at Apple CEO; Cook named successor: Steve Jobs has resigned as Apple CEO.