My friends dog died.
Lost for what to do to help them feel better, we bought them beer and chocolate, because that often makes us feel better, even if we don't feel bad or even if we feel quite good.
Then, I smartly left the cache in a shopping bag for a week or so.
We came home friday night to find the dog had eaten the chocolate. I guess he felt bad about losing an enemy he had always despised and tried to end his own small misery forever. Unfortunately, I did not buy enough chocolate to kill a 90 pound dog, though a 2-3 lb dog may have felt a bit queasy. Instead, I think he was simply satisfied that he had eaten something, and thus totally missed his goal.
Mountains
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
2013 Cherry Blossom Festival
We went to the Cherry Blossom Festival in DC on the 7th.
I think we beat the flowers by about a day, but there were still enough blossoms to go around to keep things interesting. And where the blossoms were lacking, the people weren't. There were people everywhere. I've heard that DC has a population that's nearing the size of Vermont. When everyone in a 5 mile square decides to go to one side to see, if not smell, the flowers, things get crowded.
It was slightly chilly and breezy, but now we're bathed in 80 degree heat, so I assume that was our one good day of spring.
We walked around the Tidal basin, visiting the various memorials, including the new MLK memorial.
My favorite is still the FDR memorial. It's peaceful and it's impossible to fully appreciate it from any given spot. It's packed with symbolism, and leaves you thinking you should try a bit harder to be a better person.
We easily transformed a cheap trip downtown into a fantastically expensive weekend by boarding The Dog at the kennel so as to not need to run any particular schedule. The cost is significant, and thus I'm not sure I'll do it more, but that route took a huge amount of stress from the day. I only looked at my watch once, when someone suggested lunch.
The Washington Monument is still scaffolded from repairs from the earthquake a few years ago.
Magnolias.
Try harder to be a better person.
I think we beat the flowers by about a day, but there were still enough blossoms to go around to keep things interesting. And where the blossoms were lacking, the people weren't. There were people everywhere. I've heard that DC has a population that's nearing the size of Vermont. When everyone in a 5 mile square decides to go to one side to see, if not smell, the flowers, things get crowded.
It was slightly chilly and breezy, but now we're bathed in 80 degree heat, so I assume that was our one good day of spring.
We walked around the Tidal basin, visiting the various memorials, including the new MLK memorial.
My favorite is still the FDR memorial. It's peaceful and it's impossible to fully appreciate it from any given spot. It's packed with symbolism, and leaves you thinking you should try a bit harder to be a better person.
We easily transformed a cheap trip downtown into a fantastically expensive weekend by boarding The Dog at the kennel so as to not need to run any particular schedule. The cost is significant, and thus I'm not sure I'll do it more, but that route took a huge amount of stress from the day. I only looked at my watch once, when someone suggested lunch.
The Washington Monument is still scaffolded from repairs from the earthquake a few years ago.
Magnolias.
Try harder to be a better person.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Cloud Free Sky
I was reading an article in Scientific American that discussed the economics of running ad-supported cloud services.
It brought about the realization that that the reason why all cloud services don't stick around, even though people love them. Cloud services need to make money to survive. The ones that don't make it either don't supply good data for targeted advertizing, or they don't attract enough eyeballs to get ad revenue, or refuse to charge a fee for some reason.
So, ask yourself: does my favorite cloud service give a company a rich, solid feed of information about myself? Is it useful as a large scale advertizing tool? Where does it get it's money?
If you can't answer that question, pull your data and run.
We can apply that model explain a lot of things: the death of mashups (no revenue is gained by providing content for other companies mashups), and the subsequent lockdown of Facebook and Twitter APIs. It's the writ reason for the shutdown of Tinkercad. Reader, especially in it's neutered social-free form, could only give vague information about favorite sites, and by design obscured the important information from stakeholders. The death of the many subscription/DRM music services also follows the trend.
This theory would also suggest that the personal computing device is not in particular danger of death, as there are many areas of computing that will strongly resist the cloud model of monetization. Shareware developers rejoice.
It brought about the realization that that the reason why all cloud services don't stick around, even though people love them. Cloud services need to make money to survive. The ones that don't make it either don't supply good data for targeted advertizing, or they don't attract enough eyeballs to get ad revenue, or refuse to charge a fee for some reason.
So, ask yourself: does my favorite cloud service give a company a rich, solid feed of information about myself? Is it useful as a large scale advertizing tool? Where does it get it's money?
If you can't answer that question, pull your data and run.
We can apply that model explain a lot of things: the death of mashups (no revenue is gained by providing content for other companies mashups), and the subsequent lockdown of Facebook and Twitter APIs. It's the writ reason for the shutdown of Tinkercad. Reader, especially in it's neutered social-free form, could only give vague information about favorite sites, and by design obscured the important information from stakeholders. The death of the many subscription/DRM music services also follows the trend.
This theory would also suggest that the personal computing device is not in particular danger of death, as there are many areas of computing that will strongly resist the cloud model of monetization. Shareware developers rejoice.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Cloud Seeding Disaster
It has not been a big secret that I do not hold cloud computing in high regard. In principle, the idea that we can centralize our content (you know, files) and processing (you know, the thing that $1000 computers do) is nifty. Everything from any device.
The downside is that the user doesn't have control over what happens in the cloud. You can hang on to a software install CD or a downloaded file forever and keep using it long after the company that made it has gone under (Hypercard and SuperPaint, for example), but once a cloud service stops working, it's gone. I've watched as a long sequence of cloud computing products has bit the dust, leaving people who paid or depended on them holding the bag. Flickr, Google Wave, Google Notebook, Zune Store, and more recently Cisco Routers, Razr Mice, Simcity, Evernote, and the unending Adobe Creative Cloud debacle. I have ample evidence that engaging in cloud based activities is setting oneself up for a screwjob.
Thus, I've always used cloud stuff sparingly, but it creeps in around the edges. Blogger has a nice interface, games on Steam are fun, not needing a cable to put books on the Kindle is neat.
But then it happened.
They shutdown something I used all the time, really liked, and used to do my job better.
They shutdown Google Reader.
Um. Hey. Yeah. Hi. I was using that.
Unlike a lot of other stuff that's being hawked online these days, that product made me a more effective individual. Reader is/was like the one tool I found that was great for keeping up with scientific literature. Fast, clean, and flexible. I could sit down for a couple of hours one day a week and cram everything that I cared about into my head and/or my print queue. It was the tool it worked perfectly. I would have paid money for the privilege of using it. I told everyone I knew how awesome it was. I used it all the time. If you need to follow a lot of different information sources, it is the best tool around.
Now some pointy haired sand packer in California decided that no one is using it, and so throws the switch with no point of discussion or negotiation.
Put that on the pile of cloud failures, and a facsimile on the pile great-products-discontinued-for-no-reason.
I should have seen that coming.
Now what to do?
The downside is that the user doesn't have control over what happens in the cloud. You can hang on to a software install CD or a downloaded file forever and keep using it long after the company that made it has gone under (Hypercard and SuperPaint, for example), but once a cloud service stops working, it's gone. I've watched as a long sequence of cloud computing products has bit the dust, leaving people who paid or depended on them holding the bag. Flickr, Google Wave, Google Notebook, Zune Store, and more recently Cisco Routers, Razr Mice, Simcity, Evernote, and the unending Adobe Creative Cloud debacle. I have ample evidence that engaging in cloud based activities is setting oneself up for a screwjob.
Thus, I've always used cloud stuff sparingly, but it creeps in around the edges. Blogger has a nice interface, games on Steam are fun, not needing a cable to put books on the Kindle is neat.
But then it happened.
They shutdown something I used all the time, really liked, and used to do my job better.
They shutdown Google Reader.
Um. Hey. Yeah. Hi. I was using that.
Unlike a lot of other stuff that's being hawked online these days, that product made me a more effective individual. Reader is/was like the one tool I found that was great for keeping up with scientific literature. Fast, clean, and flexible. I could sit down for a couple of hours one day a week and cram everything that I cared about into my head and/or my print queue. It was the tool it worked perfectly. I would have paid money for the privilege of using it. I told everyone I knew how awesome it was. I used it all the time. If you need to follow a lot of different information sources, it is the best tool around.
Now some pointy haired sand packer in California decided that no one is using it, and so throws the switch with no point of discussion or negotiation.
Put that on the pile of cloud failures, and a facsimile on the pile great-products-discontinued-for-no-reason.
I should have seen that coming.
Now what to do?
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